Recent rainfall could increase mosquito population. Residents advised to Check Gardens/Yards for Breeding Habitats


 
The country has been experiencing some heavy rainfall events during the past couple of days due to the passing of Tropical Storm Earl over the weekend and unstable atmospheric conditions along with a moist and warm southerly wind flow that will account for cloudy periods and isolated showers.
The Collective Prevention Services (CPS), is calling on residents to help stop the spread of mosquitoes by preventing them from breeding in your backyard or garden after rainfall events.
The best way to manage a mosquito problem is to tackle it at its source: keep the mosquitoes from breeding.
After every rainfall event take action and end the breeding by not letting your home be a breeding site for mosquitoes. Mosquitoes also need to feed in order to reproduce, so avoid being bitten by joining the fight to stop the spread of mosquito-borne diseases.
Source reduction is the key to decreasing the mosquito population. Due to the tropical nature of our climate, breeding
habitats are in abundance, and many of them are unfortunately man-made.
A bite by an infectious Aedes aegypti mosquito, spreads diseases such as – Dengue, Zika, Chikungunya, Yellow Fever -, and therefore it is crucial for every household to prevent its breeding.
Mosquitoes can breed in as little as a half-inch of water. This isn’t a lot of water, and plant saucers are one of those
unassuming places that can gather a small amount and still be a huge breeding site for your backyard mosquito.
Breeding sites include anywhere that water can settle for a certain time undisturbed from garbage to your flowers/plants.
This includes tin cans, old tires, empty paint cans, buckets, old saucers, flowerpots, cemetery urns/vase, old pet dishes, unused plastic swimming pools, boats on dry dock, or other containers that collect and hold water. Turn over unused boats or make sure the water runoff is free to run on the ground.
Once again, it is very important to check around your yard to make sure there is no standing water after a rainfall event, especially during the hurricane season when the country experiences more rainfall due to passing tropical weather systems.
A few tips/reminders: Get rid of any unused pots or bins or turn them upside down, so they don’t collect water; Keep trash and recycling bins covered. If you can, try drilling drain holes into the bottom of them; keep a fine-mesh screen over rain barrels, water tanks and cisterns.
Take a look at your plants, once your plants are collecting water in between the leaves and the stem, these too pose as a breeding site. Trim plants and tree hedges and keep your property clean.
Make use of the current pre-hurricane clean-up that is being carried out by the Waste Haulage Companies. Look out for the schedule in the daily newspaper.
For issues surrounding mosquito breeding sites, contact CPS’ vector control team by calling 914. Ask to be connected to the vector control team. You can also email vector-control@sintmaartengov.org with supporting pictures and contact information to report a mosquito nuisance or request assistance.
CPS is a government department that falls under the Ministry of Public Health, Social Development and Labor.