Have you noticed aggressive mosquitoes in Sacramento? Here’s why and how to protect yourself

From the Sacramento Bee
February 11, 2022

With warm Sacramento weather comes blood-hungry mosquitoes. According to the Sacramento-Yolo Mosquito and Vector Control District, a significant number of service requests have been made within the last couple of days as people are spending more time outdoors and are noticing mosquitoes around their property. “These mosquitoes are ones that had been hibernating during the past few months,” said Gary Goodman, manager of the district, in a Thursday morning news release. “The warm temperatures have brought them out of resting and they are aggressively biting.”

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News Brief 2.9.22

Update on Oxitec’s Proposed California Project; Register: PacVec Annual Meeting 2022 on April 5-6 in Sacramento!; MVCAC Yearbook Survey 2022; AMCA Memorial List for the 88th Annual Meeting; 2022 Sentinel Chicken Order Forms Available Now!; MVCAC South San Joaquin Regional Meeting; Share Your Post COVID-19 Exposure Methods With Us; MVCAC Member Resources Re: COVID-19; Spotlight On: SGV Journey of the Germ; Submit your district for the next Spotlight On; HR resources for districts to use and to upload information into; MVCAC News Briefs – Giant Asian Hornets; MVCAC News Briefs – Zika Updates; MVCAC News Briefs – Other Outbreaks; Do you have important news to share about your district or mosquito and vector issues?; MVCAC Jobs Board; MVCAC Sustaining Member Corner

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Hot Weather In San Gabriel Valley Leads To Surge In Mosquitoes

From CBS Los Angeles
February 10, 2022

WEST COVINA (CBSLA) — As temperatures heat up, mosquitoes are descending on the San Gabriel Valley and officials are warning residents to take precautions against getting West Nile virus.

“Mosquito trap data from the San Gabriel Valley Mosquito & Vector Control District shows the average mosquito activity this week is 517.83% higher compared to the same week as last year,” the San Gabriel Valley Mosquito & Vector Control District said Thursday.

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How to avoid mosquito bites? Try wearing clothes with these colors, study suggests

From the Sacramento Bee
February 8, 2022

If you want to prevent mosquito bites, the key may be in the clothes you wear.

That’s because new research shows the insects are more drawn to some colors than others. The findings suggest wearing colors that are less attractive to mosquitoes could help people avoid getting bitten.

“Mosquitoes were not attracted to blue, green, purple, and white,” Jeff Riffell, a study co-author, told McClatchy News in a Feb. 7 email. “The results from the study show that colors like black and red are very attractive, and if you were to wear those colors in your clothes, you would increase your attraction to the mosquito. However, if you were to wear white, or blue and green, you would be much less visually attractive to the mosquito.”

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News Brief 2.2.22

Upcoming MVCAC Meetings; COVID Protocol For Conference Has Been Established; MVCAC 2022 Annual Meeting; MVCAC Yearbook Survey 2022; AMCA Memorial List for the 88th Annual Meeting; 2022 Sentinel Chicken Order Forms Available Now!; MVCAC South San Joaquin Regional Meeting; Share Your Post COVID-19 Exposure Methods With Us; MVCAC Member Resources Re: COVID-19; Spotlight On: SGV Journey of the Germ; Submit your district for the next Spotlight On; HR resources for districts to use and to upload information into; MVCAC News Briefs – Giant Asian Hornets; MVCAC News Briefs – Zika Updates; MVCAC News Briefs – Other Outbreaks; Do you have important news to share about your district or mosquito and vector issues?; MVCAC Jobs Board; MVCAC Sustaining Member Corner

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News Brief 1.26.22

Upcoming MVCAC Meetings; COVID Protocol For Conference Has Been Established; MVCAC 2022 Annual Meeting; MVCAC Yearbook Survey 2022; TDR-Global Vector Hub Symposium Monday, January 31, 2022; Passing of Susan Maggy; AMCA Memorial List for the 88th Annual Meeting; 2022 Sentinel Chicken Order Forms Available Now!; VVBD Committee Monthly Meetings; MVCAC South San Joaquin Regional Meeting; Share Your Post COVID-19 Exposure Methods With Us; MVCAC Member Resources Re: COVID-19; Spotlight On: SGV Journey of the Germ; Submit your district for the next Spotlight On; HR resources for districts to use and to upload information into; MVCAC News Briefs – Giant Asian Hornets; MVCAC News Briefs – Zika Updates; MVCAC News Briefs – Other Outbreaks; Do you have important news to share about your district or mosquito and vector issues?; MVCAC Jobs Board; MVCAC Sustaining Member Corner

 
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Scientists identify promising transmission chain-breaker in the fight against malaria

From Science Daily
January 26, 2022

Blocking a key protein found in Anopheles gambiae mosquitoes — the principal vector for malaria transmission to humans in Africa — could thwart infection with malaria parasites and thus prevent them from transmitting the parasites to humans, according to a study from researchers at the Johns Hopkins Malaria Research Institute at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

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News Brief 1.19.2022

Upcoming MVCAC Meetings; COVID Protocol For Conference Has Been Established; MVCAC 2022 Annual Meeting; 2022 Sentinel Chicken Order Forms Available Now!; Visual Gateway (Tableau) Workshop – January 20th, 2022 @ 3-5 PM; VVBD Committee Monthly Meetings; MVCAC South San Joaquin Regional Meeting; Share Your Post COVID-19 Exposure Methods With Us; MVCAC Member Resources Re: COVID-19; Spotlight On: SGV Journey of the Germ; Submit your district for the next Spotlight On; HR resources for districts to use and to upload information into; MVCAC News Briefs – Giant Asian Hornets; MVCAC News Briefs – Zika Updates; MVCAC News Briefs – Other Outbreaks; Do you have important news to share about your district or mosquito and vector issues?; MVCAC Jobs Board; MVCAC Sustaining Member Corner
 
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Dogs at higher risk of contracting heartworm disease from mosquitoes in OC, officials say

From MSN
January 20, 2022

The pesky Aedes aegypti, more commonly known as the ankle biter, is behind more than the persistently itchy welts on our legs.

Heather Hyland with the OC Mosquito and Vector Control District said Thursday that results from testing at the end of 2021, show that this species of mosquito carries heartworm, which can be fatal to our furry friends.

“Out of 260 samples, we found that four tested positive for dog heartworm detection. That’s telling us that there is dog heartworm in the community, but it’s also telling us, based on that data, that it’s low-risk right now,” Hyland said.

According to a 2019 map from the American Heartworm Society, no state is heartworm free. The darker the red, the higher the number of cases. The map shows Mississippi and Louisiana leading the country in infection rates.

The mosquitoes testing positive in Orange County came from Huntington Beach, Seal Beach, and Fullerton. The danger in Southern California is that ankle biters are rapidly breeding, and they can spread heartworm to dogs with just one bite.

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News Brief 1.12.2022

Upcoming MVCAC Meetings; COVID Protocol For Conference Has Been Established; MVCAC 2022 Annual Meeting; Visual Gateway (Tableau) Workshop – January 20th, 2022 @ 3-5 PM; VVBD Committee Monthly Meetings; MVCAC South San Joaquin Regional Meeting; Share Your Post COVID-19 Exposure Methods With Us; MVCAC Member Resources Re: COVID-19; Spotlight On: SGV Journey of the Germ; Submit your district for the next Spotlight On; HR resources for districts to use and to upload information into; MVCAC News Briefs – Giant Asian Hornets; MVCAC News Briefs – Zika Updates; MVCAC News Briefs – Other Outbreaks; Do you have important news to share about your district or mosquito and vector issues?; MVCAC Jobs Board; MVCAC Sustaining Member Corner
 
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News Brief 1.5.2022

Upcoming MVCAC Meetings; COVID Protocol For Conference Has Been Established; MVCAC 2022 Annual Meeting; MVCAC Monthly All-Hands Call; Share Your Post COVID-19 Exposure Methods With Us; MVCAC Member Resources Re: COVID-19; Spotlight On: SGV Journey of the Germ; Submit your district for the next Spotlight On; HR resources for districts to use and to upload information into; MVCAC News Briefs – Giant Asian Hornets; MVCAC News Briefs – Zika Updates; MVCAC News Briefs – Other Outbreaks; Do you have important news to share about your district or mosquito and vector issues?; MVCAC Jobs Board; MVCAC Sustaining Member Corner
 
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California scientists debate whether it’s menace or messiah – Times-Herald

From the California News Times
January 4, 2022

Government officials to prevent deadly illness often praise low mosquitofish as a savior of public health. However, some environmentalists call it a “pesto minnow” and a “fish destroyer.”

Almost a century after the finger-sized fish was first introduced to California in Sacramento’s lily pond, it is arguably the most ubiquitous freshwater fish in the world. However, mosquitofish are also one of the most invasive species in the world.

Almost all mosquito and carrier extermination districts in California are now deploying creatures with a variety of strategies, balancing pest control capabilities with ecological destruction of fish.

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News Brief 12.22.2021

Upcoming MVCAC Meetings; COVID Protocol For Conference Has Been Established; MVCAC 2022 Annual Meeting; MVCAC Monthly All-Hands Call; Share Your Post COVID-19 Exposure Methods With Us; MVCAC Member Resources Re: COVID-19; Spotlight On: SGV Journey of the Germ; Submit your district for the next Spotlight On; HR resources for districts to use and to upload information into; MVCAC News Briefs – Giant Asian Hornets; MVCAC News Briefs – Zika Updates; MVCAC News Briefs – Other Outbreaks; Do you have important news to share about your district or mosquito and vector issues?; MVCAC Jobs Board; MVCAC Sustaining Member Corner
 
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News Brief 12.15.2021

Upcoming MVCAC Meetings; COVID Protocol For Conference Has Been Established; MVCAC 2022 Annual Meeting; MVCAC Monthly All-Hands Call; Share Your Post COVID-19 Exposure Methods With Us; MVCAC Member Resources Re: COVID-19; Agency Spotlight: New Name for Delta Vector Control District; Submit your district for the next Agency Spotlight; HR resources for districts to use and to upload information into; MVCAC News Briefs – Giant Asian Hornets; MVCAC News Briefs – Zika Updates; MVCAC News Briefs – Other Outbreaks; Do you have important news to share about your district or mosquito and vector issues?; MVCAC Jobs Board; MVCAC Sustaining Member Corner
 
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News Brief 12.08.2021

Upcoming MVCAC Meetings; COVID Protocol For Conference Has Been Established; MVCAC 2022 Annual Meeting; SAVE THE DATE: December 9, 2021, 2:00-3:30PM; Flea-borne Typhus Discussion with Dr. Gregory Anstead; Share Your Post COVID-19 Exposure Methods With Us; MVCAC Member Resources Re: COVID-19; Agency Spotlight: New Name for Delta Vector Control District; Submit your district for the next Agency Spotlight; HR resources for districts to use and to upload information into; MVCAC News Briefs – Giant Asian Hornets; MVCAC News Briefs – Zika Updates; MVCAC News Briefs – Other Outbreaks; Do you have important news to share about your district or mosquito and vector issues?; MVCAC Jobs Board; MVCAC Sustaining Member Corner
 
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If mosquitoes were eradicated, what would be the consequences?

From NewScientist
December 8, 2021

Jane Monroe Arcata, California, US

Mosquitoes are a major food source for many bird and bat species, and larval mosquitoes are regularly eaten by various freshwater fish and aquatic insects such as backswimmers, larval dragonflies and diving beetles.

These mosquito consumers in turn provide food and other resources for other organisms. Bats, for example, play a critical role in the health of cave ecosystems; they also consume, and help control, many agricultural pests.

The eradication of mosquitoes might please humans in the short term, but would eventually damage many ecosystems due to a cascade of negative consequences as more and more species were affected. A better plan might be to eradicate the disease-causing parasites that use mosquitoes as a vector.

“The eradication of mosquitoes might please humans in the short term, but would eventually damage many ecosystems”

Jonathan Wallace Newcastle upon Tyne, UK

This is a variant of the “what is the point of…?” question that often gets posed about species we consider to be pests.

The eradication of mosquitoes would certainly have consequences. Firstly, there is the question of how the mosquitoes would be eradicated. Spraying pesticides is the most common method, and it is inevitable that non-target species are also affected.

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Integrated Mosquito Management Protects People and Animals from Mosquitoes

From Entomology Today
December 8, 2021

“Mosquitoes are the best,” said no one ever. Adult females of most mosquito species require a blood meal from unwitting hosts to produce eggs. The hunt for blood and drive to reproduce can result in mosquitoes biting people, causing a variety of reactions ranging from nothing to itchy, red welts that leave their sufferer with an annoying reminder of the encounter. Unfortunately, sometimes these bites transmit microscopic invaders that cause terrible diseases in humans and animals such as West Nile, Zika, yellow fever, malaria, dengue, St. Louis encephalitis, eastern equine encephalitis, dog heartworm, and many more.

Mosquitoes and their associated diseases have impacted humanity throughout history. However, proof that mosquitoes could transmit pathogens and get people sick only occurred relatively recently, in the late 19th century. Until then, doctors and other public health practitioners attributed some mosquito-transmitted diseases to other causes such as miasma, or bad air.

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News Brief 12.1.2021

Upcoming MVCAC Meetings; MVCAC 2022 Annual Meeting; SAVE THE DATE: December 9, 2021, 2:00-3:30PM; Flea-borne Typhus Discussion with Dr. Gregory Anstead; Share Your Post COVID-19 Exposure Methods With Us; MVCAC Member Resources Re: COVID-19; Agency Spotlight: New Name for Delta Vector Control District; Submit your district for the next Agency Spotlight; HR resources for districts to use and to upload information into; MVCAC News Briefs – Giant Asian Hornets; MVCAC News Briefs – Zika Updates; MVCAC News Briefs – Other Outbreaks; Do you have important news to share about your district or mosquito and vector issues?; MVCAC Jobs Board; MVCAC Sustaining Member Corner
 
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News Brief 11.24.2021

Upcoming MVCAC Meetings; MVCAC 2022 Annual Meeting; Oxitec Updates Available; MVCAC Drone Use and Interest Survey; Share Your Post COVID-19 Exposure Methods With Us; MVCAC Member Resources Re: COVID-19; Agency Spotlight: New Name for Delta Vector Control District; Submit your district for the next Agency Spotlight; HR resources for districts to use and to upload information into; MVCAC News Briefs – Giant Asian Hornets; MVCAC News Briefs – Zika Updates; MVCAC News Briefs – Other Outbreaks; Do you have important news to share about your district or mosquito and vector issues?; MVCAC Jobs Board; MVCAC Sustaining Member Corner
 
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Mosquitoes Infected With West Nile Virus Discovered in La Quinta

From MyNewsLA.com
November 18, 2021

Mosquitoes infected with West Nile virus were discovered in La Quinta, officials announced Thursday.

The infected mosquitoes were collected from traps near Fritz Burns Park, at the intersection of Avenue 52 and Avenida Bermudas, according to the Coachella Valley Mosquito and Vector Control District. This is the second time mosquitoes in La Quinta have been positive with the virus this year.

“The warm temperatures this fall mean more mosquitoes later in the season,” said Tammy Gordon, Public Information Officer for the District. “You should invest in and wear insect repellent when enjoying the outdoors.”

There has been one human case of WNV in the Coachella Valley this year and 101 human cases in California overall. Eleven people have died from the virus this year, according to officials.

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News Brief 11.17.2021

Upcoming MVCAC Meetings; MVCAC 2022 Annual Meeting; Oxitec Updates Available; Join a MVCAC Committee!; MVCAC Drone Use and Interest Survey; MVCAC Monthly Committee Meeting Information; Share Your Post COVID-19 Exposure Methods With Us; MVCAC Member Resources Re: COVID-19; Agency Spotlight: New Name for Delta Vector Control District; Submit your district for the next Agency Spotlight; HR resources for districts to use and to upload information into; MVCAC News Briefs – Giant Asian Hornets; MVCAC News Briefs – Zika Updates; MVCAC News Briefs – Other Outbreaks; Do you have important news to share about your district or mosquito and vector issues?; MVCAC Jobs Board; MVCAC Sustaining Member Corner
 
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News Brief 11.10.2021

Upcoming MVCAC Meetings; MVCAC 2022 Annual Meeting; Check Presented from Asm. Quirk for CalSURV; Announcing the passing of James R. Caton; Join a MVCAC Committee!; MVCAC Drone Use and Interest Survey; Virtual Farewell Party for Truc Dever; MVCAC Monthly Committee Meeting Information; Share Your Post COVID-19 Exposure Methods With Us; MVCAC Member Resources Re: COVID-19; Agency Spotlight: New Name for Delta Vector Control District; Submit your district for the next Agency Spotlight; HR resources for districts to use and to upload information into; MVCAC News Briefs – Giant Asian Hornets; MVCAC News Briefs – Zika Updates; MVCAC News Briefs – Other Outbreaks; Do you have important news to share about your district or mosquito and vector issues?; MVCAC Jobs Board; MVCAC Sustaining Member Corner
 
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How an Invasive Species Spreads: The Case of Aedes notoscriptus in Southern California

From Entomology Today
November 9, 2021

The mosquito Aedes notoscriptus is no longer a stranger to California. The Australian native was first reported in Los Angeles County in 2014, its first appearance outside of Australia, New Zealand, and the southwest Pacific. Of course, invasive insect species aren’t unusual (in California and elsewhere), but this species was noted for its rapid spread and easy adaptation to urban areas.

By 2019, immature and adult Ae. notoscriptus mosquitoes had been collected from 44 cities in three California counties. Yet, the mosquito—sometimes known as the striped mosquito or the Australian backyard mosquito—remains relatively understudied. Knowing how the species adapts (and how quickly) will help provide clues to managing it. This knowledge is also important because Ae. notoscriptus seems well poised to rapidly spread globally. In a paper published in October in the Journal of Medical Entomology, entomologists from vector control districts in Los Angeles and San Diego counties and the California Department of Public Health present findings on the spread and adaptations of the mosquito.

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Human infection of mosquito-borne illness found in Stanislaus County

From the Turlock Journal
November 9, 2021

A Stanislaus County woman has become the first person this year in the county to be diagnosed with St. Louis encephalitis virus, according to the Stanislaus County Health Services Agency.

The woman’s name and hometown were not released. She is in her 50s. She had neurologic symptoms and was tested in September; confirmatory testing was performed by the California Department of Public Health and recently released by the SCHSA.

As of the last state surveillance report of Nov. 5, St. Louis encephalitis virus has been detected in mosquitoes in eight California counties. The Stanislaus County woman is the one person in California testing positive for SLEV in 2021. SLEV is transmitted to humans by the bite of an infected mosquito. SLEV was detected in mosquitoes in Stanislaus County in September of this year. Most people infected with SLEV have no apparent illness. Initial symptoms of those who become ill include fever, headache, nausea, vomiting, and tiredness. Severe neuroinvasive disease (often involving encephalitis, an inflammation of the brain) occurs more commonly in older adults.

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News Brief 11.3.2021

Upcoming MVCAC Meetings; MVCAC 2022 Annual Meeting; 2022 Committee Chairs; AB 1788(Bloom) Implementation and Vector Control Districts Clarification; MVCAC Drone Use and Interest Survey; Virtual Farewell Party for Truc Dever; MVCAC Monthly Committee Meeting Information; Share Your Post COVID-19 Exposure Methods With Us; MVCAC Member Resources Re: COVID-19; Agency Spotlight: New Name for Delta Vector Control District; Submit your district for the next Agency Spotlight; HR resources for districts to use and to upload information into; MVCAC News Briefs – Giant Asian Hornets; MVCAC News Briefs – Zika Updates; MVCAC News Briefs – Other Outbreaks; Do you have important news to share about your district or mosquito and vector issues?; MVCAC Jobs Board; MVCAC Sustaining Member Corner
 
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News Brief 10.27.2021

Upcoming MVCAC Meetings; MVCAC 2022 Annual Meeting; MVCAC Drone Use and Interest Survey; Virtual Farewell Party for Truc Dever; October is CyberSecurity Awareness Month; 89th Volume of the MVCAC Proceedings and Papers Available Now; MVCAC Monthly Committee Meeting Information; Share Your Post COVID-19 Exposure Methods With Us; MVCAC Member Resources Re: COVID-19; Agency Spotlight: New Name for Delta Vector Control District; Submit your district for the next Agency Spotlight; HR resources for districts to use and to upload information into; MVCAC News Briefs – Giant Asian Hornets; MVCAC News Briefs – Zika Updates; MVCAC News Briefs – Other Outbreaks; Do you have important news to share about your district or mosquito and vector issues?; MVCAC Jobs Board; MVCAC Sustaining Member Corner
 
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A Solution to SoCal’s Mosquito Invasion: Sterilize the Males

From NBC Los Angeles
October 28, 2021

Southern Californians are being attacked by what officials say could be a record number of blood-sucking Aedes mosquitoes, also known as “ankle biters.”

“It’s absolutely the worst it’s ever been, and I’ve lived here for 25 years,” said LA resident Sheila Irani, showing the I-Team mosquito bites covering her ankles and legs.

The aggressive Aedes first appeared in our region about a decade ago, but they’ve spread significantly in recent years.

LA County Vector Control tells NBC4 they are now on track to get a record number of calls for help from homeowners who complain they’re being eaten alive by the ankle biters, which can penetrate clothing to reach their victims.

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Visit a factory that makes mosquitoes

From CBS Sunday Morning
October 24, 2021

The deadliest animal on Earth is not the shark, or the snake, or the scorpion, or even us. It’s the mosquito. The diseases they carry kill over a million people a year, and in a warming climate they’re spreading to new places.

In 2013, a particularly nasty species arrived in Fresno, California: aedes aegypti

“She’s evil,” said Jodi Holeman, who works for Fresno’s mosquito-control department. “This is a female that will bite you multiple times. She’s very, very aggressive. The one thing that you can say with great certainty is we don’t have any very strong methods of control for this particular mosquito.” 

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News Brief 10.20.2021

Upcoming MVCAC Meetings; MVCAC 2022 Annual Meeting; MVCAC Drone Use and Interest Survey; Virtual Farewell Party for Truc Dever; Publication of Aedes notoscriptus Article in JME; October is CyberSecurity Awareness Month; 89th Volume of the MVCAC Proceedings and Papers Available Now; MVCAC Monthly Committee Meeting Information; Share Your Post COVID-19 Exposure Methods With Us; MVCAC Member Resources Re: COVID-19; Agency Spotlight: New Name for Delta Vector Control District; Submit your district for the next Agency Spotlight; HR resources for districts to use and to upload information into; MVCAC News Briefs – Giant Asian Hornets; MVCAC News Briefs – Zika Updates; MVCAC News Briefs – Other Outbreaks; Do you have important news to share about your district or mosquito and vector issues?; MVCAC Jobs Board; MVCAC Sustaining Member Corner
 
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Second group of mosquitoes test positive for West Nile virus in Sonoma County

From KRON4
October 18, 2021

COTATI, Calif. (KRON) – A group of mosquitoes tested positive for West Nile virus, according to the Marin/Sonoma Mosquito and Vector Control District.

The district said on Monday that the adult mosquitoes were collected in traps in Sonoma County — This is the second sample group this year to test positive in the county.

This group was in the area of Santa Rosa Avenue and Burt Street in Santa Rosa, officials said.

Staff continues to search the area for new sources of mosquito production.

“District staff will continue to monitor the distribution and abundance of adult mosquitoes in the area where the positive mosquito sample was collected,” stated Nizza Sequeira, Public Information Officer. “The District will also continue to test viable adult mosquito samples collected in the area for WNV. In the meantime, we ask that residents report mosquito problems to our office and take personal protection measures such as wearing an effective mosquito repellent when engaging in outdoor activities.”

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News Brief 10.13.21

Tick Survey for MVCAC Members; 89th Volume of the MVCAC Proceedings and Papers Available Now; Publication of Aedes notoscriptus Article in JME; October is CyberSecurity Awareness Month; Send dead protected birds to CDFW for study at no cost to you; Upcoming MVCAC Meetings; MVCAC 2022 Annual Meeting; MVCAC Monthly Committee Meeting Information; Share Your Post COVID-19 Exposure Methods With Us; MVCAC Member Resources Re: COVID-19; Agency Spotlight: New Name for Delta Vector Control District; Submit your district for the next Agency Spotlight; HR resources for districts to use and to upload information into; MVCAC News Briefs – Giant Asian Hornets; MVCAC News Briefs – Zika Updates; MVCAC News Briefs – Other Outbreaks; Do you have important news to share about your district or mosquito and vector issues?; MVCAC Jobs Board; MVCAC Sustaining Member Corner
 
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Invasive Aedes mosquito expands reach in Los Angeles, Orange Counties

From the LA Times
October 11, 2021

County vector control personnel informed Graham Jenkins and his wife late last month that the itchy bites on their ankles were the work of an insidious mosquito that had invaded their Gardena home — and that there was nothing they could do.

“These little buggers are living with us forever now,” Jenkins said.

A pair of bites on the 34-year-old’s wrist recently got infected and sent him to the emergency room. After a week of antibiotics, he said he was “almost back to normal,” but still wearing his watch on the other wrist.

The invasive Aedes mosquito is an aggressive biter with the ability to pierce clothing and reproduce in water sources as small as a bottle cap. Flying low to the ground, they strike during the daytime, preferring human blood to that of birds or other animals. They often strike multiple times in rapid succession.

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Officials warn of invasive mosquito species surging in SoCal that aggressively bites humans

From KTLA
October 7, 2021

Los Angeles County authorities are warning residents that an invasive species of tropical mosquitoes is becoming more prevalent in the region.

The Aedes mosquitos are more aggressive against humans than other species in the area, and they’re difficult to get rid of because their ability to reproduce exponentially, experts say. They’ve also triggered a warning in the San Gabriel Valley and Orange County.

Vector control officials set up traps in neighborhoods around L.A. County to monitor the insects, and so far this year they’ve trapped the most in Sunland and Sun Valley.

People aren’t imagining it when they say they’re getting bit more this year, said Susanne Kluh, director of scientific and technical services for the Greater L.A. County Vector Control District.

The species has been in the region since 2011, but “depending on where you live, it might have just started really building up this year,” Kluh said.

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News Brief 10.6.21

Call for Papers, Presentations and Posters; October is CyberSecurity Awareness Month; Tick Survey for MVCAC Members; Send dead protected birds to CDFW for study at no cost to you; Upcoming MVCAC Meetings; MVCAC 2022 Annual Meeting; MVCAC Monthly Committee Meeting Information; Share Your Post COVID-19 Exposure Methods With Us; MVCAC Member Resources Re: COVID-19; Agency Spotlight: New Name for Delta Vector Control District; Submit your district for the next Agency Spotlight; HR resources for districts to use and to upload information into; MVCAC News Briefs – Giant Asian Hornets; MVCAC News Briefs – Zika Updates; MVCAC News Briefs – Other Outbreaks; Do you have important news to share about your district or mosquito and vector issues?; MVCAC Jobs Board; MVCAC Sustaining Member Corner
 
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News Brief 9.29.21

AB 361 Update; October is CyberSecurity Awareness Month; Tick Survey for MVCAC Members; Send dead protected birds to CDFW for study at no cost to you; Public comment period for Oxitec CA project is open; Upcoming MVCAC Meetings; MVCAC 2022 Annual Meeting; Call for Papers, Presentations and Posters; 2022 William C. Reeves New Investigator Award Applications Due 10/4/21; MVCAC Monthly Committee Meeting Information; Share Your Post COVID-19 Exposure Methods With Us; MVCAC Member Resources Re: COVID-19; Agency Spotlight: New Name for Delta Vector Control District; Submit your district for the next Agency Spotlight; HR resources for districts to use and to upload information into; MVCAC News Briefs – Giant Asian Hornets; MVCAC News Briefs – Zika Updates; MVCAC News Briefs – Other Outbreaks; Do you have important news to share about your district or mosquito and vector issues?; MVCAC Jobs Board; MVCAC Sustaining Member Corner
 
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Sacramento area vector control warns of yellowjacket threat in area

From ABC10
September 29, 2021

ELK GROVE, Calif. — The Sacramento-Yolo Mosquito and Vector Control District is warning people about yellowjackets that have appeared in larger numbers than usual.

Yellowjackets stings are painful but the district warns that those allergic could have adverse reactions to them.  

“While this is not an unusual occurrence for fall, they do seem to be out in larger numbers this year especially compared to previous seasons,” Gary Goodman, District Manager for the Sacramento-Yolo Mosquito and Vector Control District, said in a news release.

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Alameda County logs year’s first West Nile virus activity

From the East Bay Times
September 27, 2021

Alameda County’s mosquito abatement district said Monday that a dead bird’s remains tested were positive for West Nile virus, the first positive test of the year.

The bird was collected in Pleasanton and underwent testing at a district laboratory. Officials said they plan to boost mosquito monitoring and larval control efforts near where the bird was found.

“With the change of season, residents may assume mosquitoes are no longer a threat, but this is usually the time of year when we see an increase in West Nile virus in our county,” district general manager Ryan Clausnitzer said.

“With light showers in the mornings followed by warm weather in the afternoons, mosquitoes still have plenty of opportunities to breed and flourish,” Clausnitzer said in part. “While we are not detecting high numbers of mosquitoes in the area where the bird was found, there is an increased risk of West Nile virus with every mosquito bite.”

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Birds, Mosquitoes With West Nile Virus Found In Contra Costa Co.

From the Concord, CA Patch
September 25, 2021

CONTRA COSTA COUNTY, CA — A second bird in Contra Costa County and another group of mosquitoes tested positive for West Nile Virus, county vector control officials said Friday.
The bird was found in San Pablo and the mosquitoes were in a trap in Oakley. It’s the first dead bird this year in San Pablo to have West Nile Virus.

So far this year in the county, two dead birds have been found with West Nile Virus as well as eight groups of mosquitoes.

Vector control officials said certain birds carry West Nile Virus and mosquitoes can become infected when they bite an infected bird. Mosquitoes spread the virus by biting another bird or a person.

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News Brief 9.22.21

Send dead protected birds to CDFW for study at no cost to you; Public comment period for Oxitec CA project is open; MVCAC Trustee Training; Dermacentor variabilis larva available for your reference collection; Upcoming MVCAC Meetings; MVCAC 2022 Annual Meeting; Call for Papers, Presentations and Posters; 2022 William C. Reeves New Investigator Award Applications Due 10/4/21; 2020 MVCAC Proceedings On Sale!; MVCAC Monthly Committee Meeting Information; Share Your Post COVID-19 Exposure Methods With Us; MVCAC Member Resources Re: COVID-19; Agency Spotlight: New Name for Delta Vector Control District; Submit your district for the next Agency Spotlight; HR resources for districts to use and to upload information into; MVCAC News Briefs – Giant Asian Hornets; MVCAC News Briefs – Zika Updates; MVCAC News Briefs – Other Outbreaks; Do you have important news to share about your district or mosquito and vector issues?; MVCAC Jobs Board; MVCAC Sustaining Member Corner
 
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OC Reports First Human Case Of West Nile Virus For 2021

From CBS Los Angeles
September 23, 2021

SANTA ANA (CBSLA) – The Orange County Health Care Agency Wednesday confirmed its first human case of the year of West Nile Virus.

The Buena Park woman who contracted the virus was hospitalized earlier this month with neuroinvasive disease, but survived and is now recovering, the O.C. Health Care Agency reports.

According to the OCHCA, so far there have been fewer WNV cases reported this year compared to 2020, when there were 19 human cases and one death caused by West Nile.

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‘Ankle Biter’ Mosquito Population On The Rise In Orange County

From CBS Los Angeles
September 23, 2021

ALISO VIEJO (CBSLA) – The aedes mosquito, more commonly referred to as the “ankle biter,” has officially landed in all 34 Orange County cities.

“Me, I count…I see one, two, three, four, five, six just on this side and there are a whole bunch more under my sock,” said Aliso Viejo resident Andrew Smith

“Kind of classically itchy and I just felt a ton of bug swarming around my ankles. I was like, ‘This is not fun,’” said another Aliso Viejo resident, Sonoma Camozzi.

Experts say the “ankle biters” are multiplying and there’s and there’s no sign of them disappearing any time soon.

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Mosquito borne encephalitis virus found in Stanislaus County

From the Ceres Courier
September 22, 2021

A mosquito sample collected in Stanislaus County has tested positive for St. Louis Encephalitis virus, according to the area’s two mosquito abatement districts.

Like West Nile Virus, most people who become infected with SLEV will never feel sick. Most people who do feel sick will have mild flu-like symptoms; a small number of people will have severe disease with headache, confusion, disorientation and dizziness. Seizures, paralysis, coma and sometimes death may occur. Severe disease is more likely in people who are older and those with weakened immune systems.

SLEV is related to the West Nile Virus and is transmitted via the bite of Culex mosquitoes, the same mosquitoes that transmit WNV.

“The discovery of positive mosquito pools is a reminder that we need to continuously prevent mosquito breeding in our community. There is no specific treatment for SLEV or WNV, so it is very important that people protect themselves and their families from mosquito bites,” advises Dr. Julie Vaishampayan, Stanislaus County Public Health Officer. “We ask everyone to use mosquito repellents to protect themselves and their loved ones from mosquito-borne viruses, especially when they are outdoors.”

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Even California Has a Mosquito Problem

From the New York Times
September 22, 2021

When I moved to Los Angeles years ago, I was told by native Angeleno friends that the city without humidity also definitely did not have mosquitoes.

What is that whizzing sound then? The welts on my ankles? My favorite cafe has taken to selling bottles of insect repellent next to the cash register. Were my friends wrong, or should we acknowledge that this winged scourge is part of life in the Golden State? 

Since 2011, scientists have tracked an invasive mosquito species in parts of California: the Aedes aegypti. These black-and-white-striped “ankle-biters,” which can transmit dengue fever, Zika virus and yellow fever, have been found up and down the state.

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West Nile virus detected in mosquitoes and sentinel chickens in Lake County

From the Lake County News
September 22, 2021

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — The Lake County Vector Control District said West Nile virus has been detected in two more mosquito samples and also in sentinel chickens in Lake County.

The sentinel chickens were in a flock near Upper Lake. The mosquitoes, all Culex tarsalis — the western encephalitis mosquito — were collected in traps set in Lower Lake and Upper Lake, the district reported.

Earlier this summer positive mosquitoes were collected near Kelseyville and Upper Lake, the district said.

“When we see West Nile virus in sentinel chickens, that tells us that the conditions are right for human infections of West Nile virus,” said Jamesina Scott, Ph.D., district manager and research director of the Lake County Vector Control District. “The best protection from West Nile virus is prevention. It’s important to avoid mosquito bites.”

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L.A. County could see more mosquitoes with hotter, longer summers

From KTLA
September 20, 2021

While many people might think mosquitoes are not a big deal in Southern California, where it’s not so humid, they should think again.

Public health officials say that the number of mosquito bites in the Los Angeles area has risen in recent years. And the hotter summers of the past few years may foreshadow conditions that boost the numbers of these small, blood-sucking pests.

That raises concerns about West Nile Virus, an incurable and potentially deadly mosquito-borne illness that can be transmitted to humans and animals.

L.A. County health officials on Monday reported this year’s first death linked to West Nile virus in the county. In 2020, there were 93 West Nile virus cases and seven deaths, according to public health data.

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L.A. County confirms its first West Nile virus-related death of 2021

From the Los Angeles Times
September 19, 2021

Los Angeles County health officials have reported the county’s first death this year due to West Nile virus.

The patient, a resident of the eastern region of the county, was hospitalized and died from a neuro-invasive disease associated with the virus, officials announced Friday. No further information was given about the individual or the date of death.

County officials have documented a total of 10 cases in the county so far this year, excluding Long Beach and Pasadena, which have their own health departments. The state reported its first West Nile virus-related death in July in San Luis Obispo County.

The mosquito-borne virus is common in California in summer and early fall. Most people who become infected don’t experience symptoms, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, but some may experience fever, muscle aches and tiredness. In severe cases of infection, especially in people over 50 years old and those with chronic medical conditions such as cancer and diabetes, the virus can affect the brain and spinal cord, causing meningitis, encephalitis and paralysis.

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Fresno County reports California’s first case in 2021 of this mosquito-borne illness

From the Fresno Bee
September 17, 2021

California’s first positive case of St. Louis encephalitis in 2021 has been reported and it’s in Fresno County.

The mosquito-borne illness, in rare and extreme cases, can cause inflammation of the brain, according to the Fresno County Department of Public Health.

A mosquito becomes infected and can pass it to humans when it bites a bird infected with the virus.

It is not transmitted person to person. Most people infected with SLEV don’t have symptoms, which can include fever, headache, or nausea up to two weeks after being bitten.

There were no details on the seriousness of the illness detected locally.

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News Brief 9.15.21

Meritorious Service Award, Honorary Member Award and Service with Distinction Award Nominations Deadline Extended; AB 1788 (Bloom) Clarification; Public comment period for Oxitec CA project is open; MVCAC Trustee Training; Upcoming MVCAC Meetings; MVCAC 2022 Annual Meeting; Call for Papers, Presentations and Posters; 2022 William C. Reeves New Investigator Award Applications Due 10/4/21; 2020 MVCAC Proceedings On Sale!; MVCAC Monthly Committee Meeting Information; Share Your Post COVID-19 Exposure Methods With Us; MVCAC Member Resources Re: COVID-19; Agency Spotlight: New Name for Delta Vector Control District; Submit your district for the next Agency Spotlight; HR resources for districts to use and to upload information into; MVCAC News Briefs – Giant Asian Hornets; MVCAC News Briefs – Zika Updates; MVCAC News Briefs – Other Outbreaks; Do you have important news to share about your district or mosquito and vector issues?; MVCAC Jobs Board; MVCAC Sustaining Member Corner
 
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Appreciating Placer Mosquito and Vector Control District’s efforts

From Gold Country Media
September 16, 2021

We’re lucky to have the expertise and efficiency shown year round by the Placer Mosquito and Vector Control District.

Although we often see the district’s trucks and employees in our neighborhoods, the district does not receive much public recognition for its success in eradicating invasive mosquito species from spreading throughout the area.

And we don’t usually reflect on the Placer Mosquito and Vector Control District’s around-the-clock efforts to stop the 30 mosquito species from multiplying here.

But if we find a mosquito that might carry a disease or we find a dead bird on our property, district employees are the first ones we call, as we expect immediate assistance.

So we appreciate the organization’s 26 employees working daily during mosquito season to keep potentially deadly or debilitating mosquito-borne diseases such as West Nile virus, yellow fever or Zika mosquitoes at bay. West Nile virus mosquito season is usually from mid-June to September or October, subsiding once temperatures are below 60 degrees. We’re still in the midst of mosquito season.

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