Last Friday (two days ago) when I returned to my apartment in student residence, I found this note attached to my door:
What??? A "contracted company" will come through my apartment with a DOG to look for health and safety issues??? Since when do they need dogs for this? Colour me deeply suspicious.
And when did "preventative" supplant "preventive" as a word?
I have given fair warning. I scribbled the following on the notice:
Update: several friends have suggested these dogs might be brought in to search for bedbugs in the beds, furniture, carpets, etc. From Wikipaedia,
Bed bug detection dogs are specially trained by handlers to identify the scent of bed bugs.
With the increased focus on green pest management and integrated pest management, bed bug detection dogs are gaining popularity in North America. Dogs are a safer alternative to pesticide use as a management strategy. If operators can find out exactly where bed bugs are located, they can minimize the area that needs to be sprayed. Dogs smell in parts per trillion, something a human cannot do, and detect bed bugs through all life cycle phases from eggs to nymphs to adults.
Bed bug detection dogs are quickly becoming mainstream. In 2011 The National Pest Management Association[13] released their Bed Bug Best Management Practices [14] which outline the minimum recommendations regarding not only treatment, but the certification and use of bed bug detection canines. The NPMA Best Management Practices emphasize the importance of having a bed bug detection dog team certified by a third party organization with no affiliation to the trainer or company that sold the canine.
Bed bug detection dogs are a viable and scientifically-proven alternative to traditional methods of pest detection. A 2008 report by the University of Kentucky Department of Entomology endorsed bed bug detection dogs by stating that the “reliability of the dogs has been impressive provided they are properly trained.”[15] Scientists at the university reviewed studies on the dogs and concluded that although expensive for operators, canine detection dogs were promising.
Bed bug detection is complicated by the fact that the insects can hide almost anywhere. Bed bug detection dogs solve this problem because they are small and agile, finding bugs in places humans cannot such as wall voids, crevices and furniture gaps.
With the increase in global travel and shared living accommodations, bed bugs have become more prevalent. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency held a bed bug summit[16] in April 2009 to address the ongoing problem of bed bugs and how to eradicate them.