1 1 1 THE BRUNSWKICfelSEACON ui lufeir Lnc bun V, Mosquito Surveillance Just A Part Of I Hickman's Unusual Job BY TKKRY POPE You could say thai Rick Hickman's fascination with mosquitoes goes be neath the surface. He is itching to prove a point ? when it comes to mosquitoes, man is his own worst enemy. As director of Brunswick County Mosquito Control, this is the time of year when Hickman's phone rings off the hook. While people head outdoors to enjoy a round of golf, a cookoul on the patio or a quiet fishing trip to the pond, uninvited mosquitoes arrive to ruin the outing. Hickman must gather mosquito data each year to receive state funds used to help bat tle the mosquito population in Brunswick County. His crew of two full-time employ ees and four part-time sprayers must cover lXK) square miles of county territory and us coastal dredge spoil islands. In his office are containers of mosquito larvae and journals detailing species surveillance from Navassa to Calabash. A light trap set at Orion Plantation one night captured over 2,(XX) mosquitoes recently and contained 20 different species, said Hickman, who lives at Hickman's Crossroads. Most people think a mosquito is just a mosquito, but Hickman has identified 41 different species living in Brunswick County. One species of mosquitoes will on ly bite frogs, he said. Many species will bite humans. It takes five days for mosquitoes to hatch from standing water, where adult mosquitoes lay their eggs. They can thrive in old tires, clogged gutters and ditches, birdbaths, beer cans, buckets left lying around the home and areas where streams stagnate from excessive storm water runoff. Hickman hopes his experiment can prove that tlif most aggressive mosquitoes, the wmr MOSQUITO IARVAE are collected from people 's yards to serve as part of Hickman 's experiment. Uiwi/iri'inwic rt- STAFF PHOTOS BY TtRRV PC a/C a ///CaAMA S office also serves as a laboratory to study the 4! different breeds of tnosauitoes he has identified as liv ing in Brunswick County. ones thai wander onto golf courses and into people's yards to hunt for blood, arc those that breed in artificial containers left lying around the homes. Natural breeding mosquitoes usually stay in wooded areas, where their populations arc controlled by mosquito-eating insects, he said. Local ponds arc the least likely place to breed mosquitoes because of the natural en emies that also live in the water. Bats and dragonflics that hang around the home cat hundreds of mosquitoes daily. Therefore, man can help zap the mosquito problem by picking up trash around the yard and by draining their prop erty of standing water before the mosquitoes arrive, he said. Fifteen different species arc known to breed in old urcs and five species in birdbaths or beer cans. "If it wasn't for artificial containers, some breeds would disappear," said Hickman. "The most disease-carrying mosquitoes known to man would disap pear." For 16 years, Hickman has been studying "Man can help zap the mosquito problem by picking up trash around the yard and by draining their property of stand ing water before the mosquitoes arrive." ? Rick Hickman Director. Mosquito Control mosquitoes and ways to combat them in Brunswick County. He is a sell-taught mosquito expert hut did study biological science in college. A microscope on his desk is used to differentiate the species he collects from across the county. The county spends an average of 85 ccnis per resident on mosquito control each year. People question why more money can't he spent to get rid of the pests, but Hickman says no one can possibly determine how much money it would take to gel rid ol them for good. Public outcry is worst during the summer rainy season. Last year, his office received 320 complaints from residents. 75 percent of which came from persons living on the coast and 25 percent from rural areas. "We're not going to get into litis situation all of the time," said Hickman. "To pay peo ple to sit around when it's not raining, the county isn't going to go for thai. Yet when there is a mosquito outbreak, we were sup pose to stop it from happening. We did try, but we didn't even make a dent in them." This summer, the mosquitoes seem to be worst than in previous years. When he de scribes Brunswick County's mosquito prob lem. Hickman notes a difference between coastal mosquitoes and rural mosquitivs. Hickman believes the coastal mosquito problem actually began two summers ago with Hurricane Hugo, which salini/cd peo pic's yards, streams and bottom areas, turning freshwater breeding sites into sail marsh breeding grounds. 'I he Salt Marsh mosquito population, a large species, \%as thrust into such numbers by Hugo that the coastal areas still haven't recovered, said llicktnan. The inner dunes and vacant lots at Holden Beach are cur rently the worst s|hi|s hi the county, lie added. "They breed in such numbers that there's not enough animals to feed them," he said. "This rainfall has turned loose everyone ol them." In rural areas, the battle is against the I Southern Kite Held mosquito and the I Gallinipper, one ol the largest species known to man. "'Hie species Unit we're dealing with now is not the number one species that wc were dealing with years ago," said Hickman "There are six species that are causing basic problems for us right now." He calls mosquitoes the ultimate sur vivor. They form a resistance to sprays and change their habits to lool man. When man thinks he has whipped a species, along comes another to take lis place. "They are the lirst really compact and moveable land animal and still the most abundant." said Hickman. "The reason they're still around is their adaptability. If you ligure you've finally got the handle on them, it's time to change your approach." A single mosquito can hitch a ride inside a person's car and later cause a mosquito outbreak at that person's home. A caller last week told Hickman, "I don't understand why you can't do away with a lowly mosquito." "I always did call it mission impossible," he added, "but this year it's been more than impossible." The excessive rainfall alone didn't trigger this year's mosquito outbreak, he argues. "It's what we did as a socicty before the rainfall began," he adds. "I don't get any complaints out ol the Green Swamp." It will be recorded as one (if the hottest and wettest summers on record in Brunswick County. It will also be noted as one of Hickman's busiest. Hickman hopes the data he gathers will one day educate the public on how they can take a bite out of the mosquito population. Meanwhile, his surveillance continues. Dark shirts help to identify the mosquito species when they land while he's out in the held. Tiiey turn their white feel upward when chiHising a place to bite. But this lime, the viciim knows more about them than they know about themselves. He gathers up their breeding container and carries it to his oil ice for further study. Perhaps one day. the lowlv mosquito w ill be whipped. axtz tSaundzn, 0.!b. Family Optometry ?Comprehensive Eye Examinations ?Ocular Emergencies ?Contact Lenses and Glasses Prescribed ?Diagnosis and Treatment of Diseases of the Eye Suite 3, Promenade Office Park 143 Holden Beach Road, Shallotte Office hours by appointment. Evening and Saturday appointments available. 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