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University of California Division of Agriculture and Natural Resources Publication 3337
Aquatic Pest Control: About Mosquitoes (from Chapter 4)Pesticide Application Compendium,
Volume 5
Habitats for MosquitoesOther Pests in the Aquatic Environment (Mosquito information from Chapter 4)Besides aquatic weeds, you may also need to control animals that become pests in aquatic areas. These include some invertebrates, such as insects, crabs, and mussels, and a few vertebrates—certain fish, birds, and mammals. As pests, these invertebrate and vertebrate organisms compete with or destroy native plants and animals, interfere with water flow, weaken levees and embankments, or cause health hazards to people and livestock. Invertebrate PestsInvertebrates are usually considered aquatic pests if they
For example, some species of mosquitoes transmit organisms that cause malaria, encephalitic, other human diseases, and canine heartworm. Update: West Vile virus. Pest clams and crabs interfere with water transmission systems in California. Certain snails harbor parasitic larvae that burrow into human skin. And mammals such as squirrels and rats damage levees and other structures with their burrowing activities. InsectsThe insects that are of most concern in aquatic environments are mosquitoes, black flies, and midges that feed on the blood of people or other animals. Some of these are capable of transmitting diseases organisms during blood feeding. Other insects become nuisances when they occur in recreational area in large numbers or occasionally inflict painful bites on swimmers. The larval stages of some aquatic insects attach to pipes or other structures in sufficient numbers that reduce water flow. MosquitoesMosquitoes are the most serious aquatic insect pests, because some species vector human and animal disease organisms (see sidebar below). The most significant pest genera are Anopheles, Culex, and Aedes. Anopheles species are the principal malaria-carrying mosquitoes. Mosquitoes belong to the order Diptera, which also includes flies, midges, and gnats. Adults in this order have sucking mouthparts and only one pair of wings. Mosquitoes are distinguished from other Diptera by the structure of their mouthparts, which include a slender proboscis. Adult females use this specially adapted proboscis to penetrate skin and feed on blood. Experts identify mosquito species by the scales along the wing veins and body. Scales of individual species vary in color and arrangement. Of the more than 2,600 species of mosquitoes worldwide, approximately 50 live in California. Only adult females feed on blood, but not all females are bloodfeeders. Adult male mosquitoes generally feed on nectar and other plant juices. Mosquitoes typically breed and lay their eggs in water clogged with such vegetation as waterlettuce, hydrilla, waterhyacinth, and cattail. They also deposit their eggs in drainage ditches, on river and stream flood plains, and in other standing water.
Mosquito-Transmitted Organisms.Mosquitoes in the United States transmit several blood-borne disease organisms. In California, mosquitoes vector the organisms that cause two important human diseases, malaria and encephalitis. (Update: West Vile virus.) In addition, mosquitoes vector the canine heartworm organism, a parasite that causes a serious and often fatal disease in dogs and cats. Controlling Mosquitoes.The most effective mosquito control method involves draining or eliminating breeding areas. When this is not possible, control efforts include spraying insecticides and using natural enemies such as small larvae-eating fish. Mosquito abatement districts in California are responsible for controlling mosquito breeding areas. Before beginning any mosquito management efforts, contact your local mosquito abatement district for information and coordination of efforts. Draining.The task of draining or eliminating breeding areas includes cleaning drainage ditches of debris and weeds, packing tree holes with sand or cement, emptying or overturning water-holding containers, and covering structures and vessels that could hold water and serve as mosquito-breeding areas.
Biological Control.Mosquitofish are effective biological control agents for mosquito larvae. The term "mosquitofish" usually refers to Gambusia affinis, a species that resembles guppies. Used in mosquito control in California since 1921, the mosquitofish is an extremely important biological control agent. Mosquito abatement districts stock them in marshlands, canals, roadside ditches, creeks, ponds, garden pools, rice fields, livestock-watering ponds, and water storage reservoirs. Another biological control agent is a strain of the bacterium Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt), which occurs naturally in the soil and on plants. Different varieties of this bacterium produce a crystalline protein that is toxic to specific groups of insects. The variety israelensis is used to control mosquitoes, black flies, and fungus gnat larvae.
About the Authors:Entomologist Patrick O'Connor Marer served as the pesticide training coordinator, Pesticide Safety Education Program, UC Statewide Integrated Pest Management Program, from 1987-2004 when he retired from the university. Journalist Kathy Keatley Garvey, a UC Davis writer and photographer since 1986, joined the Pesticide Safety Education Program in 1996, and the UC Mosquito Research Program in 2005. The photographs are the work of principal photographer Jack Kelly Clark, UC Agricultural and Natural Resources. Garvey also captured some of the images published in the manual. |