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TULSA MASTER GARDENERS
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MOSQUITOES
By Ed Lee Master Gardener
Insects -
Order Diptera, the True Flies, a single pair of wings,
but unlike other flies, their wings have scales along the veins and wing margin.
Female mouthparts form a long piercing-sucking proboscis. Males have very plumose
(feathery) antennae and do not bite.
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Mosquitoes have been the bane of mankind
for millennia. In 300 B.C., Aristotle referred to mosquitoes as "empis" in his
"Historia Animalium" where he documented their life cycle and metamorphic
abilities.1
They can disrupt work, ruin vacations and reduce
the pleasure of gardening. They are capable of transmitting
diseases such as malaria, yellow fever, filariasis, and dengue to man, encephalitis
to man and horses, and heartworm to dogs.
There are over 2500 different species of mosquitoes throughout
the world, of which
150 species occur in the United States.
1
Common types of mosquitoes found in Oklahoma are placed in the genera
Aedes, Anopheles, Culex, and Psorophora.
2
- Aedes
mosquitoes are painful and persistent biters,
attacking humans during daylight hours. They do not
normally enter homes. Aedes mosquitoes
are strong fliers and are known to fly many miles from
their breeding sources. Aedes
and also Psorophora
mosquitoes do not breed in ponds, lakes or extremely
stagnant water, so, control efforts during rain periods
should be directed at eliminating temporary standing
water pools.2
- Culex
mosquitoes are painful and persistent
biters at dusk and after dark. They prefer to attack
domestic and wild birds rather than man, cows,
and horses. They will enter homes in search of blood meals.
Some Culex species are known to transmit
encephalitis (sleeping sickness) to
man and horses. The Culex mosquitoes develop
in standing or very stagnant water. They cannot survive
the wave action of open bodies of
water or the movement of water in flowing streams.
Culex mosquitoes are often found in
containers that hold water, e.g. tanks, troughs, barrels, tin cans, tires, etc.2 Culex are
generally weak fliers and do not move far from home,
although they have been known to fly up to two miles.
Culex usually live only a few weeks during
the warm summer months. Those females which emerge in
late summer search for sheltered areas
where they "hibernate" until spring. Warm
weather brings them out in search of water on which to
lay their eggs.1
- Culiseta
mosquitoes are moderately aggressive
biters, attacking in the evening hours or in shade
during the day.1
- Anopheles
mosquitoes are the only mosquito which transmits malaria
to man.1
The last decade of the twentieth century saw the
introduction of a new more vicious biter in Tulsa County, the Asian tiger mosquito,
Aedes albopictus.
The Asian Tiger Mosuito,
known as a "Container Breeder" because it
deposits its eggs in small collections of contained
water rather than the swamps or marshes, is a highly
ornamented mosquito that is relatively easy to spot by
even the casual observer. The mosquito's color pattern
consists of a dark black background that is highlighted
with bright white markings.
The legs are broadly striped with
snow white scales, the thorax has a
distinct white racing stripe down its center and the
abdomen has incomplete white stripes that appear as
lines of bold white dots. Although the name implies
formidable size, the Asian Tiger Mosquito is really
quite small. A robust adult female in quest of a blood
meal measures slightly less than 1/4" in total
length. 4
The Asian Tiger is a
persistent biter that can be a significant pest near
its breeding habitat. When the species occurs in large
numbers in backyard situations, people can be driven
indoors. The mosquito is an opportunistic
feeder which will bite as often during
broad daylight as it will at dusk.
Typical host-seeking behavior involves approaching
at ankle level and working its way up the
body to find a suitable spot to engorge.
4
Mosquito
Development
The mosquito goes through four
separate and distinct stages in its development cycle: Egg,
Larva, Pupa, and Adult.
- Eggs: The females
of some Aedes species deposit eggs on
moist surfaces, such as mud or fallen leaves, that may
be near water but dry. When these areas reflood it
stimulates the eggs to hatch into larvae.
The females of the Culex, Culiseta, and
Anopheles deposit their eggs
directly on the surface of still water sheltered from
the wind by grass and weeds, such as ditches, street
catch basins, tire tracks, streams that are drying up,
and fields or excavations that hold water for some
time.3
- Larva:
The larva (larvae - plural) live in the water and come
to the surface to breathe. They shed (molt) their skin
four times, growing larger after each molting. The
larvae feed on micro-organisms and organic matter in
the water. On the fourth molt the larva changes into a
pupa.1
- Pupa: The
pupal stage is a resting, non-feeding stage. This is
the time the mosquito turns into an adult. When
development is complete, the pupal skin splits and the
mosquito emerges as an adult.1
- Adult:
The newly emerged adult rests on the surface of the
water for a short time to allow itself to dry and all
its body parts to harden. The wings have to spread out
and dry properly before it can fly.1
When adult mosquitoes emerge
from the aquatic stages, they mate, and the young adult female seeks a blood meal.
The young adult female mosquito taking her first blood meal does not transmit diseases.
It is the older female who may have picked up a disease organism in an earlier
blood meal that can transmit the disease during a subsequent blood meal.3 Plant nectar is the principle food source for the male.
2
Mosquito
Control
Large-scale mosquito control
cannot be obtained through individual efforts. These controls consist
of eliminating breeding areas by drainage, spreading oil films over
the surface of the water, using insecticides to destroy the larvae or
pupae, or spraying with contact insecticides to kill the adults. Since
all of these controls may also destroy habitats, kill fish, birds, or
other valuable wildlife, they should be undertaken only after careful
study by professionally trained people.
In the Tulsa area contact the Tulsa City-County
Health Department at (918) 595-4219 for further information.
Large-scale control is vital for a successful
mosquito control program, however, without the cooperation of the
individual homeowner it is doomed to failure. The homeowner can use
the following techniques to assist in the overall control effort.
- Aquatic Stage
Control - Since mosquitoes spend their
larval and pupal stages in water, the most effective
way to control mosquitoes is to find and eliminate
their breeding sites.
- Backyard
Control
- Remove tin
cans, old tires, buckets, plastic
sheeting, glass jars, broken toys, and
other containers that collect and hold
water.
- Do not
allow water to accumulate at the base of
flower pots, in pet dishes, wheel
barrows, or truck beds for more than 2
days.
- Change
water in bird baths, fountains, and
wading pools at twice a week.
- Irrigate
lawns and gardens carefully to prevent
water from standing for several days.
- Keep grass
mowed around ponds and other bodies of
water.
- Clean
debris from rain gutters and remove any
standing water under or around
structures, or on flat roofs.
- Check
around faucets and air conditioner units
and repair leaks or puddles that remain
for several days.
- Fill or
drain puddles, ditches and swampy areas.
- Either
remove, drain or fill tree holes and
stumps with mortar.
- Eliminate
seepage from cisterns, cesspools, and
septic tanks.
- Eliminate
standing water around animal watering
troughs and culverts.
- Biological
Control
- Stock
ornamental pools with top feeding
predacious minnows. Known as mosquito
fish, these minnows are about 1 to 1-1/2
inches in length and can be purchased or
seined from streams and creeks.
- Chemical
Control
- Place
Bacillus thuringiensis var.
isralensis
(B.t.i.) in the form of Mosquito Dunks or
briquets in standing water that
cannot be drained.
- Adult Mosquito
Control - Adult mosquitoes can fly long
distances, therefore, it is often necessary to
supplement larval control on your premises with control
measures directed against mosquito adults.
- Mechanical
Barriers
- Mosquitoes
can be kept out of the home by keeping
windows, doors and porches tightly
screened (16-18 mesh). Those insects
that do get into structures can be
eliminated
with a fly swatter or an aerosol space
spray containing synergized
pyrethrin.1
- Chemical
Controls
-
Repellents are
substances that make a mosquito avoid
biting people. Several repellents are
effective in preventing mosquito
bites.
- Use
repellents containing ingredients
such as diethyl toluamide
(DEET).2
The active ingredient will be
listed on the label. The area of
skin to be protected should be
covered evenly, because
mosquitoes will find and bite
untreated spots. It is often
helpful to use spray repellents
on outer clothing as well as the
skin. Repellents are formulated
and sold as aerosols, creams,
solids (sticks) and liquids. You
should keep repellents away from
eyes, nostrils and lips.
Protection generally may be
expected up to 6 hours following
application.
- Oil
of citronella is another type of
mosquito repellent for space
repelling. Oil of citronella is
the active ingredient in many of
the candles, torches, or coils
which may be burned to produce a
smoke which repels mosquitoes.
These are useful outdoors only
under windless conditions. Their
effectiveness is somewhat less
than repellents applied to the
body or clothing.
- Space
sprays may be used to kill mosquitoes
present at the time of treatment. The major
advantage of space treatment is immediate
knockdown, quick application, and relatively
small amounts of materials required for
treatment. Space sprays are most effective
indoors. Outdoors, the insecticide particles
disperse rapidly and may not kill many
mosquitoes. The major disadvantage of space
spraying is that it will not manage insects for
long periods of time.
- Mosquitoes
can be killed inside the house by using
space sprays or aerosols containing
synergized pyrethrum or synthetic
pyrethroids (allethrin, resmethrin,
etc.) which have proven effective and
are readily available.
2 Only
insecticides labeled for flying insect
management should be sprayed into the
air. Best results are obtained if doors
and windows are kept closed during
spraying and for 5-10 minutes after
spraying. Follow directions on the
label.
- Homeowners
may use hand-held foggers or fogging
attachments on tractors or lawn mowers
for temporary outdoor relief from flying
mosquitoes. Read the label of the
insecticide very carefully. Some
products are toxic to fish, birds,and
other wildlife. Many may spot car
finishes. Read and follow the
instructions on the fogging attachments
for correct application procedure. Apply
the sprays upwind, so the droplets drift
through the area where mosquito control
is desired. Apply in small amounts
periodically, this kills any new
mosquitoes that have migrated into the
area.
- Attractants
- Mosquitoes are attracted by
perspiration, warmth, body odor, carbon dioxide,
and light. Several devices are sold that are
supposed to attract, trap, and destroy mosquitoes
and other flying insects. However, if these
devices are attractive to mosquitoes, they
probably will attract more mosquitoes into the
area and may, therefore, increase rather than
decrease mosquito annoyance.
3
- Vegetation
Management
- Adult mosquitoes
prefer to rest on weeds and other vegetation.
- Homeowners can reduce the number of areas
where adult mosquitoes can find shelter by
cutting down weeds adjacent to the foundation
and in their yards, and mowing the lawn
regularly.
- To further reduce adult mosquitoes
harboring in vegetation, insecticides may be
applied to the lower limbs of shade trees,
shrubs and other vegetation. Products
containing allethrin or malathion have proven
effective. Pay particular attention to shaded
areas. Apply the insecticides as coarse
sprays onto vegetation, walls and other
potential mosquito resting areas using a
compressed air sprayer.1 Do not
overapply liquid insecticides, the excess
spray drips from the sprayed surfaces to the
ground where it is ineffective. These sprays
are not effective for more than one or two
days.3
Always read and follow label directions
before using any pesticide.
Insect
Electrocutors
- Numerous devices
are available for purchase which claim to
attract, repel or kill outdoor infestations
of mosquitoes. Most of these devices are
ineffective and should be thoroughly
researched before being purchased. Insect
electocutors (bug zappers) utilizing
ultraviolet light as an attractant have
been shown to be ineffective in reducing
outdoor populations of mosquitoes or their
biting activity.1
CAUTION!
Pesticides mentioned in this web page are registered for
use in Oklahoma, USA!5 The use of some
products may not be legal in your state or country. Please check
with your local county agent or regulatory official before using
any pesticide mentioned in this article.
ALWAYS READ AND FOLLOW LABEL
DIRECTIONS FOR SAFE USE OF ANY PESTICIDE!
Sources:
1. Mosquito Information, Tom Floore, The American
Mosquito Control Association
2.
Oklahoma State University Extension
Facts F-7012, Mosquito Control, by Kenneth Pinkston and Russell
Wright (No Longer Available)
3.
New Jersey Agriculture Experiment
Station Publication SA220-5M-86, Mosquitoes in Your Life, by
Donald J. Sutherland and Wayne J. Crans
4. Rutgers Cooperative Extension Fact Sheet
# FS845, The Asian Tiger Mosquito in New Jersey, Wayne J. Crans
5. Pesticide Database, Oklahoma Department
of Agriculture
6. A Field Guide to the Insects of America North of Mexico,
Borror, Donald J. and White,Richard E., The Peterson Field Guide
Series.
Need More Help?
Walk-ins are welcome at the
Master Gardeners office at the O.S.U Extension Center, 4116 E.
15th Street (Fairground Gate #6). You can reach us by phone
at (918) 746-3701 or the Tulsa Garden Center (2435 S.
Peoria) Master Gardener line (918) 746-5130. Our hours are
from 9:00 a.m to 4:00 p.m. Monday through Friday. The Garden
Center office is closed from noon to 1:00 for lunch.
Oklahoma State University
Cooperative Extension Service offers its programs regardless of
race, color, national origin, sex, religion, age or handicap, and
is an equal opportunity employer. Work in Agriculture, Home
Economics, and Related Fields, USDA, OSU and County Commissioners
Cooperating.
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URI:/insects/mosquitoes.shtml
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Date Modified:Friday, 29-Jul-2005 22:09:51 EDT
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Saturday, 17-May-2008 09:16:52 GMT
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