Triatominae, also known as kissing bugs, are mainly found and widespread in the Americas, with a few species present in Asia, Africa and Australia.
South Carolina
you and me
"kissing bugs."
bugs have babys by kissing each other then going in2 their room late a night at doing the naughty
Kissing bugs can be found in Canada and the continental United States. They have the colors of black or brown with yellow, brown or red marks on their abdomen.
ANSWER Bed bugs, mosquitoes. In South America it could be the kissing bug. bed bugs I'm the bed bug guy and I'm not joking there real and they live in American
No they are from different insect families. The bedbug is from the Cimicadae family, kissing bugs are of the insect family Triatominae. Bedbugs are attracted to make their home in or near somebody's bed by detecting the CO2 breath of the person asleep. They are called bedbugs because they are normally found in or near a bed and because they bite the occupant of that bed when he or she is asleep in it. They are becoming increasingly common all over the world. Kissing bugs are only found in certain countries and are very much rarer, and their bite is even more unpleasant than a bedbug's bite. They are called kissing bugs because they only seem to bite people on their face, where somebody kisses you. But some kissing bugs are also called assassin bugs and they actually attack and eat live bedbugs, particularly bedbugs that have recently had a meal of some person's blood.
where do shield bugs live?
Same bugs that live in wood.
no they dont
We all live with bugs. They infest even the cleanest homes. Even the cleanest skin and hair are home to thousands of microscopic bugs. How do we live with bugs? We couldn't live without them.
The kissing bugs or Triatominae have five nymphal stages. Each stage requires at least one full blood meal to grow to the next nymphal stage. Completion of growth from egg to adult usually takes 1-2 years.
German bugs
NO BED BUGS CAN,T LIVE IN A SWIMMING POOL because they are bed bugs not pool bugs.