Title: Mosquitoes
1Mosquitoes Wetlands
-
- Prepared by Kelly V. Tindall
- Extension Entomologist
- Twin Falls County
2- Mosquito Biology
- Wetlands mosquito habitat
- Natural
- Artificial
Silver Creek, near Picabo
3Mosquito Life Cycle
Adults emerge
Eggs (100-250/egg laying event)
10 times a year
Pupae
Overwinter all stages (species dependent) Egg to
Adult some species 4-5 days Adults live up to 2
wks
Larvae
4Mosquito Facts
- Only females bite (bloodmeal)
- Males feed on nectar
- Larvae feed on algae, etc.
- 200 species in the US
- 43 species are WNV vectors
- As many as 51 species in ID
- Of the 20 most common in ID 10 are WNV vectors
5Mosquito Facts
- Some lay eggs in the soil
- Flood is required for them to mature (floodwater
mosquitoes) - Must remain moist to complete development
- Differences in water quality
- Some clean water, some polluted
6How Does This Tie in to Wetlands?
7Wetlands
- Areas where water covers soil or near the surface
of soil all year or for varying time(s) of the
year - Types of natural wetlands
- Marine (coastal, salt water)
- Estuarine (coastal, salt/freshwater mix)
- Riverine (associated with rivers stream)
- Lacustine (associated with lakes)
- Palustrine (misc. freshwater wetlands)
8Riverine Wetlands Riparian Area
- Along streams, rivers irrigation canals
- Healthy river system is important
- Support vegetation, including trees, shrubs
grass - Prevent erosion
- Habitat for many animals
- Riparian areas 1 land,
- BUT 80 of animals utilize
Snake River
9Lacustine
- Perimeter of lakes and reservoirs
- 20 acres OR
- Water 6 ft in depth
- Exposed to wave action
Dierkes Lake
10Palustrine
- Smaller and shallower than wetlands around lakes
- Forest wetlands
- Bitterroot Mtns.
- Cooler air
- More understory
- Hot springs
- Vernal pools
Gospel Hump
11Artificial Wetlands
- Retention ponds, etc.
- Many are shallow dense vegetation
- Can provide wildlife habitat also
12 Do Wetlands breed Mosquitoes?
- It depends!
- Are they healthy? NO
- Are they mismanaged? possibly
- Artificial wetlands likely
13Healthy vs Unhealthy Wetlands
Unhealthy NO vegetation, ground trampled
Salmon Falls Canyon
Standing water is prime breeding ground
Healthy trees, shrubs, grasses
14What makes some areas less likely to breed
mosquitoes?
- Sparse vegetation
- Less area to hide from predators
- Reduced food source
- Windy conditions
- Interferes with egg laying
- Causes problems with breathing
- Water quality
- Good water ? predators
HEALTHY WETLANDS
15Biological Control for Adults
16Biological Control for Larvae
Predacaeous diving beetle
Backswimmers
Dragonfly Damselfly larvae
Water Striders
17Wetlands Reduce Mosquitoes by
- Providing habitat for the natural enemies
- Preventing/reducing flooding
- Wetlands store excess water until in can be
absorbed and recharge aquifers and other water
sources - How effective are wetlands for mosquito control?
- Essex County Mosquito Control Project (MA)
restored a 1,500 acre - Mosquito population dropped by 90.
18What makes some areas more likely to breed
mosquitoes?
- Dense vegetation
- Area to hide from predators
- Vegetation hinders pesticide contact
- Hinder water flow (irrigation canals)
- Water quality / Water level
- Poor quality preferred by mosquitoes AND bad
for predators
UNHEALTHY WETLANDS
19Polluted Waters
Animal poo/decomposing animals in water ?
organic matter ? low predator populations ?
low dissolved oxygen ? mosquitoes
20Why Protect Wetlands?
- Drained/mismanaged wetlands mosquito "blooms"
after rain/irrigation - Restore or create a healthy wetlands
- Natural predators will begin to return
- You reduce mosquitoes and GAIN
- Wildlife habitat
- Reduced chanced of flooding on adjacent ground
- Improving water quality
21How to Protect
- Vegetation Management
- Restoration plant specific native plants
- Remove dead foliage
- Limited access
- Minimize large animals from grazing trampling
- Reduce ATV usage
22Cross Section of Artificial Wetland Designed to
Reduce Mosquitoes
Vertical Side