UW library freezes bedbugs off infested books

SEATTLE — The University of Washington’s libraries are checking for bedbugs after some of the little blood-suckers were found making a home in architecture books.

Staffers at a library in Gould Hall were checking in books in August when they spotted some small black dots.

“That made them look closer, and they realized there were some bedbugs in the spine of the books,” said Stephanie Lamson, preservation librarian.

The bugs had crawled into the space that opens along the spine of hardcover books between the cover and the paper.

Concerned about an infestation, the staff took those books and others around them and quarantined them in plastic bags. After bugs turned up at the same library a second time that month they debugged about 45 books in a natural history museum freezer.

High heat also kills bedbugs, but the library didn’t want to risk damaging the books.

A temperature of 18 degrees below zero killed the pests discovered in the architecture books, Lampson said Friday.

The books were frozen for seven days, allowed to warm up for six days, and put back in the freezer for another week. The second dip in the deep freeze was to kill any bugs that hatched from eggs after the first chill.

“We also had a bedbug-sniffing dog come through, just to be very careful,” Lamson said. “And we were cleared.”

Since then, all of the university’s libraries — there are more than a dozen — have been on the lookout for the insects, which can be difficult to eradicate. No other book bugs have been sighted.

The buggy tomes had been returned to the library book drop at the College of Built Environments on the Seattle campus.

Because of privacy protections, no record was retained to identify the patron with the pests. Lamson believes it’s “someone who had an apartment or home infested and had books close to the bed probably for some time because bedbugs like small, dark, contained spaces.”

“They probably had a significant problem,” she said.

Lamson says she is sick of bedbugs, especially after the attention the library is getting following a New York Times story. There’s a very low risk of picking up bedbug at a library, she said.

“You don’t need to be afraid of your library.”

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