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Bedbugs and other insects lay eggs and move on. They do not incubate the eggs.

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Q: How longdoes female bedbug have to keep babies in warm place for?
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Amphibians have babies by looking for a good place to have there babies


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The father should not be present at all, hamsters do not live together in mated pairs. He may make the female nervous and have her eat her babies for protection of them! Also, you should set her habitat in a quiet place and make sure not to alarm her. Any stress during this time may lead to cannibalistic results. Her bedding may start to stink, but you have to ignore this and change it when she is ready to have her babies separated from her. Any earlier, and you may alarm her and have her eat her babies.


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What is the word for a place where babies are minded?

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How do bed bugs protect themselves?

A bedbug protects itself from being attacked by a human in various ways. Firstly the bedbug can tell from the breath of the person when he or she is asleep, so the bedbug will usually wait until it detects a person who is asleep before coming out of its hiding place and crawling on to the person's skin to feed on his or her blood during the night.Secondly immediately after crawling on to the person and before piercing their skin in order to insert the tiny tube through which the bedbug needs to extract the blood into its mouth, which is adapted for piercing and sucking, the bedbug first injects a chemical comprising a powerful anaestheticand a coagulant into the sleeping person's skin.This anaesthetic effect protects the bedbug by numbing any feeling, so the sleeping person does not know nor react to the presence of the bedbug on their skin while it is feasting on their blood such as by scratching until the anaesthetic has worn off. This only happens after the bedbug has completed its meal and by then crawled back off the person and to its hiding place, and so it can no longer be harmed by the person scratching or swatting.Secondly the coagulant makes the blood come out of the wound the bedbug has made in their skin nice and slowly. This protects the bedbug from being flooded with too much blood coming out too fastThe bedbug also protects itself by only coming out of its hiding place to have its meal when it is dark, as well as when detecting breath of somebody asleep so should the bed occupant wake up he will not be able to see the presence of bedbugs unless he or she turns on a light and so will most likely not realize there are bedbugs in the bed.Another protection is that the bedbug remains somewhere during day times such as in a crevice or the fold of a mattress or a crevice or crack in the floor or wall or nearby furniture so its flat tiny body can not be readily seen by people during daylight.


What is a place for babies?

A nursery


How do Fleas multiply?

The male inseminates the female BedBug which then lays eggs. The female can lay between 1 to 12 eggs per day and up to 200 in a lifetime. The Bedbug eggs are white and about 1 mm long, and almost impossible to see on most surfaces. The favorite place of the female Bedbug to lay her eggs is in the folds of your mattress, right where you sleep. The eggs have a sticky coating and clusters of 10-50 Bedbug eggs can be found in cracks and crevices. Bedbug eggs are also deposited in woodwork, furniture, carpet and other fabrics. Bedbug eggs hatch in 6 to 17 days, and the young Nymphs are ready to feast


Do bed bugs stick to bed blankets?

No live bedbugs do not as a rule stick to a bed's blankets but it is possible that bedbug eggs laid by a female bedbug may be stuck to the blankets if they have a hard surface. The live bedbug will have a daytime hiding place either in the bed structure or near the bed. That might be under clutter, (such as clothing strewn around an untidy bedroom), in the furniture near the bed such as a cupboard or chest of drawers, under the carpet, in a holdall or other luggage, in or under the floorboard, in cracks or crevices in the bed structure, in bedroom's walls, or very commonly inside the mattress or in the mattress folds of the bed, and it is more likely that will also be the new eggs will be laid.The live bedbugs and bedbug nymphs most usually only emerge from their hiding place during hours of darkness when theycrawl on to somebody's body asleep in that bed and then extract an amount of that person's blood into their stomach. They then return to their hiding place or an alternative hiding place were they may lay more eggs and remain there all day digesting their meal unless disturbed.


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How do the bed bugs drink blood?

Bedbugs eat the blood of humans. They do this by crawling on to the body of a person, usually while that person is asleep in their bed during the night. They bedbug can detect the CO2 the sleeping person breathes out. After crawling along the sheet the bedbug climbs on to on to a part of the person's body, usually a limb. to have its meal. The bedbug will pierce their skin and inject an anaesthetic and coagulant into the person's blood stream. That means the person will not feel anything while the bedbug then inserts a tiny tube into the person's bloodstream and starts sipping a small quantity of the sleeping person's blood which comes out of the person slowly because of the effect of the coagulant. Completion of the meal will normally take the bedbug 5 to 10 minutes. After completion of the meal the now engorged bedbug will now crawl off the person and back along the sheet to return to its hiding place which is very often in the folds of the bed's mattress. The person does not usually wake up while the bedbug is having its meal, but it may start to itch maddeningly when the anaesthetic wears off making him scratch vigorously to gain relief and in time a nasty looking red rash will appear on the person's skin at the place the bedbug had its meal on them.


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