Los Angeles Times

Your house as a giant bug trap

An arthropod census finds more than 100 kinds living in the average home — but most are harmless.

- SEAN GREENE sean.greene@latimes.com Twitter: @seangreene­89

The average home contains more than 100 species of f lies, spiders, beetles, ants and other critters.

Don’t panic, but your house probably has a lot more bugs in it than you think.

The average home contains more than 100 different species of flies, spiders, beetles, ants and other bugs — with an even greater variety inside houses in wealthier neighborho­ods, according to a new study in Biology Letters.

The paper highlights an unexpected diversity of life found in our own indoor habitats, suggesting the “wild” isn’t as far from home as we thought.

Before you reach for the fly swatter or can of Raid, know this: Most of the bugs in our dwellings are not destructiv­e or diseasecar­rying critters such as termites, ticks and cockroache­s. Instead of pests, the survey found mostly benign species, often so small that people rarely notice them.

The arthropods among us have “been there before you read this article and they didn’t bother you then, so knowing they’re there now shouldn’t really change that,” said Misha Leong, an entomologi­st at the California Academy of Sciences and the study’s lead author. “They’ll just continue being your quiet, respectabl­e roommates.”

To get an idea of the kinds of bugs that cohabit with humans, entomologi­sts at North Carolina State University and the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences surveyed the homes of 50 volunteers in the Raleigh area.

Donning headlamps and kneepads and armed with forceps, nets and vacuumlike bug-collecting devices called aspirators, the researcher­s scoured nearly every room of each house. They collected all varieties of living and dead arthropods — the group that includes flies, spiders, beetles, ants and crustacean­s — hidden inside.

The bug census found 10,000 specimens, which took scientists two years to categorize. The results of their initial survey were published in PeerJ earlier this year.

“It appears that the vast majority of arthropods that live among us cause no direct harm,” the authors of the study, led by North Carolina State entomologi­st Matt Bertone, wrote in PeerJ. “Unfortunat­ely, many insects and arthropods we collected are considered pests based solely on their presence in the home.”

Houses are like giant traps for tiny crawling and flying critters. While some species rely on built environmen­ts, most simply wind up indoors by accident after following an attractive light or looking for something to eat. The results are often tragic — for the bug.

And while humans often try to keep their homes free of insects and spiders, our dwellings are not as insulated from the outdoors as some might hope.

The new study suggests a neighborho­od’s affluence may be a better predictor of indoor bug diversity than, say, a home’s cleanlines­s.

It all starts with the plants in the backyard.

In general, people with more money plant more extensive gardens, which studies have shown can attract a greater variety of birds, lizards and bats.

This so-called luxury effect — the idea that socioecono­mic factors influence local biodiversi­ty — also extends to bugs.

Even properties without many plants still had a high number of bug species inside if they were in a rich neighborho­od, where they were more likely to be near lush parks and neighbors with big gardens. Property lines, of course, don’t matter to bugs.

“It matters, in short, not only how much vegetation you have in your yard, but how much is present in the yards and other habitats nearby,” the study authors wrote.

The researcher­s have plans to expand their census of indoor bug life beyond the North Carolina sample.

In Raleigh, the homes surveyed were all freestandi­ng structures in middle- and higher-income neighborho­ods. Now the work must expand to a wider range of neighborho­ods and housing types, the authors wrote.

Leong and colleagues have already sampled houses in the Peruvian Amazon, Sweden and San Francisco, including homes belonging to Cal Academy of Sciences employees. Through 2017, the next stops are in Australia, Madagascar, China and, hopefully, research field stations in Antarctica.

This type of survey could help scientists understand how urbanizati­on and human-altered landscapes shape ecology and biodiversi­ty.

For example, if the scientists were to look at houses with insect infestatio­ns, what would they find?

Perhaps infestatio­ns occur because homes are lacking in arthropod diversity. If cockroache­s or termites take over a place, maybe it’s because there wasn’t enough of another bug to stop them, Leong said.

“That’s something we don’t know, but it’s an ecological concept that biodiversi­ty usually prevents infestatio­ns,” she said. “I think it’d be cool to see if that applies indoors.”

A future study will try to find out which species truly live as our roommates and which are the vagabond species that simply come for a visit. If a species is found in at least 50% of a house’s rooms, it may be more likely to be reproducin­g and thriving indoors, Leong said.

Ultimately, the entomologi­sts want to know whether the rules of ecology are the same in the built environmen­t as they are in the wild.

“We can’t just write off man-made or humanalter­ed environmen­ts as being completely artificial,” Leong said, “because there are a lot of ecological dynamics at play.”

 ?? Matt Bertone North Carolina State University ?? CARPET BEETLES prefer to leave the indoors after the larva stage, but often end up dying on windowsill­s.
Matt Bertone North Carolina State University CARPET BEETLES prefer to leave the indoors after the larva stage, but often end up dying on windowsill­s.

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