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Mosquito Control & Mosquito-borne Disease
#11
Thanks, everyone, for these useful comments and thanks, Carey, for this excellent link you provided. Such a useful summary it provides.

http://www.hawaiiconservation.org/_libra...quitos.pdf

All very useful.

By the way, my experience in Southeast Asia and South America is that sleeping under a mosquito net makes a huge difference in the number of bites, long term. Articles and news notes I have come across recently also suggest that a new type of mosquito netting permeated with insecticide is especially useful in this regard. These treated mosquito-bed-nettings have been distributed free to a vulnerable population (pregnant women) and outcomes monitored in regions enduring significant incidence of mosquito-borne disease problems ...with impressive positive gains in overall public health resulting (please see "Mosquito nets cut birth problems" at
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/6591169.stm for more information on that topic).

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Astonishing skill! This archer is a real-life Legolas and then some!
http://geekologie.com/2013/11/real-life-...rs-anc.php

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#12
Carey,

The depth and breadth of your knowledge never ceases to amaze me. Who needs google when you've got Carey around? Smile

Aloha,

Tim
Tim

A superior man is modest in his speech, but exceeds in his actions--Confucius
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#13
Try cuban oregano. Easy to grow. Wipe leaf on your skin. The scented oil in the leaf repels them.

Kapoho myth busters (catch it live on the deck at 5:30 PM) tested this out on a teenager. We sprayed on side with canned mosquito repellant. He ran out so I gave him oregano leaves to use which he wiped all over exposed areas of skin. Then they went prawn hunting (fishing?) Oregano side had one bite. DDT side had numerous bites.
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#14
makes you think about mosquitoes in a different way but on the pest list they're kinda low. I'm sure the frogs bother more people and cnetepededs and wasp's "bite" is much nastier.

Usually our trade winds blow just enough to keep them from landing and it's really only late afternoon feeding time that they're out so a zapper on your lani will more than solve your concern. Those gas catchers are more hype then fact. The cost to effectiveness ratio isn't worth it it, Know a couple people who tried them. My dogs rule my roost, so the "screen doors" are just screen curtains. When Danes are puppies they don't wait for the screen doors to go in our out. They go through them. I had 8 dane puppies plus 4 adults.

I find cheap fly paper next to porch lights or window that have lights next to them. Hang the flypaper outside the window and the light will attract them to the fly paper and it's quieter than the Zappers.

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#15
Hi Kapohocat!

Your note regarding Cuban oregano as a natural locally garden-grown repellent more effective than chemical repellent against the mosquitoes in Puna is indeed intriguing.

One instance of this outcome could be chance, of course, yet if this is the common experience with many replications on different subjects (such as a whole crew of teens hunting prawns ...or among diverse Punaweb mosquito discussion thread readers) then the evidence would be compelling. Nothing like a replicated experiment to provide solidly confirmed evidence.

Next month I will be over in Puna for ten days and look forward to testing this tip out myself while there, if I can locate some Cuban oregeno. On some days I will apply DEET mosquito spray to clothing on one side and rub Cuban oregano on the other. As a variation, some days while tromping about I will use all DEET or all Cuban oregano, one or the other, and compare those all-DEET day bite counts versus all-Cuban oregeno day bite counts.

In your post I suspect you meant DEET rather than DDT as the active ingredient in the chemical applied to one side of your teen subject, as DEET (N,N-diethyl-m-toluamide) smells dreadful nasty and is hard on plastics and some fabrics but not all that toxic to humans --in a relative sense-- if applied only to clothing rather than directly to skin (many people seem to miss that potentially significant point: DEET is intended for application to clothing, not directly to the skin, especially to sunburned, scratched, or irritated skin). By contrast, DDT (Dichloro-diphenyl-trichloroethane) was phased out of use in the USA for the most part soon after 1972 and is considered moderately toxic/hazardous (as with the link between DDT exposure early in life and a later much higher risk of breast cancer), though DDT's ecologically persistent effects as it accumulates through food webs and biomagnifies are those which have had the most attention (eggshell thinning in birds, especially).

It is ironic that while DEET smells like outright chemical death in a can and will actually melt plastics and polyesters on contact it is DDT --which does not smell like much of anything and is still added to soap in some countries (it is very effective against lice and suchlike)-- that is actually thought to be the more toxic and potentially carcinogenic of the two (though if too much DEET is applied directly to the skin of a sensitive individual then there may be seizure problems, and likewise if absorbed into the body then DEET may be associated with an elevated risk of testicular cancer).

Of course, while my results in Puna next month with the DEET-on-clothing versus Cuban oregano trial will be of great interest to me personally (especially if the mosquitoes are thick while we are out locating property pins!) the outcome of just one or two experiences probably would not really nail the fundamental truth of the matter down definitively. Ideally, for an experiment to be scientifically valid --in the sense of having real testable statistical reliability-- there would be a number of different people (35 or more would be best) in the trial ...and for it to further be a genuinely fair test in the practical sense, those 35+ people would be drawn of both sexes and a variety of ethnic backgrounds (diet appears to have something to do with how much mosquitoes are attracted to one, as do soap and perfume scents and physiology -as pog noted in his comment). How light or dark is one's color of clothing, or, presumably, skin, may also be a factor in to whom mosquitoes are drawn. If a big and diverse bunch of people all tried this out and had essentially the same results then the Kapoho Myth Busters would deserve huge credit for the early testing and identification of a potentially significant finding (and maybe even a commercially viable product).

Thanks for the tip!

-AlaskaSteven

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Astonishing skill! This archer is a real-life Legolas and then some!
http://geekologie.com/2013/11/real-life-...rs-anc.php

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#16
A nice one to try is made by BullFrog.

"Mosquito Coast" hard to find here but available @ Malamar sometimes .......
Also has a 30SPF rating but I think you really have to pour it on as the spray pump feature works not so well.

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#17
quote:
I'm pretty sure the last reported case of dengue was in someone who had contracted it elsewhere, then flew to Hawaii. My neighbors bought one of the propane repellent units and a couple months later asked if I wanted it, said it was usless. I don't think the coqui actually eat any mosquitoes. The frogs don't like water and are nocturnal & the mosquitos disappear about dusk.



Edited by - leilaniguy on 11/17/2007 00:39:07



Hawaii had a small outbreak of Dengue just a few yrs back. Several cases were reported on Kauai, Maui and Oahu. I myself got Dengue, but it was in Mexico(Puerto Vallharta), and not here. But it's pretty nasty sickness that's for sure. Every joint in my body ached for about 10 days straight. Children, can we all say "projectile vomitting"?! When it first broke out I was like a fire hose!!!

I think the only thing the local gov does it tell you to turn over all bowls etc., that can fill up with water in your yard. They don't go around spraying neighborhoods here..

Handle every situation like a dog,If you can't eat it or hump it,piss on it and walk away...
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#18
Thanks, KapohoCat, for starter sprigs of Cuban oregano! Alas, we ended up being in business meetings almost the entire time we were in Puna during this trip so I was not able to test the mosquito repellent effect myself, since we did not undertake a pin-locating expedition. The starter sprigs have been entrusted to local friends with green thumbs, so hopefully will have taken root and perhaps even bushed out a bit by our next visit to Puna in April.

During the bit of unplanned trudging about on various lots around Puna which I did manage to do on this trip I was struck by the number of old tires littered about in overgrown and forested areas, half-filled with water. Just eliminating those tires could make a significant difference in the mosquito burden in the immediate localities.

On the topic of mosquito-borne diseases expanding their range, an interesting article (following, below) just came out on the chikungunya virus. Being forewarned may assist Hawaii to be forearmed in recognizing chikungunya and effecting control measures before it entrenches, should it appear.

[Address of online version complete with captioned photos, map, and hotlinks:
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/23/world/europe/23virus.html?_r=1&th=&emc=th&pagewanted=all&oref=slogin ]

New York Times
December 23, 2007

As Earth Warms Up, Tropical Virus Moves to Italy

By ELISABETH ROSENTHAL

CASTIGLIONE DI CERVIA, Italy — Panic was spreading this August through this tidy village of 2,000 as one person after another fell ill with weeks of high fever, exhaustion and excruciating bone pain, just as most of Italy was enjoying Ferragosto, its most important summer holiday.

“At one point, I simply couldn’t stand up to get out of the car,” said Antonio Ciano, 62, an elegant retiree in a pashmina scarf and trendy blue glasses. “I fell. I thought, O.K., my time is up. I’m going to die. It was really that dramatic.”

By midmonth, more than 100 people had come down with the same malady. Although the worst symptoms dissipated after a couple of weeks, no doctor could figure out what was wrong.

People blamed pollution in the river. They denounced the government. But most of all they blamed recent immigrants from tropical Africa for bringing the pestilence to their sleepy settlement of pastel stucco homes.

“Why immigrants?” asked Rina Ventura, who owns a shop selling shoes and purses. “I kept thinking of these terrible diseases that you see on TV, like malaria. We were terrified. There was no name and no treatment.”

Oddly, the villagers were both right and wrong. After a month of investigation, Italian public health officials discovered that the people of Castiglione di Cervia were, in fact, suffering from a tropical disease, chikungunya, a relative of dengue fever normally found in the Indian Ocean region. But the immigrants spreading the disease were not humans but insects: tiger mosquitoes, who can thrive in a warming Europe.

Aided by global warming and globalization, Castiglione di Cervia has the dubious distinction of playing host to the first outbreak in modern Europe of a disease that had previously been seen only in the tropics.

“By the time we got back the name and surname of the virus, our outbreak was over,” said Dr. Rafaella Angelini, director of the regional public health department in Ravenna. “When they told us it was chikungunya, it was not a problem for Ravenna any more. But I thought: this is a big problem for Europe.”

The epidemic proved that tropical viruses are now able to spread in new areas, far north of their previous range. The tiger mosquito, which first arrived in Ravenna three years ago, is thriving across southern Europe and even in France and Switzerland.

And if chikungunya can spread to Castiglione — “a place not special in any way,” Dr. Angelini said — there is no reason why it cannot go to other Italian villages. There is no reason why dengue, an even more debilitating tropical disease, cannot as well.

“This is the first case of an epidemic of a tropical disease in a developed, European country,” said Dr. Roberto Bertollini, director of the World Health Organization’s Health and Environment program. “Climate change creates conditions that make it easier for this mosquito to survive and it opens the door to diseases that didn’t exist here previously. This is a real issue. Now, today. It is not something a crazy environmentalist is warning about.”

Was he shocked to discover chikungunya in Italy, his native land? “We knew this would happen sooner or later,” he said. “We just didn’t know where or when.”

It certainly caught this town off guard on Aug. 9, when public health officials in Ravenna received an angry call from Stefano Merlo, who owns the gas station.

“Within 100 meters of my home, there were more than 30 people with fevers over 40 degrees,” or 104 Fahrenheit, said Mr. Merlo, 47. “I wanted to know what was going on. I knew it couldn’t be normal.”

August is not the season for high fevers, Dr. Angelini agreed, and within days of interviewing patients she was intrigued.

“The stories were so similar and so dramatic,” she said. “But we had no clue it was something tropical.”

Hard-working shopkeepers could not get out of bed because their hips hurt so much. Able-bodied men could not lift spoons to their mouths. (Months later, many still have debilitating joint pain.)

From the start, doctors suspected that the disease was spread by insects, rather than people. While almost all homes had one person who was ill, family members seemed not to catch the disease from one another.

They initially focused on sand flies, since the disease clustered on streets by the river.

Canceling their traditional mid-August vacations (in Italy, a true sign of panic), health officials sent off blood samples, called national infectious-disease experts, searched the Internet and set out traps to see what insects were in the neighborhood. The first surprise was that the insect traps contained not sand flies but tiger mosquitoes, and huge numbers of them.

The scientific survey confirmed what residents of Castiglione had come to accept as a horrible nuisance, though not a deadly threat.

“In the last three or four years, you couldn’t live on these streets because the mosquitoes were so bad,” said Rino Ricchi, a road worker who fell ill, standing at the entrance to his neatly tended garden, where mosquito traps have now replaced decorative fountains. “We used to delight in having a garden or a porch to eat dinner. You couldn’t this year, you’d get eaten alive.”

Said Dr. Angelini: “They were treating the mosquitoes like an annoyance. They knew that mosquitoes could spread tropical diseases but they had peace of mind because they knew this didn’t happen in Italy.”

Ravenna immediately set about killing the bugs in the hopes of containing the epidemic. Workers sprayed insecticides and went into each family’s garden, emptying flower pots, fountains and the rainwater collection barrels to remove the mosquitoes’ breeding ground.

By early September, there were no new cases in Castiglione di Cervia. But there were a number of mini-epidemics in the region — in Ravenna, Cesena and Rimini — set off by tiger mosquitoes there. Each was controlled in the same way.

By that point, the doctors had cataloged the patients’ symptoms and tried to match them to mosquito-borne diseases.

“We realized,” Dr. Angelini said, “we were seeing a photocopy of an outbreak on Réunion,” a French island in the Indian Ocean where more than 10,000 people have contracted chikungunya in the last two years. Blood tests confirmed the diagnosis. By summer’s end, home-grown chikungunya had been diagnosed in nearly 300 Italians.

Chikungunya is spread when tiger mosquitoes drink blood from an infected person and, if conditions are right, pass the virus on when they bite again. Tiger mosquitoes first came to southern Italy with shipments of tires from Albania about a decade ago but their habitat has expanded steadily northward as temperatures have risen.

But the doctors were baffled by how chikungunya made its way into mosquitoes in northern Italy since no one in Castiglione di Cervia had been abroad. In the past two years France, especially Paris, has had a number of imported cases of chikungunya, in travelers returning from Réunion. But the disease has never spread in France, because the mosquito cannot thrive there yet.

Eventually investigators discovered a link: one of the first men to fall ill in Castiglione di Cervia had been visited by a feverish relative in early July. That relative, an Italian, had previously traveled to Kerala, India. Chikungunya traveled to Italy in his blood, but climatic conditions are now such that it can spread and find a home here.

Now it is winter in Castiglione di Cervia, near freezing as the sun went down on a recent evening and Christmas lights glowed across the piazza. There are no mosquitoes now.

But dozens of residents still suffer from arthritis, a known complication of chikungunya.

Mr. Ricchi, the road worker, says he still has trouble clenching his fists, and his left ankle has horrible pains. Three people in the town died after getting the virus, Mr. Merlo said, although all of those victims had other illnesses as well.

From the start, townspeople noticed that the very elderly never got the disease. Now it makes sense: “If all you do is walk the 50 yards from your home to the church, there’s not much chance to get bitten,” said Mr. Ciano, the retiree.

But the biggest mystery is whether chikungunya will emerge here next summer. In the tropics, it is a year-round disease, since the mosquitoes breed continually. But the virus can winter over in mosquito eggs, too, and no one knows if there are reservoirs of sleeping eggs in some pool of water in Italy.

With climate change at hand, Dr. Bertollini said, chikungunya will surely be back somewhere in Europe again.

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#19
Well, get some Avon "Skin-so-soft" bath soap gel stuff and use that while bathing. Then the skeeters won't like you anymore. After awhile you won't hardly notice any skeeters at all unless they are being really annoying and buzzing in your ear.

We do have at least two types of skeeters. There are the daytime skeeters which don't seem to cause much problem and are the ones which don't travel very far so you can clean all standing water on your property to control them. The night time skeeters have a range of several miles so if there's standing water anywhere within that range they will come visit you if you are on their "tasty" list.


"I like yard sales," he said. "All true survivalists like yard sales." 
Kurt Wilson
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#20
I suppose this needs to be said so I'll say it. We have an ideal 'winged' transferance mechcanism functioning right here in Puna. All that's needed is for the wrong type of microbe to be added to the mosquito's arsenal in the future and we could have a really big problem epidemiologically. Let's hope that never happens. We can only do small things right now but small things have a way of adding up.

There's a direct correlation between the numbers of these pests in the enviroment and the amount of trash which is routinely thrown upon the ground by passing vehicles. Trash, especially any drinking container, i.e., beer cans and bottles and the various types of paper cups, waxed and otherwise, in addition to other types of debris become the perfect media for the spawning of the larva.
When I initially purchased the home I'm in I went through the entire treeline facing my street on both sides and removed literally hundreds of mosquito breeding items which had built up for years. When that was complete, I started in the lots around my home (just because a lot is empty ... don't be fooled into thinking there can't be trash on it), and I've continued that process as much as possible over the years.
Bottom line is that if we want less infestation in and around our homes and gardens we need to keep them clean.

As far as the state or county ever mounting any meaningful and sustained educational program which attempts to educate citizens regarding the correlation between mosquito infestation and litter ... it's not going to happen unless they're pubically called to account for their negligence by a well-heeled private advocacy since they're basically clueless performing their function at below the most basic level of public servitude. Hawaii, at this point in time, should not be infested with mosquitos to the extent it is, which is the bane of every tourist ... nor should there be the massive etablishment and current migration of albesia here in Puna and elsewhere ... the albesia exacerbating the mosquito problem by creating moist forest floor conditions.

The mosquito prognosis for the future here in Puna, at least, will be a dramatic increase in mosquito populations since the public is not being properly educated, coupled with the shocking spread of the albesia, which I might add, will at some point soon, perhaps within two decades, become the climatic plant organism ... certainly this will occur here in Puna unless a massive public education program is initiated [very soon.] This is where advocacy comes in again. Advocacy with deep pockets and the determination to enlist the best people who arn't afraid to be politically incorrect.




JayJay
JayJay
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