• Salt-based mosquito-control products are

    From ScienceDaily@1337:3/111 to All on Tue Oct 20 21:30:44 2020
    Salt-based mosquito-control products are ineffective
    Researchers find no evidence that salt-water ingestion kills mosquitoes


    Date:
    October 20, 2020
    Source:
    Entomological Society of America
    Summary:
    A new study by a bevy of expert mosquito researchers offers an
    important warning to consumers: Products claiming to reduce mosquito
    populations with salt-water solutions are ineffective. In a series
    of lab tests using nine mosquito species, researchers found no
    evidence that adult mosquitoes are killed by salt ingested at
    concentrations used in several popular mosquito-control products.



    FULL STORY ==========================================================================
    A new study by a bevy of expert mosquito researchers offers an important warning to consumers: Products claiming to reduce mosquito populations
    with salt-water solutions are simply ineffective.


    ==========================================================================
    In a series of lab tests conducted in five locations using nine species
    of mosquito, researchers found no evidence that adult mosquitoes
    are killed by salt ingested at concentrations used in several popular mosquito-control products. The findings are presented in a new publication released today in the Journal of Medical Entomology.

    Salt-based mosquito-control products have caught researchers' attention
    in recent years for their bold claims of killing mosquitoes via salt
    ingestion.

    The products often contain some combination of dried salt, sugar, and
    yeast, which is mixed with warm water by the purchaser and then placed
    outdoors to attract mosquitoes that then drink the fluid.

    Donald Yee, Ph.D., BCE, professor at the University of Southern
    Mississippi's School of Biological, Environmental, and Earth Sciences, coordinated the study among nine researchers at several universities
    and public mosquito-control agencies both in the United States and
    Australia. They used nine mosquito species in their experiment, all from
    the genera Aedes, Anopheles, and Culex, which collectively are responsible
    for the vast majority of mosquito-borne disease (such as malaria, dengue, yellow fever, and West Nile virus).

    "There is a real public-health threat from mosquito-borne disease, and
    having unsubstantiated claims out there may have real consequences for
    the health of people in areas plagued by mosquitoes," Yee says.

    Yee and colleagues conducted feeding trials in which caged mosquitoes
    were offered one of four diets: water only, salt water only, sugar water
    only, or a sugar-and-salt water mixture. The concentrations in the diets
    -- 1.03 percent salt and 8 percent sugar -- were based on the product description of the most widely available salt-based mosquito-control
    device on the market. The trials ran for seven days, and the researchers recorded the number of dead mosquitoes each day.

    Across the trials, virtually no negative effects of salt ingestion on mosquitoes were observed. Mosquitoes fed sugar water with or without salt survived at high rates throughout the experiment, with few exceptions.

    Mosquitoes fed water only or salt water only, meanwhile, fared worse,
    but also at similar rates. Yee says the results were clear and compelling.

    "The consistency in the findings was a bit of a surprise given that
    nature is messy," he says. "We'd expect there to be a lot of variation
    in responses to the diets we offered, but, broadly speaking, adding
    salt to plain water or sugar water didn't lead to increased mosquito
    death. Adults mosquitoes just don't die faster because they drink
    salt water." The findings align with broad scientific understanding of mosquito biology. "It makes a lot of sense scientifically that mosquitoes
    can deal with low concentrations of salt, given that all vertebrate
    blood has a similar amount of salt in it," Yee says. "If mosquitoes
    could not deal with salt, then they likely would have evolved away from
    blood feeding millions of years ago." In fact, the leading salt-based mosquito-control product uses a salt concentration (1.03 percent) that
    is only slightly higher than that found in human blood (0.9 percent).

    The researchers say they want to provide consumers with the knowledge
    they need to spend their money wisely and protect their health. Using mosquito-control products with unsubstantiated claims could lead to a
    false sense of security.

    Instead, they recommend practices and products that have been repeatedly
    proven to reduce risk of exposure to mosquito-borne disease: dumping
    standing water in yards (e.g., in bird baths, flower pots, tires, toys)
    to eliminate locations for mosquitoes to lay their eggs, treating standing water with insecticides that kill mosquito larvae, wearing long sleeves
    and pants when outdoors, avoiding going outside when mosquitoes are most
    active (dusk and dawn), and using repellent sprays with DEET or other EPA-approved chemicals.

    Yee also recommends members of the public turn to their local
    mosquito-control agencies for trustworthy guidance. "Most mosquito-control districts and mosquito-control organizations have recommendations
    for what does and what does not work, so you can avoid products with unsubstantiated claims," he says. "As always, if it sounds too good to
    be true, it probably is."

    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by
    Entomological_Society_of_America. Note: Content may be edited for style
    and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Donald A Yee, Catherine Dean, Cameron Webb, Jennifer A Henke,
    Gabriela
    Perezchica-Harvey, Gregory S White, Ary Faraji, Joshua D Macaluso,
    Rebecca Christofferson. No Evidence That Salt Water Ingestion
    Kills Adult Mosquitoes (Diptera: Culicidae). Journal of Medical
    Entomology, 2020 DOI: 10.1093/jme/tjaa214 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/10/201020105543.htm

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