Abstract

The Northern Territory Top End Health Service, Medical Entomology Section and the City of Darwin council carry out a joint Mosquito Engineering Program targeting the rectification of mosquito breeding sites in the City of Darwin, Northern Territory, Australia. In 2005, an investigation into potential subterranean stormwater breeding sites in the City of Darwin commenced, specifically targeting roadside stormwater side entry pits. There were 79 side entry pits randomly investigated for mosquito breeding in the Darwin suburbs of Nightcliff and Rapid Creek, with 69.6% of the pits containing water holding sumps, and 45.6% of those water holding sumps breeding endemic mosquitoes. Culex quinquefasciatus was the most common mosquito collected, accounting for 73% of all mosquito identifications, with the potential vector mosquito Aedes notoscriptus also recovered from a small number of sumps. The sumps were also considered potential dry season maintenance breeding sites for important exotic Aedes mosquitoes such as Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus, which are potential vectors of dengue, chickungunya and Zika virus. Overall, 1229 side entry pits were inspected in ten Darwin suburbs from 2005 to 2008, with 180 water holding sumps identified and rectified by concrete filling.

Highlights

  • Darwin is the capital city of the Northern Territory (NT), Australia, and is situated in the wet-dry tropics with an average annual rainfall of 1722.6 mm [1]

  • The most important mosquito borne diseases in the NT are those caused by Murray Valley encephalitis virus (MVEV), Kunjin virus (KUNV), Ross River virus (RRV), and Barmah Forest virus (BFV), with RRV being by far the most common [2]

  • Side entry pit sumps sampled during the 2005 dry season for the presence of water and

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Summary

Introduction

Darwin is the capital city of the Northern Territory (NT), Australia, and is situated in the wet-dry tropics with an average annual rainfall of 1722.6 mm [1]. The identification of a water holding side entry pit sump in the suburb of Rapid Creek in 2005 suggested there were areas of Darwin that contained stormwater sumps.

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