Local Government TV

Tuesday, December 04, 2018

The Rise of the Mosquito

Close your eyes for a moment and imagine the deadliest animal on earth. Many of you may think of a menacing great white shark, raging rhinoceros, ferocious grizzly bear, ill-tempered hippo or a sneaky snake. Everyone hates snakes. But the biggest killer by far is the tiny mosquito. It takes 725,000 lives a year. One child every 30 seconds. It is also responsible for Up until now, mosquitoes have been considered only minor irritants here in the U.S. That's about to change. Thanks to rising temperatures, expect to see the rise of the mosquito. Pestilence, one of the four horsemen mentioned in Revelation, is on its way. But is there any cause for concern here in the Lehigh Valley. The answer seems to be Yes. 

Pennsylvania’s Department of Environmental Protection (DEP), has just released final counts for its surveys of West Nile Virus (WNV). With the wet weather, 2018 was one of the worst years to date for mosquitoes carrying the virus. A sampling of Northampton County mosquito pools turned up 83 positive results compared to only 17 reported in 2017. In Lehigh County, there were 151 positive results compared to just 74 last year.

“We take any threat to public health seriously,” said NorCo Executive Lamont McClure in a statement informing the public of these results. “Northampton County is committed to preventing the transmission of West Nile Virus to humans. In 2019 we will reopen our Vector Control Department. Since 2016, the County has contracted with the Penn State Extension services for West Nile and Zika Virus. As of December 31st, Penn State will no longer run those programs.”

Across Pennsylvania in 2018, there were 115 human cases of WNV recorded, with 8 deaths. The DEP reported a total of 107 avian cases and 108 veterinary cases of the virus. No human, avian or veterinary cases of WNV were reported in Northampton County. But in Lehigh County, four people were infected. 

WNV was first detected in the U.S. in 1999 and affects birds, humans, horses and other mammals. In humans, 80% of the cases are asymptomatic and 20% involve non-neuroinvasive illness. Less than 1% of cases result in conditions such as encephalitis which can cause paralysis and even death. There were nationwide epidemics of the virus in 2003 and 2012.

Adult mosquito surveys are conducted from May through October, testing them for mosquito-borne diseases. Field Techs focus first on standing water, where mosquitoes lay their eggs, taking samples to test for the presence of the virus. Spraying does not take place until an action threshold, a high enough percentage of positive mosquitoes indicating a threat of humans, is reached.

This August, high numbers of positives were detected in the Lehigh Valley so spraying began in hot spots. Safety precautions are taken for any application of pesticides. Public notices are sent out in advance to residents, people with immune problems, and apiaries. Spraying is limited to targeted areas and done at night to avoid affecting honeybees; streams, ponds and rivers are avoided to prevent contamination of waterways.

Successful control of the mosquito population requires community effort. Homeowners should drain any source of standing water on their property, including turning over buckets and pools and tossing unnecessary items and trash. Toys, pots, cans, tire swings and plugged gutters make for excellent mosquito breeding habitats. Mosquitoes can breed in as small a space as a soda bottle cap.

The Lehigh Valley may wish to consider the approach being used by a Google company called Verily to rid Fresno of mosquitoes carrying infectious disease. For the past two years, the City has sent white vans into problem neighborhoods to release, of all things, millions of mosquitoes. They are male mosquitoes. Male mosquitoes don't bite. And these particular mosquitoes are shooting blanks, i.e. are sterile. When they mate with a female, she is unable to produce offspring. The result is less mosquitoes.

After two years of Debug Fresno, Google reports a 95% reduction in mosquitoes carrying infectious disease in Fresno. A similar project in Innisfail, Australia, resulted in a 80% decrease in mosquitoes.

21 comments:

  1. And it rains here every other day . Pools of standing water where there were none ever in my recollection. If the current weather pattern doesn't change , we will eventually have the cold air set in and get snowstorms every other day. Good times.

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  2. Actually mosquitos, along with rat fleas, are part of the solution to climate change.

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  3. These skeeters that are shooting blanks reminds me of my late husband. useless piece of shit.

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  4. Yeah but what about all though other guys that are not sterile? They will still be bug screwing.

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  5. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  6. People need to take a breath, the weather pattern will change, we have had an unusual jet stream this year coming up the coast, it seems to be shifting now to a more normal pattern. This has been the second wettest year on record, the wettest 1913. the rain falls in different parts of the earth, it is ever changing. the Midwest had a 7 year drought in the 1930's, Many lost everything, just packed up and moved out. We must resist the "chicken little" impulse.

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  7. According to the Morning Call News Article this past week, the weather we experienced this past year will be pretty much the norm for the future in the Northeast. They quote learned scientists and their outlook was glum.

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  8. Dearest Bernard..... Slow news day?? Your writing about Mosquito's? whats next? The sand flea and how t could ruin your life chronicle?

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  9. Bernie, with all the parasitic invasive species infecting the area one would think the lehigh valley has become a rainforest or even Zimbabwe in the trudge forward to becoming a third world nation unto itself. My take on it is that the college's claiming to help fight against this invasion are really inserting things even more heinous than ZIKA in the experiments.

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  10. If Bernie was so concerned aboutclimate change he would get back on his bicycle and urge Ron Angle to send his high methane emitters to a hindu sanctuary where they would be safe from an inhuman death

    BLUE BADGER

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  11. Yes 99% of scientists are political hacks. And the political hacks like Trump are really the smart ones. We are screwed. The Chinese won't have to fire a shot.

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  12. In the 1700s, Philadelphia had repeated yellow fever outbreaks. Affluent residents often fled to the country in the summers. The poor stayed behind.

    Must be someone we can blame for that.

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  13. 7.31, lets see how these expert climate scientists make out. predicting the weather is a very inexact science. they are pretty good for 5 day forecasts, beyond that you may want to throw dice.

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  14. We might want to be more concerned about the 2 legged disease carriers that are moving north into the area.

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  15. Climate change had a solution since the 50's...it's called nuclear winter.

    It hasn't been used yet because it's bad for business, when there is no viable currency, i.e. the petrodollar, they will get into their well prepared holes and hit the reset button.

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  16. "We might want to be more concerned about the 2 legged disease carriers that are moving north into the area."

    If you are referring to the Christian pilgrimage seeking sanctuary, the pogrom has started, they are being shot and gassed at our southern boarder.

    May the light of the Lord shine upon you and have mercy on your soul.

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  17. Six billion humans and all their industry cannot possibly impact the planets ecosystem. The bible and Trump said it was OK.

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  18. And those six billion people can survive on whirling bird killers, silicon sun suckers, and fairy dust. Al Gore said it was OK.

    If only they would all bicycle to work.

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