Santa Clara County to treat for mosquitos Wednesday in Palo Alto flood basin – The Mercury News Today Us News



Santa Clara County officials will carry out an aerial mosquito control treatment over the Palo Alto flood basin Wednesday aimed at reducing the population of winter salt marsh mosquitoes.

The treatment, which will be applied via helicopter, will utilize mosquito-hormone regulators and microbes to prevent larvae from developing into adults, according to a press release from the Santa Clara County Office of Communications and Public Affairs.

“As a public health agency, our mission is to protect the community from vector-borne nuisances and diseases,” Dr. Nayer Zahiri, Mosquito and Vector Control District manager, said in the press release. “Mosquitoes don’t take a break during winter, and this treatment will reduce the number of mosquitoes that breed in the marsh before they can fly off and become a problem for community members living or recreating nearby.”

The treatment is slated to begin around 8 a.m., weather permitting, and will last several hours, officials said.

The mosquito variety — also known as Aedes squamiger — can travel as far as 20 miles to seek blood to consume, officials said, and are “opportunistic feeders and aggressive biters.” In the flood basin, they breed in high numbers.

The district monitors the mosquitoes’ breeding levels and monitors the spread of mosquito-borne diseases such as Zika, dengue and West Nile virus, officials added.

The region receiving treatment is nonresidential, officials said, but reducing the population of mosquitoes will help “maintain quality of life for residents in nearby neighborhoods.”


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