Updated
Updated · The Washington Post · Jun 14
Nearly 2,000 D.C. Households Cut Mosquitoes With Traps and Bti as Climate Change Lengthens Season
Updated
Updated · The Washington Post · Jun 14

Nearly 2,000 D.C. Households Cut Mosquitoes With Traps and Bti as Climate Change Lengthens Season

2 articles · Updated · The Washington Post · Jun 14

Summary

  • Nearly 2,000 households in one Washington, D.C., neighborhood have joined a community mosquito-control drive, using traps and standing-water treatment that residents say has already reduced bugs early this summer.
  • The effort targets the main breeding mechanism: mosquitoes can lay hundreds of eggs in as little as a tablespoon of water, so residents are tossing standing water, using Bti larvicide and setting traps for adults and egg-laying females.
  • Michelle Mingrone launched the campaign in March; more than 1,000 people responded in the first week, and hundreds later signed on as organizers and block captains.
  • Bart Knols, a mosquito biologist, said similar trap-dense programs cut populations 90% to 95% on islands and eliminated two species in the Philippines in under six months, though total eradication is unrealistic in a city.
  • The neighborhood push comes as climate change makes mosquito seasons longer and more intense, raising disease risks including West Nile, which is now endemic in D.C.

Insights

If community efforts work, what is the government's future role in pest control?
Could genetically modified mosquitoes be the next step for disease prevention in American cities?