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Daily News
Updated on November 22, 2004
Insecticide Resistance in Mosquitoes Being Studied
(Beyond Pesticides, November 19, 2004) In the midst of adulticiding
mosquitoes in response to West Nile virus, researchers in Texas are
studying possible mosquito resistance to the insecticides being used.
Texas Agricultural Experiment Station, Texas Cooperative
Extension and the Mosquito Control Division of the Harris County Public
Health and Environmental Services Department are working together on
the research. Larvae of Culex quinquefasciatus, or the southern house
mosquito, are being collected in the Houston area and raised in
laboratories at Texas A&M University. Adult mosquitoes are then
tested to see whether genetic mutations have made them resistant to the
pyrethroid pesticides used in the district, said Dr. Patricia
Pietrantonio, Experiment Station entomologist.
The southern house mosquito is the primary vector for
viruses causing St. Louis encephalitis and West Nile encephalitis in
Texas urban areas.
Fragments of mosquito genes will be cloned and sequenced
to determine what mutations, if any, have occurred, Pietrantonio said.
"If mutations have taken place," she said, "the insect
will no longer die" when treated with insecticides.
The project is similar to one she completed in the
Houston area in 1998 involving the organophosphate insecticide,
malathion. Pietrantonio found in some areas the southern house mosquito
was resistant to the insecticide malathion being used. The district
switched to pyrethroid pesticides to control the pests. Pyrethroids are
chemicals that are linked with endocrine disruption, neurotoxicity, and
respiratory irritation. Symptoms of acute toxicity due to inhalation
include sneezing, nasal stuffiness, headache, nausea, incoordination,
tremors, convulsions, facial flushing and swelling, and burning and
itching sensations.
In 2003, the Mosquito Control Division in Harris County
sprayed 2 million acres with pyrethroid insecticides in an effort to
control disease-bearing mosquitoes, said Ray Parsons, division
director.
"History has shown that overuse of pesticides will lead
to resistance in insects," said said Dr. Jim Olson, Experiment Station
entomologist.
The project was started with a federal U.S. Department
of Agriculture Cooperative State Research, Education and Extension
Service grant, Olson said.
"This is serving as a model for similar problems that
could arise anywhere in the state of Texas or the United States," he
said.
"We have like concerns, particularly for the Culex
quinquefasiciastus in other areas of the Gulf Coast of Texas all the
way into the metropolitan areas of the state such as Dallas where there
is extensive spraying for mosquitoes going on."
"We have to develop new methods of controlling
mosquitoes," Parsons said. "We know we can control them with
insecticides, but it's very expensive and it only works to a certain
degree. It's going to take people going out into the field and learning
more about the mosquitoes: the biology of the mosquito and how to
control it."
The resistance project is part of a larger program
investigating the frequency of mosquito-borne diseases and other
possible control methods for mosquitoes, he said.
"In many parts of the state, we don't have a clue as to
what level of insecticide resistance exists," Olson said. "It's a bad
time to find out you've got it in the middle of a disease outbreak. It
is better you take care of it well in advance."
The Experiment Station developed a Mosquito Control
Research Initiative that will be submitted to the next session of the
Texas Legislature. The Experiment Station is asking for $1 million per
year, which would allow them to expand mosquito-related research and
educational programs.
TAKE ACTION: Fight to prevent unnecessary adulticiding
in your community and promote effective, intelligent mosquito
management. For help see Beyond Pesticides Tools for Activists page. For more information on
West Nile Virus and mosquito management see a new factsheet by Beyond
Pesticides: The Truth About Mosquitoes, Pesticides, and West Nile Virus.
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