An exhibition opening May 28, 2011, at the Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History features those dreaded little creatures notorious for preying on humans and sucking their blood: bedbugs, head lice, pubic lice, mosquitoes, ticks and fleas. Invasion of the Bloodsuckers: Bedbugs and Beyond explores the biology and habitats of these bloodsucking arthropods, including where and how they live, how to deal with them and how to tell them apart from lookalikes.
Blood feeders need one essential element to live: blood. Through family-friendly displays, interactive exercises, blood-feeding footage, and actual specimens, the exhibit demonstrates the diversity of these blood-feeding organisms and their relationship to humans. Each organism has a unique repertoire of adaptations and a distinct lifestyle that have evolved in close association with a host. Computer animations show the ancestral prototype mouthparts of arthropods as they morph into their present day form—the chewing herbivorous mouthparts evolving into a blood feeding tool.
Leonard Munstermann, Peabody’s curator of entomology and a senior research scientist at the Yale School of Public Health, wanted to show the public how to distinguish between bloodsuckers and other organisms often mistaken for them—important information because whereas most bites are harmless, deadly ones may go unnoticed. Some two dozen look-alike specimens from the Peabody collections are on display along with those of the bloodsuckers and information regarding anatomy and habits.