Neighborhood Mapping of Fine-scale Larval Mosquito Distribution

Routine inspection for mosquito larvae involves counting larvae in water samples taken by a pint-sized “dipper” on a yard-long stick. Mosquito control personnel take hundreds of such samples per day in a haphazard fashion—dipping wherever they suspect larvae may inhabit. Using this approach, field biologists find hotspots effectively, cover a lot of ground, and treat…

Door-to-door OWTS Tank Survey

Effluent discharged into ditches is not the only source conducive for mosquito production associated with OWTS. Mosquitoes can infiltrate OWTS settling tanks if lids are broken, missing, or other access points allow entry. In 2019, field biologists performed inspections door-to-door in the Tammany Hills neighborhood to understand whether mosquito production was occurring within OWTS tanks.…

Why Should I Care?

Q: I keep my “septic” system (OWTS) maintained all the time, why should I care about mosquitoes these systems may produce? A: The answer is that because mosquitoes can fly, even if you keep your OWTS working, your neighbor’s unmaintained system may be producing mosquitoes that can transmit WNV. In fact, according to our partners…

Outreach and Advocacy to Address the Root Cause

Knowing there is a problem and providing temporary mitigation to limit mosquito populations does not address the root cause of the sewage-associated mosquito production. In 2015, STPMAD joined an informal Water Quality Taskforce consisting of St. Tammany Parish Departments of Planning and Environmental Services, LA Department of Environmental Quality, LA Department of Health, LA Sea…