
HOW DO I CONTACT MOSQUITO
CONTROL?
The Chambers County Mosquito Control offices are
located at 336 Airport Road, Anahuac, Texas, 77514. We can be reached during
normal business hours from 8 AM to noon and 1 PM to 5 PM, Monday through Friday,
at 409-267-2720. When the mosquitoes are bad, you may have to call several times
in order to get through. Please be nice to our secretary when you call -
remember, it's not her fault!
WHAT CAN I DO TO HAVE LESS MOSQUITOES AT
MY HOUSE?
The first line of defense is to make sure that you are
not breeding mosquitoes on your own property. Walk your yard and check for
anything that is holding water. Anything that can hold water for 5 days or more
is a potential mosquito breeding site. Even bottle caps are capable of producing
mosquitoes.
If you can, remove the container or store it where it
will not fill with water. This is the best way to handle the problem. If the
container is a bird bath, pet water dish, or some other container that you can
not remove, then be sure to rinse it out completely every 3 days. Do NOT simply add water to the container - you must flush the
mosquito larvae out onto the ground to kill them. If you collect rain water for
your plants, simply place a piece of screen over the container so that the
mosquitoes can't get in to lay eggs.
Remember to clean your rain gutters! Blockages can cause
water to stand in them long enough to produce mosquitoes. Fill in low areas in
your yard or under your house if possible. Repair all water leaks as soon as
possible. Even plastic sheeting can hold water in the folds and produce large
numbers of mosquitoes. Remember, if you breed mosquitoes, you will feed
mosquitoes.
When mosquitoes are flying in from miles away, there is
little the home owner can do. Most importantly, you do not want to attract
mosquitoes to your house. Either turn off security lights or replace them with
motion detector lights that come on only when needed. If you must have a
security light on at all times, change the bulb from a mercury vapor to a sodium
vapor bulb. The yellowish sodium vapor light is less attractive to insects than
the blue-white mercury vapor light. Turn off your bug zapper - less than 2% of
the bugs that you see killed are actually mosquitoes, but the light does attract
them into the area.
MOSQUITOES
We have approximately 50 species of mosquitoes in
Chambers County. Of these, the public commonly encounters about 12. It is
important to know which species you are dealing with before control strategies
can be planned and initiated, as the different species vary in breeding sites,
flight ranges, peak activity periods, and biting behavior.
BASIC BIOLOGY
Eggs are laid in one of two ways, depending on the
species. Some species (pool breeders) lay eggs directly on standing water. These
eggs hatch in 24 to 48 hours, and the mosquito larvae take 5 to 7 days to emerge
as adults. Fresh eggs are laid every day, so mosquito production is constant
unless the water evaporates. This type of egg laying behavior is also common in
artificial containers such as tires, bird baths, buckets & cans, rain
gutters, etc. These species usually fly only 1 to 5 miles.
Other species (flood water breeders) lay eggs on dry
ground in depressions or low areas that will hold water after a rain or high
tide. These eggs are viable for several years, and will hatch in minutes after
being submerged if water temperatures are in the right range. Again, 5 to 7 days
are spent in the larval stage before the mosquito emerges as an adult. Because
all the eggs hatch at once, large numbers of mosquitoes are produced
simultaneously. Think of them as tiny time bombs! This is why you have no
mosquitoes on one day, and the next day you are covered with them. These species
can fly up to 100+ miles. Some species also lay these eggs in dry artificial
containers.
Regardless of the species, only 20% of the eggs that are
deposited survive to become adults, and of these, about half, or 10%, are
females. This means that only 10% of the potential mosquito population causes
all of our problems.
RICE FIELD MOSQUITOES
These are a large black mosquito with white or yellow
bands on their legs. They are a flood water variety, with an average flight
range is 20 to 40 miles. They are very aggressive biters, both day and night.
The eggs are deposited in rice fields, fallow fields, & pastures in any
depression that will hold water, including hoof prints. These mosquitoes are
attracted to Chambers County and other areas in the gulf coast by the
glow of lights at night, which can be found in any area of the county. We try to intercept these mosquitoes as they migrate
in. Residents can do nothing to help us control this species.
SALT MARSH MOSQUITOES
These are medium sized brown mosquito with white bands on
their legs. Also a flood water variety, they are very aggressive biters with a
flight range of 100+ miles. This species is most common in the eastern and
southern areas of the county, and is attracted to town by city and industrial
lights. Again, we try to intercept them on the edge of town as they move in. The
public, again, can do nothing to help.
ASIAN TIGER MOSQUITOES
Although first discovered in this country in 1985 in
Houston, Texas, this species has become the #1 urban mosquito in the south. This
is a small black mosquito with silver or white bands on the legs and one white
stripe down the back between the wings. It lays eggs only in containers, not in
puddles on the ground. Breeding sites for this species were originally in tree
rot holes and stumps, but it now takes extensive advantage of the artificial
containers that we so thoughtfully provide (cans, buckets, tires, bird baths,
clogged rain gutters, pet water dishes, anything that will hold water for 5 to 7
days). Eggs are laid just above the water line in the container. Rain fall or
movement of the container submerges the eggs, which hatch in minutes. Peak
activity period for this mosquito is rather unusual, being during middle of the
day instead of at night. The flight range for this mosquito only 1 to 2 miles,
so if you breed them, you will feed them. They are hesitant but persistent in
biting behavior. This species receives only minimal exposure to our sprays due
to the unusual daytime activity period. The only effective control for this
mosquito is removal of the breeding sites by property owner. The public must
help with this one.
CULEX SPECIES
These are small, nondescript brown mosquitoes, most of
which are active only at night. They breed in standing water high in organic
matter, and are common in underground storm sewers and in water standing under
houses built on piers. They have only a 1 to 5 mile flight range. One species
can transmit St Louis Encephalitis if it bites an infected bird and then bites a
human. Residents can help by eliminating water standing around the home.
CHEMICALS
Our insecticides have no real residual effect. We must
actually hit the mosquito directly with a droplet in order to kill it. If more
mosquitoes fly into an area after the spray has settled, they are not effected.
Obviously, it is very important to spray the right place at the right time under
the right weather conditions in order to achieve control. It is very frustrating
and expensive when large populations of mosquitoes are rapidly re-infesting
residential areas, as repeated sprays are required. Spray trucks are sufficient
for light mosquito populations, but aircraft are needed for moderate to heavy
infestations and covering large areas quickly.
SURVEILLANCE
This is the key to the control program. We must spray
only where needed and when needed in order to contact the maximum number of
mosquitoes with the droplets. Surveillance methods used include mosquito traps,
take landing rates (count the number that lands on you from the waist down in
three minutes at different locations in the county), and considering citizen
service requests when planning control efforts. We must have enough mosquitoes
in an area to justify expense of control activity, as the cost to put an
aircraft up with a load of chemical is approximately $4300. We can cover 4,000
acres with that one flight.
URBAN FLIGHT
More and more people are moving from the relatively
mosquito free urban areas to the country and suburbs. Folks are moving to the country for the "good life," but
forgetting that the "good life" includes snakes, alligators, rats, mosquitoes,
and mosquito control aircraft coming over at 200 feet early in the morning or in
late evening.
People are moving into our primary intercept zones, often in subdivisions that were recently
ricefields or are surrounded by rice fields. It takes them a while to get used
to the mosquito activity levels and the frequency of aerial spraying. Some
residents don't like us spraying over them, but want us to somehow get rid of
the mosquitoes. They do not understand the lack of residual in our chemicals.
WHY DOES IT TAKE SO LONG TO
SPRAY?
Chambers County has approximately 600 square miles of
territory. Our recent rural and suburban population growth has dramatically
increased the acreage in the aerial spray sections. The result is that with
perfect weather conditions, it takes us about 5 days using 1 aircraft to cover
all of the spray sections one time. Under heavy mosquito situations, we just
can't keep up with the re-infestation rate. Even so, we use an average of 10,000
gallons of spray each year and cover over 625,000 acres each year with the
aircraft alone.
MOSQUITO TRIVIA
Mosquitoes cannot transmit AIDS.
Purple martins and bats may eat a few mosquitoes, in
fact, we count on their help, but they will not cause a noticeable drop in your
mosquito population.
Only female mosquitoes bite. Blood supplies proteins to
build eggs with, rather than being a food source. Mosquitoes live on
carbohydrate sources like nectar and plant sap. They have even been known to
sneak a little sugar water of hummingbird feeders.
YOU STILL HAVE QUESTIONS?
If you need additional information or answers to any
questions that are not covered here, then call the Mosquito Control office. If we do not know the answer, we probably
know who to ask to find out.
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