Many people often lament over the final days of summer and dread the first frigid days of winter, but we’re guessing everyone may welcome winter with open arms, so they can bid adieu to mosquitoes and the threat of Zika virus.
Unfortunately, it’s a common misconception that mosquitoes
simply die upon Jack Frost’s arrival. Read on to learn more about seasonal
mosquito activity and how you can prevent a future mosquito problem from
hatching come spring.
Mosquito Lifecycle
Believe it or not, mosquitoes do not simply die off during
the colder months. Exactly how a mosquito survives the winter can differ by
species. The mosquito responsible for transmitting Zika virus, Aedes aegypti,
overwinters in the egg stage. As temperatures begin to fall below 50 degrees
Fahrenheit, adult females deposit their final batch of eggs in water-holding
items containing as little as a half an inch of water. The adults will
eventually die, while the newly deposited eggs enter a state of diapause, a
process that suspends their development during the coldest months.
When temperatures start to rise and rainfall picks back up
again in spring, the eggs are re-submerged and hatch to start the next
generation of pesky Aedes mosquitoes that will undoubtedly seek out humans as a
food source. Even more alarming, though, is the fact that these offspring could
be infected with Zika, as noted in a recent study published in the American
Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene.
Pest World.org
https://www.pestworld.org/news-hub/pest-articles/where-do-mosquitoes-go-in-winter/
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