ABSTRACT
A field study was carried out on the year-long residual activity of the insect growth regulator (IGR) pyriproxyfen (Nylar 0.5G) in comparison with methoprene (Altosid® XRP Pellets) against mosquito developmental stages in catch basins in northwestern Riverside County, southern California. Pyriproxyfen was applied at 75, 100, 125, 150, 175 g per catch basin and methoprene at 3.5 g per catch basin. A total of 80 catch basins (10 per each treatment and 20 for control) were used. Posttreatment observations of catch basins were carried out at weekly intervals, with all pupal collections reared to adults. Mosquito species composition in this study, consisting mostly of Culex species (693), was predominated by Cx. quinquefasciatus (92.8%), followed by Cx. erythrothorax (5.5%), Cx. tarsalis (1.2%), Cx. stigmatosoma (0.3%), and Cx. thriambus (0.2%). Activity of both IGRs was expressed as percent inhibition of adult emergence (% IAE). Data generated on % IAE showed that, like methoprene, pyriproxyfen provided complete control of mosquitoes at 75, 125, and 175 g per catch basin up to 50 wk posttreatment at the Riverside amusement park, whereas its activity against mosquitoes in catch basins treated with 100 g and 150 g at the Eastvale site was short-lived, up to 48 wk. Water samples, bioassayed against laboratory-reared, 4th-stage larvae of Cx. quinquefasciatus 1–2 wk after the 50-wk-long study, showed evidence of significant % IAE (∼50) by pyriproxyfen at the 2 higher rates (125 g, 175 g) used at the amusement park. In conclusion, pyriproxyfen can be used to effectively control mosquitoes in catch basins for 48–50 wk, depending on the rate of application.
INTRODUCTION
For decades insect growth regulators (IGRs) have shown great efficacy against a variety of insect pests and disease vectors, coupled with low mammalian toxicity and reduced risk to aquatic nontarget species. As growth modifying substances, IGRs could be mimicking insect juvenile hormone (juvenoids, e.g., methoprene) or interfering with chitin synthesis in insects (substituted benzolyphenyl urea compounds, e.g., dichlobenil derivative, diflubenzuron, or triazine derivative, cyromazine), to name a few (Mian and Mulla 1982b). Formulated products containing methoprene have been effectively used against various pests and disease vectors such as Altosid® against mosquitoes, Apex® against sciarid flies, Extinguish® in fire ant bait, Kabat® against the cigarette beetle, Minex® against the chrysanthemum leaf miner, Precor® against fleas, Strike® against chironomid midges, and Diacon® II (Hendrick 2007) or technical methoprene against stored-product pests (Mian and Mulla 1982a, 1982c, 1983, 1990). Like methoprene, the junevoid pyriproxyfen has been used for decades against a variety of pests of agricultural (Almond moth, San Jose scale), household (ants, cockroaches, and carpet beetles), and medical and veterinary (mosquitoes, flies, fleas, and ticks) importance (NPIC 1995). In earlier studies, pyriproxyfen (0.5G) resulted in a mediocre inhibition of adult emergence (IAE) of Culex peus (Speicer) (now Cx. stigmatosoma Dyar) and Cx. quinquefasciatus Say in dairy wastewater lagoons in southern California (Mulla et al. 1986). However, when it was applied at 0.1 kg to dairy wastewater lagoons in central California, pyriproxyfen provided complete control of Culex spp. for 7–68 days, and its residual activity lasted longer due to residue adsorption onto organic debris in wastewater lagoons (Mulligan and Schaefer 1990). Pyriproxyfen has also been reported to cause complete IAE of Cx. pipiens pallens (L.) and Cx. tritaeniorhynchus Giles for >3 wk in open containers and irrigation ditches at 0.01 ppm, cesspools at 0.05 ppm, and in sewers with wastewater at 0.1 ppm in Japan (Kamumura and Arakawa 1991); it has also been reported to cause complete IAE of Aedes togoi (Theobald) in brackish water at 0.05 ppm in Korea (Lee 2001). In a semi–field study, Webb et al. (2012) reported a complete control of the Australian salt-marsh mosquito, Ae. vigilax (Skuse), by a granular formulation of pyriproxyfen (Sumilarv 0.5G) for 2 wk posttreatment with a high (28%) IAE in control, which they attributed to abnormally cool weather during the test. In autodissemination studies, Gaugler et al. (2012) reported 100% IAE of Ae. albopictus (Skuse) when exposed to pyriproxyfen-charged stations in cage trials and 81% IAE in small room trials. They also reported venereal transfer of pyriproxyfen from contaminated males to virgin female Ae. albopictus. More recently, Mian et al. (2017) found pyriproxyfen to provide 100% IAE of Cx. quinquefasciatus in catch basins in southern California for 3 wk. Beyond that time mortality in the treatments was overshadowed by high mortality in control catch basins, possibly due to autodissemination.
The objective of the present study was to evaluate the effectiveness of formulated pyriproxyfen for a yearlong control of immature mosquitoes in catch basins in northwestern Riverside County, southern California.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Insect growth regulators:
Pyriproxyfen (Nylar® 0.5G) provided by McLaughlin Gormley King Company (MGK), Minneapolis, MN, was tested at rates of 75 g, 100 g, 125 g, 150 g, and 175 g per catch basin and compared with S-methoprene (Altosid 30-day, 3.5% pellets, provided by MGK) at 3.5 g per catch basin for residual activity from July 2017 to June 2018.
Field study:
The methodology used in this study was based on the MGK protocol for testing and evaluation of Nylar 0.5G versus Altosid pellets in catch basins by T. Janousek and D. A. Dame (unpublished). Pyriproxyfen was tested in catch basins within a 7-mile radius in the contiguous cites of Eastvale and Riverside, county of Riverside, CA. At the Riverside amusement park (33°54′10.52″N, 117°27′55.92″W) and nearby there were 52 catch basins, 10 of which each were treated with 75 g, 125 g, and 175 g of pyriproxyfen and 10 with S-methoprene pellets (Altosid 30-day formulation), and 12 served as controls. The catch basins varied in size from 18 in. (45 cm) in diam, 18 in. (45 cm) deep, each with a 12 × 12 in. (30 × 30 cm) removable grate to 34 in. (85 cm) diam, 24 in. (60 cm) deep, with a 2424 (60 × 60 cm) grate with 0.75 in. (1.9 cm) openings between bars. The catch basins at the Eastvale shopping center parking lot (33°97′67.60″N, −117°55′43.46″W) ranged from 12 in. (30 cm) in diam and 18 in. (45 cm) deep to a 36 × 48 in. (90 × 120 cm) heavy grate and up to 6 ft deep (180 cm) with 1.5 in. (3.8 cm) openings between bars. The Eastvale site had 10 catch basins each treated with 100 g and 150 g of pyriproxyfen and 8 kept as controls, for a total of 28. While pyriproxyfen treatments were performed only once at the onset of the study, Altosid applications were repeated monthly or as needed per label directions for use.
Catch basins with observational history of the presence of mosquito developmental stages were selected with each catch basin examined for width, depth, and water level. All catch basins were sampled with a common dipper or a modified sampler and mosquito developmental stages (eggs, larvae, and pupae), and resting adults, if any, were recorded as pretreatment counts. Pyriproxyfen was tested at 5 application rates of 75 g, 100 g, 125 g, 150 g, and 175 g per catch basin. Each treatment was made to 10 catch basins by pouring the formulation onto the water surface inside the catch basin. S-methoprene pellets were applied to 10 catch basins at the rate of 3.5 g per catch basin. Twenty untreated control catch basins were set up at the beginning of the treatments and handled in the same way as the treated catch basins throughout the study period.
At weekly posttreatment intervals, each catch basin was sampled with 5 dips, starting with control catch basins first, followed by low to high treatments. Larvae and pupae were counted to determine dip averages. Separate dippers were used for treatments and control catch basins. The dipper was rinsed with water between treatments. At each sampling interval, pupae were collected from control and treated catch basins with the help of a pipette; they were placed on a filter paper in a Petri dish with a small quantity of water from the catch basin to keep the pupae alive. All pupae collected in the field were brought to the laboratory and reared to adults under laboratory conditions of 80° F (26.6°C), 40–60% RH, and 12:12 light and dark photoperiod. Adults emerging from pupae were identified to species, using the identification keys by Meyer and Durso (1998).
During the entire study period pertinent weather data (air temperature, water temperature, sky cover, rain, and wind) and other specific conditions or events, if any, were recorded.
At the end of the field study we also carried out a couple of tests to bioassay water samples from both control and treated catch basins against 4th-stage larvae of a laboratory-maintained strain of Cx. quinquefasciatus. In the first test, water samples (100 ml each) were collected in Ziploc plastic bags, using a dipper/modified sampler; they were brought to the laboratory and transferred to 150 ml plastic cups. In the second test a week later, water samples were collected in the same manner after stirring the water with the dipper for 30 sec to allow for mixing up any pyriproxyfen residue. Along with the water from control catch basin, a distilled water control was also run. Each treatment or control cup received 25 early 4th-stage larvae of the test mosquito species. The larvae were provided food (rabbit chow with Brewer's yeast [3:1]) every 3 days up to 10 days. All treatments and controls were replicated 4 times. The tests were maintained at room temperature (75°F [23.8°C]) in the laboratory. Mortality data were recorded to adult emergence up to 10 days.
Data analyses:
Data obtained in the field study over 50 wk were arranged and statistically analyzed, using the appropriate test of significance (chi-square test; Steel and Torrie 1960). The data generated in laboratory bioassays were analyzed using the analysis of variance, and means were compared, using Duncan's multiple range test (Duncan 1955).
RESULTS
Mosquito pupal collection from catch basins exclusively yielded Culex spp. Of the 693 adults emerging from pupal samples (Table 1), the predominant species was Cx. quinquefasciatus (92.8%), followed by Cx. erythrothorax (5.5%), Cx. tarsalis (1.2%), Cx. stigmatosoma (0.3%), and Cx. thriambus (0.2%). The female to male sex ratio was 61:39. As shown in Table 2, pyriproxyfen resulted in 83–100% IAE through 48 wk posttreatment beyond which its activity went down to zero at the Eastvale catch basins by wk 50. However, like S-methoprene, pyriproxyfen activity at the Riverside treated catch basins (75, 125, and 175 g) still remained high (100% IAE) through the 50-wk-long study.
The data on water bioassay against mosquito larvae presented in Table 3 showed that treatment 100 g and 125 g, in the first test, exhibited identical activity, 48% and 47% IAE, respectively as compared to 8% in S-methoprene-treated samples. In the second test, samples from prestirred water in catch basins showed that the 2 highest treatments, 125 g and 175 g of pyriproxyfen, at the Riverside park still had a numerically significant activity, 67% and 47% IAE, respectively, with zero IAE in S-methoprene–treated samples, 2 wk postconclusion of the 1-year study. There was no significant difference in mosquito development between the control catch basin water and distilled water control.
General weather data—air temperature, water temperature, sky cover, rain, and wind—during the weekly sampling at the study sites are shown in Fig. 1. Except for ≥80°F in July, the average daily air temperature went down to below 80°F (26.6°C) for August through November; thereafter, the temperature remained in the mid- to upper 60s with a few spikes to over 70°F. Water temperature, for the most part, remained 2–5 degrees below the ambient air temperature. Southern California averages about 16 in. of rainfall per year. In 2017, however, the region had around 9 in. (225 mm) of precipitation. During the month of August 2017, there were a couple of monsoonal rains that in 1 instance did wash away mosquito immatures from our test catch basins, especially in the Eastvale area. Rain activity for the remainder of the season remained spotty, affecting mosquito activity. Wind activity for most of the year remained around 5–10 mi/h (8–16 km/h). The area experienced a few windy conditions with a wind speed of 25–35 mi/h (40–80 km/h) with gusts up to 50 mi/h, creating cold dry conditions affecting mosquito activity.
DISCUSSION
Pyriproxyfen has reportedly shown efficacy against different mosquito species applied at variable rates to a variety of habitats. These results include a mediocre activity of pyriproxyfen (0.5G) against Cx. stigmatosoma and Cx. quinquefasciatus in dairy wastewater lagoons in southern California (Mulla et al. 1986). In a similar study, using 0.1 g of pyriproxyfen, Mulligan and Schafer (1990) reported complete control of Culex spp. in dairy wastewater lagoons in central California for up to 68 days. Elsewhere, in Japan, Kamimura and Arakawa (1991) found complete control of Cx. pipiens pallens and Cx. tritaeniorhynchus in open irrigated ditches treated with 0.01 ppm of pyriproxyfen. In Korea, Lee et al. (2001) reported complete control of Aedes togoi in brackish water treated with pyriproxyfen (0.05 ppm). In Australia, a granular formulation of pyriproxyfen (0.5G) showed complete control of Ae. vigilax for 2 wk posttreatment (Webb et al. 2012). In a later study by Mian et al. (2017), pyriproxyfen (0.5G) at 10 and 50 g per catch basin resulted in 100% control of Cx. quinquefasciatus and other Culex spp. for 3 wk. In the present study, the control catch basins used were at least 500 ft away from a treated catch basin to avoid any chances of autodissemination. In the earlier study by Mian et al. (2017), the only mosquito species reported from catch basin samples was Cx. quinquefasciatus. The present data confirm Cx. quinquefasciatus as the leading species (92.8%), followed by Cx. erythrothorax (5.5%), Cx. tarsalis (1.2%), Cx. stigmatosoma (0.3%), and Cx. thriambus (0.2%).
The present study has shown that, depending on the application rate, pyriproxyfen could be effective for 50 wk against mosquitoes in catch basins treated with 75, 100, and 175 g per catch basin at the Riverside park; its activity lasted for 48 wk at 100 and 150 g per catch basin at the Eastvale site. This appears to be the first yearlong study on the longevity of pyriproxyfen in catch basins under actual field conditions. However, long-term studies of this type also face some challenges that may have played a role in reduced activity of pyriproxyfen at the Eastvale catch basins. The first of these challenges is the availability of sufficient numbers of active catch basins of similar dimensions in 1 place. In this study, we were able to find catch basins sufficient to test 3 of the 5 pyriproxyfen rates (75 g, 125 g, 175 g) and 1 methoprene rate (3.5 g) plus the control (=50 catch basins) at the Riverside park. The other 2 rates (100 g and 150 g per catch basin) plus control were tested in catch basins at the Eastvale shopping center within a 7 mi (11.2 km) radius. The catch basins at the latter site were scattered over the parking lot of the shopping center; they were bigger and deeper than those at the former site. The control catch basins that were much smaller were ∼500 ft (1.5 km) distant around an artificial, recreational, and residential lake, Swan Lake. Variability in catch basins at the sites certainly had some impact on working around these structures. Moreover, the 2 sites were sampled on 2 different days of the week due merely to the high number of catch basins to be covered all in 1 day.
Sampling challenges in catch basins with removable grates at the Riverside site as well as those at Swan Lake (Eastvale) could easily allow sampling with the common mosquito dipper used by vector control personnel. On the other hand, the bigger catch basins at the Eastvale site with heavy and fixed grates had to be sampled with a modified sampler narrow enough to pass through the grate openings. The use of the modified sampler was certainly done out of necessity due to the size and structure of these catch basins and may have added to some difference in results.
Depending on the sources of runoff and weather conditions, a catch basin may not always carry sufficient water long enough to sustain mosquito developmental stages. All catch basins in the present study were carefully selected based on their previous history of having mosquito breeding according to the mosquito records maintained by the Northwest Mosquito and Vector Control District (NWMVCD), Corona, California.
The other very important and most unpredictable challenge could be the act of nature such as inclement weather conditions. This study year appeared to be totally unpredictable, having weather patterns not experienced before such as sustained cold and dry conditions and erratic rainfall—a pattern not conducive to mosquito breeding. One monsoonal storm did wash way the contents of some of the catch basins at the Eastvale site. Our rainfall in southern California was about one-half of what we had the previous year (18 in. [4,890 mm]). Overall, mosquito numbers throughout southern California were reported low during the 2017–18 season.
In conclusion, this study shows that pyriproxyfen can be effective against mosquitoes inhabiting cryptic structures, e.g., catch basins for up to a year, depending on the application rate and prevailing ambient weather conditions.
It is recommended that future studies of this type should include bioassays of treated and control waters against lab-reared mosquitoes to corroborate the outcome of pupal sampling as stipulated in the present protocol.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The authors acknowledge with thanks Jennifer Williams and the McLaughlin Gormley King Company, Minneapolis, MN, for field assistance support and formulated pyriproxyfen used. The data generation, analysis, and conclusions drawn in this study are exclusively those of the authors. The authors also thank the staff of NWMVCD for their assistance during this project.
REFERENCES CITED
Author notes
Department of Health Science and Human Ecology, California State University, San Bernardino, CA 92407-2393.
Northwest Mosquito and Vector Control District, 1966 Compton Avenue, Corona, CA 92881.