Joan Jones, wtop.com
WASHINGTON – It sounds like an old wives’ tale: To get rid of bedbugs, all you need are leaves.
Bean leaves, to be exact.
For generations, housewives in the Balkans in Eastern Europe would spread the leaves around a room because bedbugs “get impaled by these little hooks on the tips and get trapped,” says University of California-Irvine professor Robert Corn.
When pesticides became popular – and effective at battling pests – in the 1940s, the leaf-spreading became unnecessary. If it wasn’t for a mention in a United States Department of Agriculture paper in 1943, the practice might have been forgotten, according to .
Now, Corn along with a group of other researchers are trying to replicate that sticky surface. Their goal is to develop a sticky tape to apply around the bottom of beds. The tape would impale the critters before they get to your mattress, Corn tells ²ÝÝ®´«Ã½.
The researchers reported recently in the Journal of the Royal Society Interface that they’re closer than ever to developing a fabric or surface that mimics the sticky qualities of the leaves.
So far, they have a patent pending for the technology and their idea has grabbed the attention of at least one commercial company.
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