Aedes mosquitoes, Vector Of Disease
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Factors Contributing To The Spread Of Aedes albopictus
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Factors Contributing To The Spread Of Aedes albopictus
- The widespread availability of suitable aquatic habitats
- The movement of containers
- The decline of Ae. aegypti populations
- The rapid adaptation of Ae. albopictus to shorter photoperiods
Although immature (Asian Tiger Mosquito) ATM mosquitoes inhabit many different types of containers, scrap tires probably harbor this mosquito more frequently and in greater numbers than any other type.
Major pest problems caused by ATM are often associated with accumulations of scrap tires.
If vigorously enforced, the new regulations on waste tires will eventually diminish the availability of used tires as habitats for ATM and related mosquitoes.
Other common man-made habitats for immatures of the ATM include bird baths, water bowls for pets, buckets, plates under potted plants, clogged rain gutters and vases used to hold fresh-cut or silk flowers.
Natural containers, such as treeholes and tank bromeliads, also provide suitable habitats for the ATM. Indeed, this mosquito shows a much greater propensity for using natural containers than does YF.
Movement Of Containers
Although most scrap tires are eventually brought to a state-approved disposal site, far too many waste tires end up at these locations only after being retrieved from illegal dump sites.
Improper storage and delays in shredding waste tires has contributed to the spread of ATM. Some of the early invasions sites for ATM in Florida were at regional scrap tire disposal locations which were receiving tires already infested with this mosquito.
Delays in shredding tires allowed these sites to serve as focal points for the spread of ATM to new areas.
In more than a dozen Florida counties, the initial discovery of ATM was made at cemetery sites.
Plastic floral baskets with fresh cut flowers are often placed at a grave site at the time of burial. After a few days, the wilted flowers are discarded , but the baskets are usually recycled. They may return to the same or to a different cemetery holding either fresh or silk flowers. Mosquito eggs laid while the basket is in one cemetery may hatch in another. This invasion route may explain why the ATM became well-established in some cemeteries before appearing in nearby accumulations of waste tires.
Decline In Aedes aegypti Populations
Adaptations To Shorter Photoperiods
Initially, eggs of the ATM in North America would not hatch when the day length was less than 13.5 hours.
This is one of several factors which suggest this mosquito invaded the continental United States from the temperate region of Asia.
Probably due to its temperate origin, the ATM quickly spread in the temperate zone of central and eastern United States.
Be contrast, this mosquito was relatively slow in spreading to lower latitudes. For the ATM to remain active in south and central florida during a significant portion of the year where day lengths for much of the year are less than 13.5 hours, the mosquito had to lower the day length threshold or eliminate the response to day length. Rapid selection for both of these features has occurred in the ATM in peninsular Florida and, throughout much of Florida, this mosquito is now active year around.
Distinguishing Asian Tiger And Yellow Fever Mosquitoes
Adult AT and YF mosquitoes are active during the daytime. They usually can be distinguished with ease in the field by differences in the patterns of the scales on their backs ( Figure 2 ).
In addition, the clypeus, a structure located on the head between and above the proboscis, is covered with white scales in female YF mosquitoes and with only black scales in female ATM. Scales on the back may be rubbed off, especially in specimens taken in traps; whereas the scales on the clypeus are seldom missing.
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The ATM has quickly become a serious pest species in many Florida communities where the annoyance level generated by populations of this mosquito is considerably greater than that caused previously by YFM. The wider range of habitats occupied by the ATM would tend to make it generally more common than YF mosquitoes.
In Florida, the Asian Tiger Mosquito has not been implicated in the transmission of any human pathogens.
However, elsewhere it is a major vector of dengue and yellow fever. Results of laboratory tests indicate that the ATM is capable of serving as a vector for several other viruses that are pathogenic to man or animals.
Control
The best approach for controlling AT and YF mosquitoes is by eliminating larval habitats.
With improved legislation and better informed citizens, it should be possible to greatly reduce the abundance of container-inhabiting mosquitoes throughout Florida.
Current requirements for the storage of waste tires are grossly inadequate for mosquito abatement. The waste tire rule should be revised to require that all tires be stored in dry areas.
Educational programs which inform citizens about the important role they can play to prevent mosquito production in containers around their homes, should be expanded and offered on a continuing basis.
By eliminating unneeded containers and by frequently emptying the water in other containers ( e.g ., bird baths and pet-watering dishes) around their homes, residents can complement the control efforts of the local mosquito control program.
Achieving permanent mosquito control in natural containers, such as tank bromeliads, may be more difficult.
Therefore, homeowners should consider limiting the number of these plants that they place in their yards.
Chemical and microbial larvicides may provide temporary control, but generally they are not cost effective.
Mosquitoes and plant debris can be flushed out of tank bromeliads with a garden hose equipped with an appropriate nozzle.
It is unlikely that plants flushed once or twice a week would produce many adult mosquitoes. Growing bromeliads in plastic pots makes it easier to flush out the mosquitoes.
<hr>Footnotes
1. This document is ENY632, one of a series of the Entomology and Nematology Department, Florida Cooperative Extension Service, Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences, University of Florida. Original publication date September 1997. Revised July 2005. Visit the EDIS Web Site at http://edis.ifas.ufl.edu.
2. G. F. O'Meara, professor, Florida Medical Entomology Laboratory, Cooperative Extension Service, Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences, University of Florida,Vero Beach, FL 32962.
<hr>The Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences (IFAS) is an Equal Opportunity Institution authorized to provide research, educational information and other services only to individuals and institutions that function with non-discrimination with respect to race, creed, color, religion, age, disability, sex, sexual orientation, marital status, national origin, political opinions or affiliations. For more information on obtaining other extension publications, contact your county Cooperative Extension service.
U.S. Department of Agriculture, Cooperative Extension Service, University of Florida, IFAS, Florida A. & M. University Cooperative Extension Program, and Boards of County Commissioners Cooperating. Larry Arrington, Dean.
<hr>Copyright Information
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So, in other words,
After having witnessing the effect of this vector in La Réunion, in India, in Africa, in South-East Asia, in South America, in Central America, here it comes to Mexico and Southern United States.
The success of FT in India was our lead time concerning the Chickungunya diseases carriers ( Aedes Aegyti ), some Health Minister decided to take the raw datas from France (La Réunion) and swiftly implement Mosquitoes Control Measures.
Fall 2006,
Despite in restraint diffusion, we have notice a sudden upsurge of Dengue Hemmoragic Fever in countries bordering US.
The University of Florida, one of the best in the world concerning Mosquitoes Control now warn us to expect some problems wih this mosquito.
As post above, each and one of us, and trough groups (As seen in La Réunion and India) can make a difference on breeding site, thus reduce morbidity and mortality.
Please do not underestimate the effect on thousands and thousands of individuals, and therefore on society of the effects of Dengue, Chickungunya or Yellow Fever.