Local News

Miami-Dade expands the mosquito control area to more than 15 neighborhoods

Miami-Dade County, Florida – Mosquito control trucks will visit more areas in Miami-Dade.
In order to target mosquitoes in their developmental larval stages in standing rain or irrigation water, three specially-outfitted Buffalo Turbine trucks will apply biweekly treatments.
“Our surveillance program data has shown us a shift in mosquito populations,” Mosquito Control Division Director William Petrie said in a statement on Wednesday.
The areas are in Allapattah, Cutler Bay, Deering Bay, Flagami, Hialeah, Hialeah Gardens, Homestead, Kendall, Key Biscayne, Miami Beach, Miami Gardens, North Miami, North Miami Beach, Opa-Locka, Pinecrest, West Miami, Little River, and Wynwood.
The treatment is only toxic to mosquito and black fly larvae.
Here are some tips to help keep residents mosquito bite-free this winter, and all year-round:
• Cover exposed skin with long sleeves, pants, socks, and shoes, and/or with an EPA-registered mosquito repellent that contains DEET, picaridin, oil of lemon eucalyptus or IR-3535 as the active ingredient
• Properly dispose of any unused items in your yard that may pool rain or irrigation water
• Periodically change out the water set out for your outdoor pets
• Clear out your rain gutters to prevent clogging and standing water that can facilitate breeding
• Maintain the proper chemical levels in your swimming pool all year round to prevent it from turning green and attracting mosquitoes
• Using the larvicide Bti in granular form in bromeliads and dunk form in birdbaths and fountains prevents breeding in them
• Investing in mesh screening on windows, doors and patios helps keep mosquitoes from entering your home
• Request a mosquito inspection and report mosquito nuisance issues like abandoned pools and standing water online at miamidade.gov/311Direct
 

Lowell Bowen

From the time he was 8 years old Lowell knew he wanted to be on TV. Well, as people say one thing leads to another, that's how Lowell started his career in the news industry. Lowell has been part of The South Florida Daily since the very beginning.

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