Kissing Bugs

nasty little insects that bite your lips.

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Kissing Bug - Panstrogylus geniculatus - Fernando Otálora Luna - Wikimedia Commons
Kissing Bug - Panstrogylus geniculatus - Fernando Otálora Luna - Wikimedia Commons
All Kissing Bugs feed on blood, and those that prefer human blood can carry a serious disease. Charles Darwin's debilitating illness was probably caused by one.

Triatoma infestans is one of the Kissing Bugs. Like the ticks - (see how to remove them safely) - these bugs can carry human diseases. T.infestans is the most important carrier of Chaga’s disease in South America.

What happens is that the bug gets infected with the parasite (Trypanosoma cruzi) when he sucks blood from an infected person, and then passes it on when he bites a new victim. The parasite is actually passed out with the bug’s faeces, and then it creeps into the wound which is usually on the lips. Soon after infection there is a chronic reaction, typically with swelling around the lips, and then the disease lays dormant for several years. The later, chronic, stage of the disease is very serious. There is often severe heart damage, and while the disease can be treated just after infection, the chronic disease remains incurable. Even heart transplants don’t seem to work because the parasite just takes advantage of the lowered immune system, reproduces like mad, and then starts doing damage all over again!

Charles Darwin ( famous for his views on evolution ) probably caught Chaga’s Disease when he was bitten by “a great black bug of the pampas” while on his famous voyage round the world in the ‘Beagle’. It is possible to get a vaccination before going to places where the disease is endemic (parts of South America), and you can also use mosquito nets. The worrying thing is that for every one adult flying down to ‘get’ you there will be five young ones crawling up! And that’s not all one has young that camouflage themselves, so that you can end up carrying them into the house with the firewood.

Kissing Bugs are members of the Assassin Bug and Wheel Bug family of insects (Reduviidae). They have been found preserved in Amber - ( Assassin Bug in Colombian Amber). Most Assassin Bugs kill insects so they can be very helpful to man, often killing agricultural and garden pests, and sometimes more directly (such as the ‘Masked Hunter’ who kills bedbugs!). Wheel Bugs are among the many bugs kept as pets by some people who feed them mealworms. They look very unusual but they can give a very nasty bite, so I don’t think I’ll go any further than keeping Silverfish myself!

see also 'animal senses' and, can they control host behaviour as the horsehair worms do?

A few other biological articles might also be of interest.

John Blatchford, Graeme Mathieson

John Blatchford - John Blatchford (Fellow of the Society of Biology UK - Zoology Ph.D.)

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Comments

Aug 22, 2008 12:38 PM
Guest :
Why don't you show a picture it could be interesting to look at!!
Oct 14, 2008 10:33 AM
Guest :
For picture of this insect open "bug week archive's".
Nov 7, 2008 7:14 AM
Guest :
How many bugs in the world are known as the kissing bug? Can you make a list of them all? I'm doing a report for my school and your site has the most information, all I need to know now is how many kissing bugs are there and I needed a list of them. I tried making a list from other sites but I kept getting confused! Please help me out!

Thanks For All The Information!
Nov 8, 2008 12:42 AM
John Blatchford :
(excerpt from Wikipedia)
All members of Triatominae, a subfamily of Reduviidae, can be called kissing bugs. There are more than 130 species in this subfamily.

* Alberproseniini
o Alberprosenia 2
* Bolboderini
o Belminus 9
o Bolbodera 1
o Microtriatoma 2
o Parabelminus 2
* Cavernicolini
o Cavernicola 2
* Linshcosteusinii
o Linshcosteus 6
* Rhodniini
o Psammolestes 3
o Rhodnius 16
* Triatomini
o Dipetalogaster 1
o Eratyrus 2
o Hermanlentia 1
o Meccus 6
o Mepraia 2
o Nesotriatoma 3
o Panstrongylus 13
o Paratriatoma 1
o Triatoma 67

All 138 Triatominae species are potentially able to transmit T. cruzi to humans but the following five species are the most epidemiologically important vectors of Chagas disease.

* Triatoma infestans
* Rhodnius prolixus
* Triatoma dimidiata
* Triatoma brasiliensis
* Panstrongylus megistus


Note: For a complete list of species see Galvão et al [Zootaxa 202: 1-36 (2003)]
(excerpt from Wikipedia)
Dec 1, 2008 7:45 PM
Guest :
i just found one crawling on my rug. it is certainly a kissing bug.
we have a fireplace, so it must have come in through the wood pile.
i will never be able to sleep restfully again.
uuuuuuggggghhhhh.
Jan 4, 2009 7:26 PM
Guest :
I live in Salisbury North Carolina and I wanted To know are they down there and do they have a certain time or season they come out and can they be any where like Rocky Mount North Carolina Where my couisin lives.
Jan 22, 2009 8:40 PM
Guest :
What happen if you are bitten by kissing bug?
what should i do?
Feb 13, 2009 4:30 AM
Guest :
Just for information, heart transplants can be effective, as treatment to eliminate the parasites is commenced before immunosuppression. While relapse can occur, heart transplant may be essential. Also, there is currently no vaccine available contrary to what this article states.
Dr K MacDonald
Sep 27, 2009 7:01 AM
Guest :
This is a scary, scary, scary little bug let me tell you. the little creeps play dead too, just so you all know!!! I had one in my house and thought I killed it with bleach, but the next morning it was gone!!! BEWARE OF THE KISSING BUG
Oct 16, 2009 7:01 PM
Guest :
What is the process of getting rid of the kissing bug once you know you have them? Is it possible for the kissing bug to live two years in the frame of a bunk bed that was made in Brazil. We don't know how we got them and this is one of our only ideas.
Mar 6, 2010 4:48 PM
Guest :
this is a graet websiet.
May 25, 2010 3:45 PM
Guest :
Idk.... I live in Asheville, NC and I wanted to know if they are here as well? I watched the Dr.Oz show today about them and im scared haha
Aug 2, 2010 11:03 AM
Guest :
I live in PA and was bit by one of these. I did not know what it was but someone told me.. Should I be worried I'm pregnant???
Aug 18, 2010 7:41 AM
Guest :
Is there any way or pesticide to kill kissing bugs when they are big population and dangerous to people? Thank you
Oct 13, 2011 5:48 AM
Guest :
Im doing a report so it helps me
Oct 13, 2011 6:02 AM
Guest :
I like this website because its pretty helpful for some reports
Dec 5, 2011 5:31 PM
Guest :
kissing bugs are so scary, and i saw kissing bugs on a thousand ways to die. And now i do not want to be bite by won! i am 8 too...
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