Culex Mosquitoes at Stormwater Control Measures and Combined Sewer Overflow Outfalls after Heavy Rainfall
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials & Methods
2.1. Conceptual Representation
The CSS collects wastewater and domestic sewage from factories, commercial and residential areas. This wastewater has not yet been treated and contains human and industrial waste [19,20]. | |
SCMs capture stormwater runoff and rainfall, and decreases the peak flow rate and the volume of stormwater entering the piping system [8,9]. As runoff travels through the SCM, impurities may be filtered out and/or bioremediated [10,11]. Depending on the SCM type, stormwater may pool within the SCM allowing for retention, evaporation, and infiltration. Some SCMs may also contain vegetation that may use stormwater for transpiration [7,8,9,10,11]. SCMs that utilize pooling and/or contain decaying vegetation may be favorable oviposition sites for Culex mosquitoes [12,13,14,15,16,17]. | |
Many types of SCMs, such as rain gardens, are directly connected to the combined sewer system in case the SCM overflows. Though some SCMs may trap mosquito eggs, larvae, and pupae within their substrates and vegetation and prevent them from entering the pipes, we also consider in our conceptual diagram that stormwater that overflows from SCMs and into the piping system may contain eggs and/or pre-mature mosquitoes. As such, these eggs and pre-mature mosquitoes might exit the system at either point 5, where they may be removed at the wastewater treatment plant, or point 6, where they may exit at a CSO outfall. | |
Stormwater runoff is collected into storm drains. SCMs upslope may help decrease the amount of stormwater that flows directly into the storm drains [8,9]. Stormwater runoff that flows directly into the storm drains will flow into the CSS pipes at unhindered speeds [19,20]. | |
The wastewater mixed with stormwater enters a wastewater treatment plant that will remove organic matter, pathogens, and toxic materials [19,20]. Once the water is treated, it is released back into the environment. | |
During heavy rainfall, CSOs may occur. Untreated to barely treated storm and sewer water exits at the outfalls, at point 6, during CSO events [21]. These CSOs contain high amounts of organic matter [19,20]. Due to this, nearby standing side pools may provide mosquitoes with favorable oviposition habitats [22]. |
2.2. Study Site
2.3. Data
2.4. Statistical Analysis
2.4.1. Spatial Associations
2.4.2. Temporal Associations
3. Results
3.1. Descriptive Results
3.2. Temporal Associations
3.2.1. Associations with Precipitation and Temperature
3.2.2. Lagged Effect of SCMs on Culex Mosquitoes after Heavy Rainfall
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Location Type | Decrease in Culex Mosquitoes at Location Type per STDEV Increase in SCM Count | [95% Confidence Intervals] |
---|---|---|
Subsewersheds | 67.0% | [50.3%, 78.1%] |
Outfalls | 67.2% | [50.9%, 78.0%] |
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Chan, A.Y.; Kim, H.; Bell, M.L. Culex Mosquitoes at Stormwater Control Measures and Combined Sewer Overflow Outfalls after Heavy Rainfall. Water 2022, 14, 31. https://doi.org/10.3390/w14010031
Chan AY, Kim H, Bell ML. Culex Mosquitoes at Stormwater Control Measures and Combined Sewer Overflow Outfalls after Heavy Rainfall. Water. 2022; 14(1):31. https://doi.org/10.3390/w14010031
Chicago/Turabian StyleChan, Alisha Yee, Honghyok Kim, and Michelle L. Bell. 2022. "Culex Mosquitoes at Stormwater Control Measures and Combined Sewer Overflow Outfalls after Heavy Rainfall" Water 14, no. 1: 31. https://doi.org/10.3390/w14010031
APA StyleChan, A. Y., Kim, H., & Bell, M. L. (2022). Culex Mosquitoes at Stormwater Control Measures and Combined Sewer Overflow Outfalls after Heavy Rainfall. Water, 14(1), 31. https://doi.org/10.3390/w14010031