Winnipeg may stop fogging for adult mosquitoes once existing pesticide supply runs out: report - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 08:44 AM | Calgary | -16.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Manitoba

Winnipeg may stop fogging for adult mosquitoes once existing pesticide supply runs out: report

The City of Winnipeg may end its decades-long practice of fogging foradult nuisance mosquitosbecause the pesticide it usesis no longer being made.

City could rely solely on larviciding for mosquito control if no new pesticide approved for fogging use

closup of mosquito
Winnipeg has enough pesticide to fog for mosquitoes over the next two to four years, but may stop fogging once that runs out, a new city report says. The city has only had to send out fogging trucks during three of the past seven years, due to improvements to larviciding practices and dry weather. (Wayne Glowacki/The Canadian Press)

The City of Winnipeg may end the decades-longpractice of fogging foradult nuisance mosquitoesbecause the pesticide it usesis no longer being made.

A new report to city council says Winnipeg has bought up all the remaining Canadian stock of DeltaGard, the pesticide the city has used for adult nuisance mosquito fogging since 2017, when it replaced malathion.

DeltaGard is a trade name for a product containing the chemicaldeltamethrin, which is considered less ecologically harmful than malathion.Manufacturer Envu Canada informed the city itstoppedproducing DeltaGardin 2023.

The city's insect control branch now has enough DeltaGard on hand 6,629 litresto fog for mosquitoes over the next two to four years, depending on weather conditions over the next few summers.

But once that supply runs out, there is no replacement pesticide available to the city to deploy against adult mosquitoes, said David Wade, the superintendent of the city's insect control branch.

Pesticidesapproved for use in the United States would have to go through an expensive Canadian licensing process that would make no economic sense formanufacturers,he said.

Winnipeg, which started fogging for adult mosquitoes in 1950,is now the only large municipality that still engages in this practice, he said.

The rest of the Canadian market for adult mosquito fogging is very small, he added.

"It costs hundreds of thousands of dollars toregister a product through the government of Canada through the Pest Management Regulatory Agency," Wade said in an interview outside his office on Waverley Street on Wednesday.

"That's why some companies are reluctant todo so."

If another product is not licensed for use in Canada, the city may stop fogging for adult mosquitoes altogether, Wade said.

Improved larviciding,less fogging

Fogging for adult mosquitoesis not the main weapon in Winnipeg's skeeter-fighting arsenal. The insect control branch tries to kill mosquitoes in the larval stage withlarvicides, applied both by people on foot and by helicopter tolow-lying areas of the city, where standing water accumulates in the spring.

Improvements to Winnipeg's larviciding practices, combined with dry weather, have allowed the city to fogfor adults less often. The insect control branch has only deployed fogging trucks during three of the past seven years, Wade said.

"I think it's important that Winnipeggers know that spraying for mosquitoes is a very small portion of the work that the City of Winnipeg does in insect control," said Coun. Evan Duncan (Charleswood-Tuxedo-Westwood), who chairs city council's community services committee, which is responsible for insect control.

A helicopter.
Larviciding, partly conducted via helicopters like this one, is the main way Winnipeg controls mosquito populations. (Global News pool cam)

Nonetheless, Duncansaid he would prefer to see Winnipeg find an alternative to DeltaGard before supplies of the pesticide run out over the next two to four years.

"A lot is going to change in that time, and I think that we'll see a product come to Canada and Manitoba that will be as effective, if not more effective," he said in an interview outside city hall.

In the event the province of Manitoba orders up a mandatory fogging program because of the public health threat posed by West Nile virus, Winnipeg could receive emergency approval to use a pesticide licensed in the U.S., Wade said.

That is not an option for nuisance mosquito fogging, he added.

Rob Anderson, a University of Winnipeg entomologist, said Winnipeg may have to devote even more resources to larvicidingand land drainage iffogging for adult mosquitoes is no longer an option.

But he suspects some Winnipeggers might take pest control into their own hands if the city stops fogging for mosquitoes.

"Many people may just simply start doing it themselves, buying off-the-shelf aerosol applications,pieces of machinery and pesticide products from garden stores," Anderson said in a telephone interview.

Wade's report, which goes to city council's community services committee on April 10, makes no recommendations. He said his main objective was to inform council and all Winnipeggersof the looming shortage of fogging agents.

Despite the relatively dry conditions this spring, Wade said it's too soon to say what sort of summer Winnipeg will have with mosquitoes. Insect control crews will begin larviciding operations in early May, he said.

Winnipeg may stop fogging for adult mosquitoes once existing pesticide supply runs out

6 months ago
Duration 2:07
Winnipeg has enough pesticide to fog for mosquitoes over the next two to four years, but may stop fogging once that runs out, a new city report says. The city has only had to send out fogging trucks during three of the past seven years, due to improvements to larviciding practices and dry weather.