| |
| Mosquito Activity (Scale from 0 to 5) |
- No rain was recorded in the city last week. The mosquito
activity scale is at a 1. Trap counts increased in some places this
week. Dry conditions are dominating the city. The dry conditions are
killing more than mosquitoes, fish and other natural mosquito
predators are being killed off. When it does rain mosquitoes will
have the advantage, this creates the potential for a massive
mosquito increase.
|
| Surveillance |
- The trapping schedule is off slightly this week due to the
holiday on Monday. Data from 10 traps are not reported since the
traps will not be collected until Friday morning.
- 5 CDC style traps were set this week, with a total of 803
mosquitoes caught, for an average of 161 per trap. The bulk of the
mosquitoes trapped this week were at the Landfill trap; we will
monitor these mosquitoes and treat as needed to minimize impacts on
the surrounding neighborhoods. Currently most of the mosquitoes are
not in the neighborhoods.
- 10 Omni-Directional Fay-Prince (OFP), used to trap tiger
mosquitoes, caught 83 tiger mosquitoes for an average of 9 per trap.
The Park Manor area of the city seems to be the local hot spot at
this time.
|
| Service Requests |
- We had 5 service requests this week. Service requests normally
increase after Memorial Day. Most of the calls were in the Park
Manor area of the city.
|
| Control |
- Spray crews truck fogged for adult mosquitoes around 800 acres
this week.
- Mosquito control staff continue to systematically seek out known
breeding sites and to treat any standing water were mosquitoes are
breeding. Current efforts are being directed to finding and treating
normally wet areas that are drying up creating isolated pockets of
mosquito breeding.
|
| Citizens Mosquito Control |
- Our weekly surveillance efforts indicate tiger mosquito counts
are increasing. Tiger mosquitoes are the little black and white
striped mosquitoes that bite you below the knees while you are out
working in your yard. These mosquitoes are daytime biters, and are
not very active at night. This means that truck fogging for them
does little or nothing to reduce their numbers. These mosquitoes
only breed in artificial containers, so keeping your yard free of
any containers that hold water is key to keeping your yard free of
these sneaky biters. We need your help to reduce their numbers. Not
only does it help us, you and your neighbors benefit the most.
|
| Federal Activity |
|
|
|
 |