Title: Public Health Pest Control
1Public Health Pest Control
PESTICIDE SAFETY AND APPLICATION PLNT 1150
Alex Latchininsky Assistant Professor / Extension
Entomologist Dept. of Renewable
Resources January 2006
2DISCLAIMER Trade or brand names used in this
presentation are used only for educational
purposes The information given herein is
supplied with the understanding that no
discrimination is intended, and no endorsement
information of products is implied
3LICE Order Phthiraptera, 3 types
1/8
4TREATMENT OF HEAD LICE
- Permethrin or Pyrethrin shampoos
- Malathion shampoos
- Re-treat in 10 days (cannot kill eggs)
- Louse or nit combs
- Pets? No!
- Personal hygiene
- Do not share caps or combs
- Head lice are NOT disease vectors
5BODY LICE
- Less common in the U.S.
- Larger than Head Lice 1/7
- Hide in clothing seams
- Vectors of epidemic typhus (rickettsiae)
- Vectors of trench fever (World War I 1.8
million cases in U.S. military)
6PUBIC or CRAB LICE
1/16
Do not transmit disease agents Found only on
humans not on cats or dogs
7FLEAS Order Siphonaptera
Size 1/16 No wings
Cat flea
8LIFE CYCLE OF A FLEA
Total 12-174 d (typical 3 to 5 wks)
9FLEAS MEDICAL IMPORTANCE
- Piercing mouthparts feed exclusively on blood
- Irritation from flea bites
- Primary vector of bubonic plague (Oriental rat
flea) - Bacterium Yersinia pestis
- Mortality rate 90 - Black Death
- Middle Ages killed 1/3 of Europes population
in a few decades - Vector of Murine typhus (Rickettsia typhi)
- Intermediate hosts of dog tapeworms may infect
humans if the flea is inadvertently swallowed
10MANAGEMENT OF FLEAS
- Treat the pet
- Treat the premises
Pet treatments Insect Growth Regulators
(methoprene, lufenuron, pyriproxyfen), or
Adulticides (fipronil, imidacloprid) Premises
treatments Steam clean IGRs Sanitation
(vacuum to remove eggs)
11Bed Bugs
- Order Hemiptera True Bugs
- Piercing-sucking beak
- One species Cimex lectularius
12Cairo Hotel Marriott October 2005
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15Bed Bugs
- Female produces up to 500 eggs
- Can survive 1 year without blood meal
- Hides during the day, active by night
- Produces foul smelling substance when disturbed
- Sanitation!
16BLOOD SUCKING FLIES Order Diptera two wings
wings
halteres
17BLACK FLIES Family Simuliidae
Larva Pupa
Larvae develop in flowing water
Adults can be black, gray or yellow Size 1/8
18BLACK FLIES LIFE CYCLE
Adult Eggs on a submerged water
plant Larvae in feeding position
Emerging adult in air bubble Pupae
19BLACK FLIES
- Attracted to dark colors and carbon dioxide
- Vicious biters. Piercing, blade-like mouthparts
- Bites are painful because of venom (saliva)
- Do not attack indoors or at night
- Extremely numerous in early Summer
- May transmit diseases, even encephalitis
- Protection repellents (DEET)
20STABLE FLY
Larva (maggot)
Pupa
Stomoxys calcitrans adult
21STABLE FLY
Bayonet-like mouthparts Stable fly House fly
- Both male and female are blood-sucking
- Attracted to dark colors
- Breeding sites manure, straw
- Control similar to house flies
- SANITATION!
22HOUSE FLY
Sponging mouthparts
A carrier of up to 40 diseases,
including typhoid fever, cholera, dysentery,
and anthrax. The fly transmits diseases by
carrying disease organisms onto food. It picks up
disease organisms on its leg hairs or eats them
and then regurgitates them onto food (in the
process of liquefying solid food)
23WYOMING MOSQUITOES
At least 45 species Main genera Culex, Aedes,
Anopheles, Culiseta, Wyeomiya, Mansonia
24MOSQUITO LIFE CYCLE
eggs
adults
larva
pupa
25Aquatic stages
Mosquito pupae
Mosquito larvae
26Mosquito wing
Scales
27Male mosquito does not bite
28MOSQUITOES AS DISEASE VECTORS
1 vectors of numerous devastating diseases
worldwide -Encephalitis (5 types) Western
Equine Encephalitis Culex tarsalis -West Nile
Virus Culex pipiens (East), C. tarsalis
(West) -Dengue Aedes aegypti -Yellow fever
Aedes aegypti -Malaria Anopheles
spp. -Filariasis (nematodes) Culex, Aedes,
Anopheles spp. -Dog heartworm Culex, Aedes spp.
29MOSQUITO LIFE HISTORIES
- Four larval habitat types are used to group the
mosquitoes - Permanent Pool
- Container
- Floodwater
- Transient water
30Permanent Pool Habitat
31Permanent Pool Habitat Group Need shallow water
with emergent plants Eggs laid singly on water
surface for Anopheles species Overwinter as
adult mated females Not very important species
as disease vectors or nuisance in
Wyoming Anopheles species are only mosquitoes
that can vector malaria
32Container Group Habitat
33Container Habitat Group Need artificial or
natural containers that hold water long enough
to complete larval development Eggs laid singly
at water line surface for Aedes species. Culex
species sometimes use this habitat
also Overwinter as eggs, multiple broods per
season Important species as disease
vectors worldwide, less so in Wyoming Often the
target of urban mosquito control
34Floodwater Habitat
Eggs are deposited singly on damp soil which is
intermittently flooded
35 Floodwater Group Aedes species dominate this
habitat Eggs are laid singly where the mosquito
female senses the area has been submerged in
water before Several hatches per year - Ae.
dorsalis, Ae. melanimon Ae. vexans, most
common species in WY Overwinter in egg
stage When conditions are correct can rapidly
develop - 6 days Capable of flying long
distances
36Transient Water Habitat
Roadside ditches, irrigated lands etc.
37 Transient Water Group Culex species dominate
this habitat, esp. mucky water. Culex tarsalis
life history Eggs are laid as rafts on water
surface At 80 F, go from egg to adult in 10
days Overwinter as adult, fed and mated
female Populations build through summer Month
life span as adult, up to 4 blood meals
possible Capable of flying 0.5 mile per
night Feed at night, will enter
buildings Prefers birds but will switch to
horses and humans
38Culex tarsalis
39WEST NILE VIRUS CASES
2003
2004
2005
Year WY CA 2003 375 3 2004 10 760 2005
12 865
40Culex tarsalis
41MOSQUITO SURVEYS
- Adult surveys
- CDC light traps
- Dry ice traps (C. tarsalis)
- Landing and biting collections
- Insect sweep net collections
- Truck trap collections
- Larval and pupal surveys
- -Dipping
42MOSQUITO CONTROL
- Source reduction
- Water management
- Sanitation
- Irrigation optimization
- Drainage
- Biological control
- -Gambusia fish
- -Pathogens (Bti, Bs)
43MOSQUITO CONTROL
- Chemical control
- Larviciding (larval control)
- The most efficient control strategy
- Minimizes treated areas
- Avoids treating populated areas
- Adulticiding (control of adults)
- Usually, consists of Ultra-Low Volume spraying
in urban areas
44PRODUCTS FOR MOSQUITO CONTROL
45I. LARVICIDES A.I. Trade name Formulation Pros
Cons Temephos Abate G, EC Lowest
cost Nontarget Methoprene Altosid G, B, P,
LC Nontarget safe Cannot be certain of
efficacy until too late
to retreat Oils BVA, Golden Oil Acts
on pupae Oil film Bear Subsurf. lar
vae Monomole- Agnique Liquid Acts on
pupae Subsurf. cular film Larvae
46I. LARVICIDES (contd.) A.I. Trade
name Formulation Pros Cons Bacillus
Aquabac Liquid Nontarget safe Short thuringiensi
s Bactimos WDG, AS, Briquets window
israeliensis LarvX, Teknar P, G, B control
30d of trtmt., (Bti) Dunks pupae Bacillus
VectoLex G, WDG Nontarget safe Pupae sphaericus
(Bs) AS Aqueous Suspension B Briquets EC
Emulsifiable Concentrate G granules LC
Liquid Concentrate P Pellets WDG
Water-Dispersible Granules
47II. ADULTICIDES A.I. Trade name Formulation Pros
Cons Malathion Fyfanon, ULV, Tolerances OP,
some Atrapa, thermal fog resistance Prentox
Naled Dibrom, ULV, EC, Tolerances OP, Trumpe
t thermal fog corrosive Fenthion Batex ULV No
ne OP, FL Permethrin Permanone, ULV, Low
vertebrate None AquaResilin, thermal
fog, toxicity Biomist, clothing Mosquito tre
atment beater ULV Ultra Low Volume OP
Organophosphate insecticide
48II. ADULTICIDES (contd.) A.I. Trade
name Formulation Pros Cons Resmethrin
Scourge ULV, Low vertebrate RUP thermal
fog toxicity Sumithrin Anvil ULV, Low
vertebrate No thermal fog toxicity tolerance
Pyrethrins Pyrenone ULV, EC Natural May
be Pyronyl pyrethrum, costly tolerances
, larvicide also ULV Ultra Low
Volume RUP Restricted Use Pesticide
49MOSQUITO CONTROL WORKSHOP
Organized by WMMA Lander, 18-19 April
2006 Contact Nancy Webber, Fremont Co. Weed
and Pest (307) 332-1052
50OTHER STINGING AND BITING INSECTS
51Imported Fire Ants
Solenopsis invicta (Red) Solenopsis richteri
(Black)
52Vicious Attackers
Blisters and pustules following Fire Ant sting
53Control
Chemical Single mound or area-wide broadcast
treatments (granular insecticides or baits)
54Africanized Honey Bees
55Wasps and Bees
Honey bee with a stinger
Yellow jacket wasp
56Bumble Bees
57OTHER ARTHROPODS
Class Arachnida SPIDERS Order Aranea TICKS
Order Acari
58BLACK WIDOW SPIDER FEMALE
Hourglass pattern on the abdomen
59BLACK WIDOW SPIDERS
Mature female
Immature female
Mature male
60HOBO SPIDER
61BROWN RECLUSE SPIDER EYES
2
2
2
62WIND SCORPION
63TICKS
- Close relatives of spiders,
- and NOT insects adults have 8 legs
- Blood-sucking parasites of mammals, birds and
reptiles - Both males and females feed on blood
- Efficient vectors of diseases (2 after
mosquitoes)
64Soft tick
Rocky Mountain Wood tick (hard)
65ROCKY MOUNTAIN WOOD TICK
- Hosts Small rodents, porcupines, deer and large
domestic animals - Most common species that bites people
- Vector of Colorado tick fever, Rocky Mountain
spotted fever, Tick paralysis (rare), Tularemia
(rare) - Not a vector of Lyme disease, which is
transmitted by Ixodes scapularis
Dermacentor andersoni adult
American dog tick is also a vector of CTF
66RM WOOD TICK LIFE CYCLE 3 hosts
(Large mammal host)
Small mammal host
Small mammal host
67ROCKY MOUNTAIN WOOD TICK
- PREVENTION
- Avoid tick habitats
- Use tick repellents (DEET)
- Wear protective clothes
- Clothing treatment with Permethrin (Permanone)
- Tick checks after visiting possible habitats
- HOW TO REMOVE A TICK
- Use blunt tweezers
- Pull the tick slowly
- Treat the feeding place with disinfectant