The Prague Post - Malaysian scientists recruit bed bugs as crime scene sleuths

EUR -
AED 4.35854
AFN 76.556904
ALL 96.178333
AMD 448.031554
ANG 2.124476
AOA 1088.300597
ARS 1666.861321
AUD 1.666845
AWG 2.13625
AZN 2.024618
BAM 1.949591
BBD 2.390876
BDT 145.207572
BGN 1.993086
BHD 0.447455
BIF 3507.010242
BMD 1.186805
BND 1.498627
BOB 8.202877
BRL 6.171977
BSD 1.187015
BTN 107.580399
BWP 15.552472
BYN 3.404857
BYR 23261.387733
BZD 2.387387
CAD 1.612216
CDF 2640.641882
CHF 0.915567
CLF 0.025688
CLP 1014.290998
CNY 8.204684
CNH 8.196791
COP 4357.095284
CRC 587.127758
CUC 1.186805
CUP 31.450346
CVE 110.255472
CZK 24.24608
DJF 210.919156
DKK 7.471056
DOP 74.323717
DZD 153.789019
EGP 55.513302
ERN 17.802082
ETB 184.014154
FJD 2.594772
FKP 0.868593
GBP 0.871412
GEL 3.192216
GGP 0.868593
GHS 13.060825
GIP 0.868593
GMD 87.236494
GNF 10420.152041
GTQ 9.104007
GYD 248.348064
HKD 9.275918
HNL 31.456295
HRK 7.529921
HTG 155.574557
HUF 379.328555
IDR 19938.866405
ILS 3.651913
IMP 0.868593
INR 107.686162
IQD 1555.308603
IRR 49994.181731
ISK 145.205826
JEP 0.868593
JMD 185.728529
JOD 0.84148
JPY 182.064863
KES 153.097763
KGS 103.785466
KHR 4782.825793
KMF 492.524353
KPW 1068.123839
KRW 1720.17966
KWD 0.364313
KYD 0.98925
KZT 585.694795
LAK 25451.043447
LBP 106496.402182
LKR 367.190644
LRD 221.398367
LSL 18.822989
LTL 3.504328
LVL 0.717887
LYD 7.477758
MAD 10.845919
MDL 20.055132
MGA 5257.548044
MKD 61.613357
MMK 2492.18901
MNT 4234.748607
MOP 9.557623
MRU 47.359516
MUR 54.213326
MVR 18.347677
MWK 2060.892448
MXN 20.418748
MYR 4.646939
MZN 75.825148
NAD 18.941156
NGN 1604.062688
NIO 43.573522
NOK 11.26651
NPR 172.128115
NZD 1.963113
OMR 0.45632
PAB 1.18702
PEN 3.981743
PGK 4.965002
PHP 69.172947
PKR 331.830779
PLN 4.215776
PYG 7839.035789
QAR 4.321456
RON 5.089737
RSD 117.356016
RUB 91.500053
RWF 1723.834984
SAR 4.450989
SBD 9.55188
SCR 16.339609
SDG 713.865792
SEK 10.56483
SGD 1.498378
SHP 0.890412
SLE 28.779741
SLL 24886.716991
SOS 678.255764
SRD 44.83394
STD 24564.477629
STN 24.863575
SVC 10.386922
SYP 13125.564275
SZL 18.822694
THB 36.921042
TJS 11.146456
TMT 4.153819
TND 3.36489
TOP 2.857543
TRY 51.78875
TTD 8.050329
TWD 37.209677
TZS 3074.008974
UAH 51.074049
UGX 4196.635386
USD 1.186805
UYU 45.515053
UZS 14597.707342
VES 460.781418
VND 30856.942911
VUV 141.664527
WST 3.212746
XAF 653.874669
XAG 0.014411
XAU 0.000235
XCD 3.207401
XCG 2.139387
XDR 0.813743
XOF 652.143357
XPF 119.331742
YER 282.939866
ZAR 18.848471
ZMK 10682.669047
ZMW 22.584079
ZWL 382.150886
  • JRI

    0.3500

    13.13

    +2.67%

  • BCC

    -0.3200

    89.41

    -0.36%

  • CMSD

    -0.0100

    24.07

    -0.04%

  • BCE

    -0.1800

    25.65

    -0.7%

  • CMSC

    0.0084

    23.7

    +0.04%

  • NGG

    1.8800

    90.64

    +2.07%

  • RIO

    2.2800

    99.52

    +2.29%

  • GSK

    -0.3300

    58.49

    -0.56%

  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • AZN

    11.3600

    204.76

    +5.55%

  • BTI

    0.1400

    60.33

    +0.23%

  • BP

    1.5800

    38.55

    +4.1%

  • VOD

    0.4300

    15.68

    +2.74%

  • RELX

    -1.5600

    27.73

    -5.63%

  • RYCEF

    -0.4800

    16.93

    -2.84%

Malaysian scientists recruit bed bugs as crime scene sleuths
Malaysian scientists recruit bed bugs as crime scene sleuths / Photo: Mohd RASFAN - AFP

Malaysian scientists recruit bed bugs as crime scene sleuths

Under glaring laboratory lights, a research assistant extends his forearm and carefully inverts a mesh-topped container onto his skin to allow a wriggling mass of bed bugs to feed on his blood, all in the name of science.

Text size:

Long-loathed as itchy household pests, the blood-sucking insects have revealed a darker, more intriguing potential as Malaysian scientists have discovered they can be turned into unlikely crime-busting allies.

A team from the Science University of Malaysia (USM) in northern Penang has found that tropical bed bugs can retain DNA from human prey for up to 45 days after snacking on an unwary victim.

This makes the tiny critters, who love to lurk in headboard cracks, mattress seams and pillow covers, ideal evidence resources when it comes to pinpointing suspects at crime scenes.

From a speck of blood, police investigators may one day be able to piece together the full profile of an offender, if the critters are present at a crime scene.

Analysing the insects could reveal gender, eye colour, hair and skin colour, entomologist Abdul Hafiz Ab Majid told AFP.

"We call bed bugs the 'musuh dalam selimut' (Malay for "the enemy in the blanket")," Hafiz said, adding that "they can also be spies" to help solve crimes.

- DNA profiling -

In a laboratory tucked deep inside USM's School of Biological Sciences, Hafiz and postdoctoral researcher Lim Li have spent nearly half a decade studying tropical bed bugs.

The bloodsuckers, scientific name Cimex hemipterus, are the most common species found in Malaysia and the tropics.

The bugs are reared in containers under a laboratory bench, each wrapped in black plastic to mimic conditions the insects thrive in.

"We place folded pieces of paper inside the small containers so the bed bugs have something to climb on," Hafiz said.

With the lab's temperature kept at a constant 23C to 24C, the insects suck up 1.5 to 5.3 microlitres of blood at each feeding, an "amount less than a droplet", Hafiz explained.

Researchers found DNA extracted from bed bugs that had fed on human blood could recover basic "phenotypic profiling", a person's observable traits, as well as gender for up to 45 days.

Using so-called STR (Short Tandem Repeat) and SNP (Single Nucleotide Polymorphism) markers, specific DNA sequences extracted from the blood, researchers can determine the gender, eye, hair and skin colour of potential suspects, long after they have fled the scene.

The USM study called "Human profiling from STR and SNP analysis of tropical bed bug, Cimex hemipterus", was published in Nature's Scientific Reports two years ago.

It was the first documented forensic use involving tropical bed bugs.

- 'Perfect' forensic tool -

Unlike mosquitoes and flies, bed bugs cannot fly, and once they have fed, "become engorged and can't move around that much", Hafiz said, adding that they can only move within 20 feet (six metres) of where they've fed.

"That's what makes them unique. We can say they are perfect to use as a forensic tool compared to mosquitoes that... fly away," Hafiz added.

The bugs are particularly useful at crime scenes, where fluids have been wiped away to destroy evidence, as the critters are often well-hidden.

Back in the lab, researcher Lim did not hesitate to demonstrate a feeding session, even joking that she had been a "willing victim" for science.

"I let them feed on my blood when I wanted to test how long (it would take) the human DNA to degrade," she said.

Lim insisted that the inconspicuous bugs are "misunderstood creatures" and do not spread diseases -- even though their bite leaves an itchy rash that can last for weeks.

"Maybe we can try educating people because the bed bugs are not actually vectors. So even if you get bitten, they can't transmit diseases to you," she said.

While the researchers imagined a future where tiny bed bugs at crime scenes could lead investigators to murder suspects, Hafiz said the insects weren't a magic fix.

Bed bugs have their limits -- especially when it comes to cracking cold cases, said Hafiz.

"It only gives investigators a time frame of 45 days to use bed bugs as evidence -- and only if they are available at the crime scene," he said.

T.Musil--TPP