Mosquito season is back in the Central Valley

Dale Yurong Image
Wednesday, March 31, 2021
Mosquito season is back in the Central Valley
It's time to start applying repellent again and empty potential mosquito breeding areas.

FRESNO, Calif. (KFSN) -- If you've spent any time outdoors lately, you've noticed mosquito season is upon us again.

It's time to start applying repellent again and empty potential mosquito breeding areas.

Climate Central defines 'mosquito days' as those ranging from 50 to 95 degrees with a relative humidity above 42%.

They're ideal conditions for mosquitoes to breed. All they need is standing water to lay their eggs.

"I'm still surprised at how many of our residents don't know that mosquitoes develop in water," says Katherine Ramirez of the Consolidated Mosquito Abatement District.

Ramirez says you need to go around your yard and empty any standing water which could attract the striped Aedes aegypti mosquito, which is capable of carrying dangerous viruses like Yellow Fever.

"This particular mosquito that bites below the knees, we call them ankle biters, they like flowering pot sources. They like tarps."

The Culex mosquito, which can carry West Nile Virus, prefers larger bodies of water.

Crews are now checking on homes where unmaintained, green swimming pools have been reported.

"We do apply mosquito fish to those swimming pools or other chemicals to kill the mosquito larvae and pupae. We set mosquito traps," says Ramirez.

Mosquitoes are also drawn to yard drains, which is why you should put some window screens under the cap to keep them out.

A few years ago, an experimental treatment in the Valley involved the release of sterile male Aedes aegypti mosquitoes. A bacteria they carried kept the female's eggs from hatching.

"That program saw really good results, about an 85% decrease in mosquitoes," says Ramirez.

The number of 'mosquito days' a year in Fresno decreased from 105 in the 1980s to 89 a decade ago due to rising temperatures in the summer but Climate Central says the number is now rising in most cities it has analyzed.

Here in the Valley, the mosquito population certainly has the potential to bring its numbers back up.