Midsummer is shirt-sleeve weather, an enjoyable time of year to be out and about with family and friends. But it is also the heart of mosquito season, so beware the health risks caused by their bites.
The No. 1 prevention practice is eliminating any standing water that could serve as a mosquito-breeding site.
โStill water is a great environmentโ for the insects, said Scott Zide, founder of Mosquito Squad, a mosquito and tick control service with 200 locations around the nation. โOne-hundred-plus mosquitoes can be hatched from a single bottlecap full of water.โ
Tire swings, buckets, fire pits, rain barrels, plant saucers, empty pots, clogged downspouts, ornamental fountains, birdbaths, wheelbarrows, animal dishes and kidsโ toys, including wading pools, even upside-down Frisbees, can collect enough water for mosquitoes to breed.
โThese are the kinds of things you have to turn over,โ Zide said.
Some mosquitoes drop eggs that cling like glue to the sides of water-filled containers, he said. โThese you have to sanitize, making sure theyโre cleaned and scraped off and with no water left behind.โ
The life cycle of a mosquito is broken into four parts: egg, larva, pupa and adult. All need water to survive, with temperature and species determining how long each stage lasts. Female mosquitoes generally live less than two weeks.
Most mosquito bites cause only itching or skin irritation, but a few of the 200-plus mosquito species in North America carry viruses acquired from birds and animals that can cause debilitating diseases in humans, even death. Among them: malaria, dengue, equine encephalitis, heartworms, West Nile and Zika viruses.
โOnly a handful of mosquito types feed on humans,โ said Laura Harrington, an entomology professor at Cornell University. โSome are generalists, and some mosquitoes are very specific in their blood-host preferences.
โMosquitoes vary in the time of day that they feed as well,โ she said. Carriers of Zika, she said, โtend to feed during daylight hours, in contrast to many West Nile vectors (carriers) that feed at dusk, dawn or night.โ
Some additional tips about reducing mosquito numbers in the yard:
Covers and screens. Place tight lids on containers used for water storage so mosquitoes canโt get inside to lay eggs, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says. Use mesh with holes smaller than an adult mosquito to cover containers without lids.
Irrigation. โWater right over the plant. Donโt overspray. That can produce standing water,โ said Ryan Larsen, a civil engineer with NDS Inc., a water management company in Woodland Hills, Calif. โInstall an efficient irrigation system to reduce that.โ
Ponds and water fixtures. Install a pump to keep the water moving. โSmall pumps work great in small ponds, but theyโre not effective as ponds get larger,โ Larsen said. โGet fish that will eat mosquito larvae.โ
Remove tarps or stretch them tight.
Team Up. Work with your neighbors, especially in neighborhoods with little space between lots, to police areas that could affect each otherโs property.
For more about mosquito prevention and protection on your property, see this Centers for Disease Control fact sheet: www.cdc.gov/dengue/resources/factSheets/mosquito-control.pdf
Contact Dean Fosdick at deanfosdick@netscape.net
