Levy County Mosquito Control

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Protecting Native Pollinators & Apiaries

The intersection of vector control and agricultural preservation is one of the most delicate balances in public health. Levy County is home to vital commercial apiaries (honeybee farms) and native populations of Monarchs, Gulf Fritillaries, and solitary bees. The LCMN Advisory Board enforces stringent application protocols to ensure that combating mosquito-borne disease does not precipitate a localized pollinator collapse.

The Broad-Spectrum Dilemma

Chemical adulticides (chemicals designed to kill flying mosquitoes) are primarily formulated from synthetic pyrethroids. These are broad-spectrum neurotoxins. Chemically, they cannot differentiate between an Aedes aegypti mosquito carrying Dengue Fever and a foraging honeybee pollinating local crops.

Because we cannot change the chemistry of the pesticide, Integrated Pest Management (IPM) dictates that we must change the method and timing of the application.

Temporal Mitigation: Time as a Shield

Municipal Night Fogging

Honeybees and most butterfly species are strictly diurnal (active only during the day) and return to their hives or roosts at dusk. Conversely, the Culex mosquito (the vector for West Nile and EEE) emerges to feed at night.

The Protocol: By law, municipal ULV (Ultra-Low Volume) fogging trucks only operate from dusk until dawn. This “temporal mitigation” ensures that the airborne chemical droplets settle and degrade before pollinators leave their hives at sunrise.

The Threat of Daytime Misting

Private pest control companies frequently install automated misting drums in residential backyards. These systems are often set to spray multiple times a day—including early morning and afternoon.

The Violation: Spraying pyrethroids during daylight hours directly coats foraging bees and flowering plants with lethal neurotoxins. For detailed information on this ecological violation, please review the Advisory on Residential Misting Systems.

Prioritizing Pollinator-Safe Larvicides

The LCMN prioritizes treating mosquitoes in their aquatic larval stage rather than spraying flying adults. We utilize Bacillus thuringiensis subspecies israelensis (Bti) in Levy County’s drainage ditches and retention ponds.

Bti is a naturally occurring soil bacterium with a highly specific protein crystal. It only activates in the alkaline gut of a mosquito or black fly larva. It is completely inert and 100% harmless to bees, butterflies, ladybugs, and all other terrestrial insects.

Levy County Apiary Registration

If you manage commercial or hobbyist beehives in Levy County, you are entitled to municipal “No-Spray Buffer Zones.”

  1. Ensure your hives are officially registered with the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services (FDACS).
  2. Submit your FDACS registration number and exact GPS coordinates to the LCMN via our Citizen Portal.
  3. Our GPS tracking systems in municipal spray trucks will automatically shut off the ULV foggers when driving within 300 feet of your registered apiary.
Register Your Apiary Locations

Levy County Mosquito Control Information Network

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Public Information Desk: 352-486-5127