The San Antonio Health Department reported finding a mosquito with the West Nile Virus in one of their surveillance traps. This is the most common mosquito borne illness in the United States and may cause meningitis or encephalitis. Here’s some information on it from the CDC.
https://www.cdc.gov/west-nile-virus/about/index.html
If you don’t get bitten by mosquitoes, you won’t get it. My approach is three pronged. First, I put insect repellant when I go outdoors on exposed areas. My personal favorite is Deep Woods Off. I don’t like the way it smells, but it works. The second is to cut down of mosquito propagation by emptying standing containers which may retain water if it will rain again and by using traps where the mosquitoes lay their eggs. My favorite trap that i have used for years is no longer made, Trap N Kill.
I am going to take the containers, put water in them and add Mosquito Dunk granules. These granules contain a type of bacteria which are toxic to the mosquito larvae.
The third measure is trap the adults. The most effective traps that kill mosquitoes and not helpful insects are those that use carbon dioxide as bait, the same stuff that we exhale. Unfortunately, they are more expensive than many of the Ultraviolet light models. Here is an interesting article which covers these points.
How to Find a Mosquito Trap That Actually Works
Avoid bug zappers, experts say. Instead, try these evidence-backed traps and other strategies to stay safe.
Mosquitoes can quickly make a pleasantly warm evening unbearable—so much so that you might decide to stay inside rather than deal with the annoying, biting pests.
You might think that a bug zapper is the solution to taking back your yard. But mosquito control experts don’t think highly of those devices, which rely on ultraviolet light to attract any sort of flying insect before giving them a deadly jolt.
Stopping mosquitoes is an important goal, these experts say. After all, they’re not only annoyances but also disease vectors that may carry viruses like West Nile, dengue, Zika, and chikungunya.
There are some mosquito lures and traps that work under the right circumstances, says Daniel Markowski, PhD, technical advisor to the American Mosquito Control Association. But bug-zapping devices aren’t on that list.
“When you’re hearing your bug zapper go all night, it’s killing moths and midges and beetles, beneficial good insects, and very few if any mosquitoes at all,” he says.
Devices that rely on light or heat are indiscriminate bug killers. Research indicates that only a minuscule fraction of the bugs they kill are mosquitoes. Instead, they’re likely to kill insects that are important pollinators or serve other helpful functions, says Eva Buckner, PhD, an assistant professor at the University of Florida’s Florida Medical Entomology Laboratory.
Zappers aren’t the only option. There are tools you can use to help manage mosquito populations, but there’s no one home product that can eliminate all mosquitoes, says Kristin Healy, PhD, an associate professor of entomology at Louisiana State University and past-president of the American Mosquito Control Association. Still, you can significantly reduce the risk of being bitten by at least some of these pests by using an integrated approach, targeting mosquitoes at various stages of their life cycle, and taking a variety of steps to protect yourself.
Which Type of Mosquito Is Bugging You?
There are more than 2,700 mosquito species around the globe and more than 100 mosquito species in the U.S., according to Healy. They vary in terms of breeding habitats, flying distances, feeding behavior, activity levels at different times of day, aggressiveness, and more. Because of that, things that will ward off or trap one type of mosquito may have no effect on another.
Mosquito Traps and Lures That Work
Mosquito traps and lures target adult mosquitoes that are already out, flying around, and looking for a meal. Because mosquitoes can enter a yard from any direction, however, it’s unlikely that a trap will capture all of them, Markowski says.
The best traps are ones that target mosquitoes specifically, not bugs or flying insects in general, according to Buckner, Healy, and Markowski. Some create environments that mosquitoes might fly into to try to lay their eggs. Depending on the trap, mosquitoes are trapped before they can lay eggs, or they lay eggs in a solution that can kill the eggs or larvae before they become adults. Others lure the bugs that are seeking out a blood meal (like you) with an attractant like carbon dioxide, which simulates breathing. Once in those traps, the mosquitoes can’t escape—and they die.
Researchers at the CDC designed a low-tech trap known as an autocidal gravid ovitrap (AGO trap) to specifically target Aedes species, which often breed in buckets or old tires in backyards. Versions of this trap often look like a bucket with a bit of water and hay inside. Female mosquitoes fly in looking to lay eggs, but a screen prevents them from actually depositing eggs. They are then captured by sticky paper on the sides of the bucket.
You can buy the Ovi-Catch AGO trap based on CDC technology from Catchmaster. And there are a number of closely related traps, Buckner says. The company Biogents sells several research-backed traps, including a similar product known as a “GAT” trap.
The CDC’s AGO trap doesn’t contain any chemicals meant to kill anything, but some traps that are structurally similar contain larvacide to kill mosquito larvae. One example Markowski cites as effective is the In2Care trap. With this trap, mosquitoes fly in and can access the water where they lay eggs. But the water has a fungus that will slowly kill adult mosquitoes and a larvacide that the mosquitoes can spread to other breeding sites before they die.
For AGO traps or others like them to work best, you should have a network of them in your neighborhood, Buckner says. The mosquitoes they attract don’t fly far but still might come in from a neighbor’s yard unless you and people in surrounding homes work together to decrease the local population.
These aren’t the only traps that work. Popular traps like the Mosquito Magnet can also catch a lot of mosquitoes, including house mosquitoes, attracting them by emitting carbon dioxide, Markowski says. (Attractants can also be used in bug-zapping devices, but these experts said that such devices still kill too many beneficial insects.)
These sometimes kill hundreds of mosquitoes in a night, Markowski says. But that highlights both the benefits and weaknesses of traps as part of mosquito prevention. Eliminating a couple of hundred mosquitoes might lower your risk of being bitten. “But the issue you have is it is literally a numbers game,” Markowski says. If you have an unused swimming pool or backyard pond nearby, that could release millions of new mosquitoes each week. In that context, a few hundred a night is just a drop in the bucket.
That’s why you can’t expect traps to do everything, according to Healy. “Be wary of things that say they control 100 percent” of mosquitoes, she says. Instead, think of traps as one strategy among many.
What Else Can You Do?
It’s far easier to manage mosquito larvae than adult mosquitoes, Healy says, because they tend to be confined to a source of standing water. Because of that, one of the first steps you should take is to identify standing water sources on your property.
If possible, take a weekly walk-around to dump out any sources of standing water. Look for buckets, trash cans without lids, tires, plastic pipes, or anything else where even a small amount of water can collect. You can also replace the water in something like a bird bath every week. Because it generally takes at least a week for eggs to be laid and larvae to hatch and then grow to the adult stage, you don’t need to do this more than weekly.
If you have a small pond or something else that can’t be drained, your local mosquito control district may provide you with small fish that feed on mosquito larvae, which can help control your problem. In other places, you can look for a safe, environmentally friendly larvacide like Mosquito Dunks or Mosquito Bits to put in the water.
If you look in home improvement stores, you’ll find a number of barrier sprays that kill mosquitoes resting on outdoor foliage. But “I don’t recommend any type of broadcast spray,” Buckner says. These sprays usually contain pesticides known as pyrethroids, which will kill just about any insect they come in contact with, including pollinators like butterflies and honeybees. If you’re going to use any kind of pesticide spray, use it just on the spaces around your doorways, where mosquitoes are likely to rest, Markowski says, “not out there on vegetation or flowers.” Keep in mind, though, that exposure to pyrethroids has been linked to some health risks for people.
And, of course, make sure to have screens on windows or doors that you want to be able to leave open.
“I’ve yet to see a single device or product that works in all situations at all times. There is no magic bullet that’s going to wipe them all out,” Markowski says. “It’s an integrated approach. If you do a little of all of it, that’s when you’re protected.”
To bolster your personal protection, remember to use an EPA-registered insect repellent when you are outside (see CR’s insect repellent ratings). Use these repellents as directed on the label.