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West Nile virus 2006 : Mosquito Surveillance

Information on Mosquito Surveillance in Ontario

Mosquito surveillance remains the mainstay in the Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care's efforts to prevent and control West Nile virus. The purpose of mosquito surveillance is to help determine the risk of contracting WNV in a particular region. This information helps the medical officer of health for each local health unit make decisions in the prevention and control of WNV illness.

Adult mosquitoes are trapped from spring to fall, identified up to species level and counted. A Real Time Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction test is done to determine the WNV status of the various mosquito pools.

The mosquito species/groups of species that tested positive for WNv from 2001 to 2004 (approximately 20 species/groups of species) are the focus of the MOHLTC's viral testing.

The mosquito traps used in Ontario are mainly CDC 'light' traps which use both CO2 and light to attract mosquitoes. In addition to the CDC traps, nine health units are piloting the use of 'Gravid' traps, units expressly designed to attract gravid mosquitoes that have bitten at least once (perhaps more often) in their lifetime and could have picked up the infection. Gravid traps are frequently used to monitor the ovipositing segment of Culex pipiens and Culex restuans populations. These species have been identified as the vectors of WNV.

WNV positive mosquito pools tend to be area specific, and can be an excellent indicator of the threat from WNV in a specific locality. Traps may be set out by the health unit on a permanent basis throughout the community, and/or be moved about to determine mosquito status in new locations of interest. A mix of fixed and flexible trap locations will be recommended to achieve representative coverage of the jurisdiction.

Positive WNV mosquito results may also be reflective of local bird WNV infection even though the indicator birds may not have been identified in an area, or the birds submitted may have proved negative for WNV. There are three main reasons for this :

  1. Birds may fly in a large range, allowing ill birds to fall in locations they are not readily found for pick-up and submission (e.g. wood lots or forest);
  2. Dead birds may have died of non-WNV causes; and
  3. An increase in bird immunity may develop as the disease becomes enzootic (or "endemic" in human terms) in the avian population. With fewer birds dying there is less opportunity to retrieve and test them for WNV.
Secondary Mosquito Surveillance

Ontario has also initiated a secondary adult mosquito-based surveillance program focused upon Culiseta melanura, Coquillettidia perturbans and other species that carry Eastern Equine Encephalitis (EEE). While EEE was found in only one horse in 2004 and in horses in nine health units across Ontario in 2003 (no human cases have ever been identified in Ontario), it is an important mosquito-borne disease for humans.

This program will help the medical officers of health in decision-making on control strategies as well as building a historical entomological database around EEE.

2006 Mosquito Surveillance Statistics

WNV mosquito surveillance statistics are provided individually to the MOHLTC by Ontario's 36 regional health units. Surveillance statistics are current as of 4 pm (EST) Monday through Friday.

Health Unit Total Positive Pools
Algoma Health Unit 3
Brant County Health Unit 2
Chatham-Kent Public Health Division 4
Durham Region Health Department 7
Eastern Ontario Health Unit 0
Elgin-St. Thomas Health Unit 1
Grey-Bruce Health Unit 0
Haldimand-Norfolk Health Unit 0
Haliburton-Kawartha-Pine Ridge District Health Unit 1
Halton Region Health Department 17
Hamilton-Public Health & Community Services Dept. 14
Hastings & Prince Edward Counties Health Unit 1
Huron County Health Unit 0
Kingston, Frontenac and Lennox & Addington Health Unit 0
Lambton County Community Health Services Department 5
Leeds, Grenville and Lanark District Health Unit 0
Middlesex-London Health Unit 6
Niagara Regional Public Health Department 7
North Bay Parry Sound Health Unit 0
Northwestern Health Unit 4
Ottawa Public Health and Long-Term Care Branch 3
Oxford County 3
Peel Regional Health Department 14
Perth District Health Unit 1
Peterborough County-City Health Unit 1
Porcupine Health Unit 1
Renfrew County and District Health Unit 0
Simcoe - Muskoka District Health Unit 1
Sudbury and District Health Unit 13
Thunder Bay District Health Unit 0
Timiskiming Health Unit 0
Toronto Public Health 47
Waterloo Region Public Health 1
Wellington-Dufferin-Guelph Health Unit 1
Windsor-Essex County Health Unit 14
York Region Health Services Department 10
ONTARIO TOTAL 182


Mosquito Surveillance in First Nations communities

The following table summarizes the positive mosquito pools found as a result of an adult mosquito surveillance program being carried out in Ontario Region, First Nations communities. This information is provided by Health Canada's First Nation and Inuit Health Branch, and is not included in the Ontario Health Unit totals given above. For more information, see the First Nations and Inuit Health Branch webpages.

First Nations Community Total Positive Mosquito Pools
Aamjiwnaang (Sarnia) First Nation 2
Moravian of the Thames First Nation 1
Munsee-Delaware First Nation 1

See also :
For more information
Call the ministry INFOline at 1-800-268-1154
(Toll-free in Ontario only)
In Toronto, call 416-314-5518
TTY 1-800-387-5559
Hours of operation : 8:30am - 5:00pm
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