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Hawaii News

Aerial attack targets avian malaria-spreading mosquitoes on Kauai

COURTESY STATE DEPARTMENT OF LAND AND NATURAL RESOURCES
                                A helicopter spreads a globally used bacterium aimed at fighting avian malaria-spreading mosquitoes.

COURTESY STATE DEPARTMENT OF LAND AND NATURAL RESOURCES

A helicopter spreads a globally used bacterium aimed at fighting avian malaria-spreading mosquitoes.

ALAKAI PLATEAU, Kauai >> An aerial war is being waged above native forests on Kauai to save the nearly extinct Hawaiian honeycreeper.

The bird, also known as akikiki, has long been under threat from avian malaria- spreading mosquitoes. To that extent, conservationists have been using a helicopter dubbed “Dusty” to spread a globally used bacterium in forests inhabited by the honeycreeper.

The bacterium, known as Bacillus Thuringiensis Israelensis, or Bti, naturally occurs in soils and waterways. Bti is harmless to other creatures but can suppress mosquitoes that carry avian malaria.

“It won’t affect any vertebrates like fish or birds, or your dog or your pig, or even you if you happen to drink water that this bacterium is found in,” said Lisa “Cali” Crampton, project manager for the Kauai Forest Bird Recovery Project, in an update provided by the state Department of Land and Natural Resources.

The aerial effort has been ongoing twice each month, three days at a time, since fall 2023 with the helicopter flying up to a 1,200-acre parcel on the Alakai Plateau. The helicopter is equipped with a boom that features dozens of nozzles used to spread Bti over land and streams.

Bti has proved effective, having been used for public health and control of mosquitoes, said Lindsey Nietman, the forest bird recovery project coordinator, in remarks made in June at a Board of Land and Natural Resources meeting.

“It’s EPA (Environmen­- ­­tal Protection Agency)- approved, and you can buy it over the counter,” she told the board.

“It can be applied by truck, hand-held broadcast sprayer or aircraft. We’re using a helicopter because we’re trying to target the millions of little ponds of water in Hawaii’s rainforests, where mosquitoes can breed.”

The initial phase of the project on Kauai found that water with Bti killed mosquito larvae at much greater rates than water without the bacterium, which led to the second phase.

“Like most mosquito control treatments, this is year-round suppression,” Crampton said. “We want to keep their numbers down to decrease disease transmission rates, so birds will not get infected as often by mosquito-borne diseases like avian malaria.”

The same applications are expected to begin in 2025 on Maui, where another tool is being used to control mosquito populations: Incompatible Insect Technique. IIT is scheduled to join Bti on Kauai at some point in 2025.

“I think the tricky question in conservation right now is that there is such a crisis and there is such a demand on financial and other resources, we’re all trying to figure out the best way to deal with our huge problems,” Crampton said.

She added, “Is it bringing all remaining individuals of at-risk species into captivity until we can get landscape- scale mosquito suppression? We need people to understand the importance of these tools and backing initiatives to employ all available tools.”

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