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Mosquito season heavy in Lee, Collier as new bug-borne disease hits Sunshine State

The 2024 mosquito season is turning out to be an active, dangerous one for all of Florida as heavy rains have left standing water on most of the Sunshine State.

The northern part of the state is experiencing a bug-borne disease that’s new to Florida, one that’s transmitted through the bites of midges and some species of freshwater mosquitoes.

Locally, both Lee and Collier mosquito control district are seeing high numbers of the disease-carrying freshwater mosquitoes as well as their coastal, saltwater counterparts.

“We’re seeing far above average numbers for our mosquito season,” said Keira Lucas, deputy executive director of the Collier Mosquito Control District. “It really started early, and we had high numbers of saltmarsh mosquitoes in coastal communities, and we started battling them in April. And we continue to see them into September.”

Populations of disease-carrying mosquitoes are high in areas like Naples, Golden Gate Estates, Immokalee and Ave Maria, Lucas said, with concentrations being higher for inland areas.

The sheer volume of rain is one reason mosquitoes are flourishing this year, Lucas said.

Lee and Collier counties, on average, are about 10 inches above-average for precipitation for this rainy season, according to South Florida Water Management District records.

From left, Lee County Mosquito Control employees, Nelson Aviles, Johan Elrubaie, Julio Ledezma and Anne Askew fill a helicopter with mosquito larvicide off of Corkscrew Road on Wednesday, August 31, 2022. The crew was treating for mosquito larvae in the area.

Another factor, Lucas said, is that 2023 was as drought year so many mosquito eggs that were laid in the ground last year did not hatch until record-breaking rains in June and with Tropical Storm Debby.

“With the drought, not having water standing on the land for a long period of time or even long enough for the eggs to hatch, and the eggs can accumulate over time,” Lucas said. “Then when the water fills up and it recedes, that prevents predators from going in. The mosquito fish aren’t able to get into those areas, so the populations are higher.”

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