Lodi News-Sentinel

California officials fight against the Zika-carrying ‘cockroach of mosquitoes’

- By Soumya Karlamangl­a

LOS ANGELES — Randy Garcia points a flashlight into a bush and shakes the leaves. Martin Serrano climbs a ladder to peer into rain gutters. Yessenia Avilez ducks under stairs and flips over a plastic tarp collecting water.

In a Silver Lake backyard resembling a small jungle, the team — dressed in khaki shirts tucked into blue slacks — searches for its target.

Serrano and Garcia spot a tub filled with rainwater, leaves floating on the top. There’s movement just below the surface: hundreds of swimming creatures, like tiny tadpoles.

Then something flies out of the water, inches from their faces.

It’s an Aedes mosquito, the villain in the Zika virus epidemic that has broken out in dozens of countries this year. Nationwide, mosquito control workers like these ones are waging a war against the insects, but it will be a difficult one to win.

Aedes mosquitoes, which aren’t native to the Americas, are hardier than mosquitoes we’re familiar with here and local officials have struggled to curb their spread. With the threat of Zika virus looming and summer approachin­g, that bug problem has turned into a pressing public health concern.

“This is very, very, very serious,” said Edward McCabe, chief medical officer for the March of Dimes and an emeritus professor of pediatrics at UCLA. “We wouldn’t want L.A. to turn out to be ground zero for endemic Zika in the U.S.”

Though parts of Texas and Florida are at highest risk for Zika, health officials warn that outbreaks could be expected this summer across the U.S., including in Southern California. Experts say limiting mosquito population­s is the first line of defense against Zika, but worry insect control agencies aren’t prepared.

Zika spreads when Aedes aegypti, the yellow fever mosquito, bites an infected person and then bites another. Unlike most types of mosquitoes that prefer the blood of animals, Aedes like to bite humans.

With other kinds of mosquitoes, one worker in a truck could spray a quarter of a small city with pesticide in one night and eliminate most of the bugs, said Michael Doyle, head of vector control for the Florida Keys.

But spraying doesn’t work well against Aedes mosquitoes and their eggs usually need to be destroyed by hand. So “to cover that same area you need 10 people working for a week,” going door-to-door, he said.

When Aedes mosquitoes began transmitti­ng dengue, another viral disease, in 2009 in Key West, the agency had to bring in 30 inspectors to work 10 hours a day, six days a week to scour every yard in the city for mosquitoes, Doyle said.

After more than 90 cases of dengue were confirmed in the outbreak, the district added $1 million to its budget for 10 inspectors to continue the checkups. But that’s not a solution for agencies across the country, he said.

“We just can’t afford to double our staffs in most of those places,” he said.

On that chilly spring morning in Silver Lake, Serrano and Garcia, vector control specialist­s with the Greater Los Angeles Vector Control District, dumped out the water and larvae in the tub. Garcia drilled holes in its bottom, as well as in other buckets in the yard.

They’re diligent about eliminatin­g places where water can collect because the mosquitoes can breed using as little as a teaspoon of water. “We’ve seen them in Doritos wrappers,” Serrano said.

In the L.A. region, Aedes mosquitoes are believed to have arrived several years ago in shipments of bamboo plants coming from China to El Monte. They’re now found in at least 12 counties in California, according to the state health department.

Avilez picked up a watering can and aligned one eye with its narrow spout.

The mosquitoes tend to lay their eggs — so small they’re nearly invisible to the human eye — at the waterline of buckets and containers. The eggs can survive several months of drought, waiting to hatch when they come in contact with water.

When the Sahara dried up and became a desert thousands of years ago, Aedes aegypti evolved to survive without a natural source of water, breeding using the water in pots outside people’s homes, said Marten Edwards, a professor at Muhlenberg College in Pennsylvan­ia who studies the species.

They’re so hard to eradicate because they’re essentiall­y domesticat­ed, he said. Unlike the more common Culex mosquito that comes out only at dawn and dusk, Aedes bite during the day when people are active. Often considered the “cockroach of mosquitoes,” they can even survive inside people’s homes, he said.

These aggressive, invasive mosquitoes have become a burden for insect control agencies in California.

In September, when Aedes numbers peaked in Southern California, service requests for Aedes made up 90 percent of all requests to the L.A. district, said Kelly Middleton, the district’s director of community affairs.

 ?? MARCUS YAM/LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? Vector control specialist­s Yessenia Avilez, bottom, and Randy Garcia, spot an adult aedes albopictus mosquito, also known as the asian tiger mosquito, in a residentia­l backyard during a house call in the Silverlake neighborho­od on March 25 in Los...
MARCUS YAM/LOS ANGELES TIMES Vector control specialist­s Yessenia Avilez, bottom, and Randy Garcia, spot an adult aedes albopictus mosquito, also known as the asian tiger mosquito, in a residentia­l backyard during a house call in the Silverlake neighborho­od on March 25 in Los...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States