TABLE OF CONTENTS INTRODUCTION .............................................................. i Message from the President .................................. i AMCA 2015-2016 Board of Directors .................... ii AMCA 2015-2016 Committee Chairs .................... v Planning Committees .......................................... vii Meeting Sponsors .............................................. viii Exhibitor Directory & Booth No. ............................ xi General Information .......................................... xvii SUNDAY SCHEDULE ....................................................... 1 PLENARY SESSION ........................................................ 2 Monday Afternoon Session 1 ...................................... 3 Recent and Emerging Vector-Borne and Zoonotic Disease Threats to the US ............... 3 Adult Control I/Surveillance .................................. 3 Biology and Behavior I ......................................... 5 Monday Afternoon Session 2 ...................................... 6 Student Competition II ......................................... 7 Adult Control II/ Repellents/Chemical ................... 8 Education/Public Relations/ General ....................... 9 Biology and Behavior II ...................................... 10 Tuesday Morning Session 1 ...................................... 11 Latin American Student Competition and Symposium I ............................................... 11 Student Competition III ...................................... 13 Backyard Spraying: The Pest Management Professionals Perspective Symposium ......... 14 Adult Control III/New Tech and Non-Targets ....... 14 TUESDAY MORNING SESSION 2 ..................................... 15 Disease Vector I/ Surveillance ............................ 15 Backyard Spraying: The Pest Management Professionals Perspective Symposium ......... 17 Latin American Symposium II ............................. 17 Student Competition IV ...................................... 19 Poster Session .................................................. 20 TUESDAY AFTERNOON SESSION 1 ................................. 25 Disease Vector II ............................................... 25 Remotely Piloted Aircraft Symposium ................. 26 Young Professionals Symposium: Career Roundtable Discussions .............................. 26 TUESDAY AFTERNOON SESSION 2 ................................. 28 Young Professionals Symposium II: Career Roundtable Discussions .............................. 28 Remotely Piloted Aircraft Symposium ................. 28 Larval Control I .................................................. 29 Operations and Management ............................. 30 W EDNESDAY MORNING SESSION ................................... 32 Next Generation Application Technology Symposium ................................................. 32 Adult Control IV/ Equipment ............................... 33 W EDNESDAY AFTERNOON SESSION .............................. 35 Next Generation Application Technology ............ 35 The Power of One Symposium ........................... 36 Adult Control V/ ATSB, Flies, Attractants ............ 37 Using the Private Cloud and Mobile Platforms for Effective Data Management .... 37 THURSDAY MORNING SESSION 1 ................................... 39 Resistance/Susceptibility ................................... 39 Mosquito SIT Symposium................................... 40 Vector Mosquito Control Response to Suspect Human Cases Symposium ............. 40 THURSDAY MORNING SESSION 2 ................................... 41 Vector Mosquito Control Response to Suspect Human Cases Symposium Continued .......... 41 Arthropod Vector Highlights Symposium ............. 41 Larval Control II ................................................. 43 EXHIBITOR KEY .......................................................... 51 HOW TO READ THE PROGRAM Day and Date at top of each page Start – End Time MORNING OR AFTERNOON Symposium/Session Title Organizer/Moderator: Name Start Time – End Time (may be different from start-end time in main heading, check each symposium/session) Room Location Time Abstract # Presentation Title Presenter, Other Author(s) Time Abstract # Presentation Title Presenter, Other Author(s) And so on A number preceded by a PL indicates a plenary session talk; a number preceded by a P- indicates a poster and all other numbers are oral presentations. If there is no number listed, there is no abstract associated with that particular presentation. Speakers and other authors are found in the program book author index. All author affiliations are listed in the abstract book. Maps to meeting locations and the exhibitors are on the inside covers of the program book. INTRODUCTION Message from the President Ken Linthicum It is my privilege and great honor to welcome all of you to our 82nd Annual Meeting of the American Mosquito Control Association. This marks the second time the AMCA has met in Savannah, which will once again afford an outstanding venue for our conference. This week the AMCA will host professionals from mosquito control programs, academia, industry, the military, and local, state and federal governments. We will present to you the newest information on the status and biology of current and potential mosquito threats, and the best methods to control these mosquitoes. AMCA is proud to provide leadership, information and education to its members in more than 50 countries to protect human health. We thank Wayne Gale, AMCA Vice President and Program Committee Chair for arranging an excellent program of presentations, including 11 symposia, and posters. We also thank Stan Cope, Annual Meeting Committee Chair for carefully orchestrating the details to assure a successful meeting. We applaud the efforts of Kristy Burkhalter and Lee Cohnstaedt for their superb efforts in organizing the Young Professionals and Latin America Symposia, respectively. I would like to also acknowledge Brian Byrd for again organizing this year’s Annual Meeting Student Competition, which provides an important opportunity to highlight the contributions of our students to mosquito control. We are joined this year by some new and returning Association Headquarters professionals at AMCA Headquarters and I would like to thank our new Executive Director Lori Jenssen, Membership Coordinator Quinn Cummings, and new Meeting Coordinators Allison Leyh and Bill Schankel for their efforts for a job well done. Finally, we greatly appreciate the efforts of the local arrangements committee headed by Jeff Heusel, who have volunteered their time to assure that we have a successful meeting. Ken Linthicum, AMCA President i AMCA 2015-2016 Board of Directors PRESIDENT Ken Linthicum USDA/ARS/CMAVE 1600 SW 23rd Drive Gainesville, FL 32608 Phone: 352-374-5700 [email protected] PRESIDENT ELECT Stan Cope Terminix International 29594 N. Birch Avenue Lake Bluff, IL 60044 Phone: 901-828-9562 [email protected] VICE PRESIDENT T. Wayne Gale Lee County Mosquito Control District 15191 Homestead Road Lehigh Acres, FL 33971 Phone: 239-694-2174 [email protected] PAST PRESIDENT Steve Mulligan Consolidated Mosquito Abatement District P.O. Box 278 Selma, CA 93662 Phone: 559-896-1085 [email protected] TREASURER Gary Hatch Davis County Mosquito Abatement 85 North 600 West Kaysville, UT 84037 Phone: 801-544-3736 [email protected] INDUSTRY DIRECTOR Larry Smith Central Life Sciences 530 Emerald Lake Path Sugar Hill, GA 30518 Phone: 770-614-4513 [email protected] ii LATIN AMERICAN DIRECTOR Ildefonso Fernandez-Salas Laboratory of Medical Entomology/School of Biological Sciences Universidad Autonoma de Nuevo Leon Ciudad Universitaria San Nicolas de los Garza NL, Mexico Phone: 52-181-3321453 [email protected] MID-ATLANTIC DIRECTOR Dennis Salmen 2131 Chambwood Drive Charlotte, NC 28205 Phone: 704-575-2837 [email protected] NORTH ATLANTIC DIRECTOR Paul Capotosto CT DEP WHAMM Pro 351 Route 32 North Franklin, CT 06254 Phone: 860-642-7630 [email protected] NORTH CENTRAL DIRECTOR Mike Szyska Northwest Mosquito Abatement District 147 West Hintz Road Wheeling, IL 60090 Phone: 847-537-2306 [email protected] NORTH PACIFIC DIRECTOR Jason Kinley GEM County Mosquito Abatement District Emmett, ID 83617 Phone: 208-365-5628 [email protected] SOUTH ATLANTIC DIRECTOR Christopher Lesser Manatee County Mosquito Control District 2317 2nd Avenue West Palmetto, FL 34221 Phone: 941-722-3720 [email protected] iii SOUTH CENTRAL DIRECTOR Rick Duhrkopf Baylor University One Baylor Place PO Box 97388 Waco, TX 76798 Phone: 214-710-2082 [email protected] SOUTH PACIFIC DIRECTOR Becky Cline Fresno Westside Mosquito Abatement District P.O. Box 125 Firebaugh, CA 93622 Phone: 559-659-2437 [email protected] WEST CENTRAL DIRECTOR Zane McCallister Grand River Mosquito Control District 650 W. Gunnison Avenue Grand Junction, CO 81501 Phone: 970-257-0191 [email protected] TECHNICAL ADVISOR Joseph Conlon American Mosquito Control Association Phone: 904-215-3008 [email protected] iv AMCA 2015-2016 Committee Chairs Annual Meeting Committee Stanton E. Cope Program Subcommittee T. Wayne Gale Archives Committee Eric Williges Bylaws & Policy Committee Janet McAllister Executive Committee Ken Linthicum Finance Committee Gary Hatch Legislative & Regulatory Committee Angela Beehler ESA Subcommittee Michael Hudon Chemical Control Subcommittee Zane McCallister Clean Water Act Subcommittee Gary Goodman PESP Subcommittee Gabrielle Sakolsky Washington Conference Subcommittee Tom Wilmot Federal Lands Subcommittee Bill Meredith Federal Funding Subcommittee Bill Meredith Membership Committee Lori Jenssen Nominating / Awards Committee Steve Mulligan John N. Belkin Award Subcommittee Larry Hribar v Industry Award Subcommittee Larry Smith Boyd-Ariaz Grassroots Award Subcommittee Steve Mulligan Public Relations Committee Joe Conlon Public Education Subcommittee Truc Dever Publications Committee Steve Presley JAMCA Editorial Board Harry Savage Newsletter Editorial Board Randy Knepper Special Publications Subcommittee Jeff Stivers Science & Technology Committee Mark Breidenbaugh Training & Member Education Isik Unlu Young Professionals Committee Levy Sun vi 2016 Planning Committees ANNUAL MEETING COMMITTEE Stanton E. Cope, Chair, AMCA President-Elect Ken Linthicum, AMCA President T. Wayne Gale, AMCA Vice President Larry Smith, AMCA Board, Industry Director Eric Jackson, Education Day Coordinator PROGRAM COMMITTEE T. Wayne Gale, Chair, AMCA Vice President Lee Cohnstaedt, Latin American Symposium Brian Byrd, Student Competition Diann Crane, Design/Layout & Copy Editor LOCAL ARRANGEMENTS COMMITTEE Jeff Heusel, Chair, GMCA President Kenna Graham, GMCA Vice-President Joey Bland, GMCA 1-year Director Steve Pavlovich, GMCA 2-year Director Allen Hillman, GMCA 3-year Director Trey English, GMCA Sustaining Board Member David Touwsma, GMCA Secretary-Treasurer AMCA HEADQUARTERS STAFF Lori Jenssen, Executive Director Quinn Cummings, Membership Coordinator Allison Leyh, Meeting Coordinator Joseph Mastrine, Accountant Maria Lynn, Data Entry vii Meeting Sponsors AMCA is deeply appreciative of and proud to acknowledge the following industry supporters of the 82nd Annual Meeting DIAMOND LEVEL SUPPORTERS Meeting Bags Meeting Bag Insert Program Book Welcome Reception Young Professional Industry Shadowing Program Sponsor of Kristen Stevens Audiovisual Latin American Symposium & Student Competition Student Competition Fund Young Professional Industry Shadowing Program Sponsor of Andrea Glenn Skiles Tuesday Morning Refreshment Break Ice Cream Social President’s Luncheon viii SILVER LEVEL SUPPORTERS Internet Hub Young Professional Industry Shadowing Program Sponsor of Emily Boothe Badge Holders Student Competition Fund Young Professionals Social Young Professional Industry Shadowing Program Sponsor of Meredith Spence Tuesday Afternoon Refreshment Break Wednesday Morning Refreshment Break Meeting Bag Insert Young Professional Industry Shadowing Program Sponsor of Kenneth Hess ix BRONZE LEVEL SUPPORTERS Young Professional Industry Shadowing Program Sponsor of Darrell Bible Young Professionals Industry Shadowing Program Sponsor of Daniel Dawson Latin American Symposium & Competition Fund Student Competition Fund Young Professional Industry Shadowing Program Sponsor of Maddie Perlman-Gabel Young Professional Industry Shadowing Program Sponsor of Kennen Hutchison x Exhibitor Directory Booth No. ADAPCO, Inc. 550 Aero Lane Sanford, FL 32771 Phone: 800-367-0659 Email: [email protected] www.MyADAPCO.com 203 Ag-Nav 30 Churchill Drive Barrie, Ontario, Canada L4N 825 Phone: 705-734-0909 Email: [email protected] www.agnav.com 110 AllPro Vector Group 640 Griswold Street Suite 200 W Northville, MI 48167 Phone: 248-773-7460 Email: [email protected] www.allprovector.com 411 American Longray LLC 1227 Hampshire Street Suite 37 San Francisco, CA 94110 Phone: 415-830-9494 Email: [email protected] www.pestgoaway.com 318 American Mosquito Control Association 1120 Route 73 Suite 200 Mount Laurel, NJ 08054 Phone: 856-439-9222 Email: [email protected] www.mosquito.org 113 AMCA Young Professionals 1120 Route 73 Suite 200 Mount Laurel, NJ 08054 Phone: 856-439-9222 Email: [email protected] www.mosquito.org 603 AMVAC Environmental Products 751 W. Ocracoke Square SW Vero Beach, FL 32968 Phone: 772-563-0606 Email: [email protected] www.amvac-chemical.com 217 xi Application Dynamics P.O. Box 152725 Cape Coral, FL 33915 Phone: 239-673-8328 Email: [email protected] www.applicationdynamics.net Arro-Gun Spray Systems LLC 7575 Tamra Drive Reno, NV 89506 Phone: 830-914-3247 Email: [email protected] www.arro-gun.com 319 Aventech Research Inc. 110 Anne Street South Unit 23 Barrie, Ontario, Canada, L4N 2E3 Phone: 705-722-4288 Email: [email protected] www.aventech.com 511 100 Bayer Environmental Science 2 T.W. Alexander Drive P.O. Box 12014 Research Triangle Park, NC 27516 Phone: 919-549-2535 Email: [email protected] www.backbybayer.com 211 Biogents Weissenberg Strasse 22 Regensburg, Germany 93055 Phone : +49 94156992167 Email : [email protected] www.biogents.com 221 BioQuip Products, Inc. 2321 E Gladwick Street Rancho Dominguez, CA 90220 Phone: 310-667-8800 Email: [email protected] www.bioquip.com 219 BVA Inc. P.O. Box 930301 New Hudson, MI 48165 Phone: 248-348-4920 Email: [email protected] www.bvaoils.com 312 xii Central Life Sciences 1501 E Woodfield Road Suite 200 West Schaumburg, IL 60173 Phone: 847-330-5300 Email: [email protected] www.centrallifesciences.com 301 Clarke 675 Sidwell Court St. Charles, IL 60174 Phone: 630-671-3120 Email: [email protected] www.clarke.com 503 Control Solutions 5903 Genoa Red Bluff Pasadena, TX 77507 Phone: 800- 242-5562 Email: [email protected] www.controlsolutionsinc.com 104 Curtis Dyna-Fog LTD 17335 US HWY 31 North Westfield, IN 46074 Phone: 317-896-2561 Email: [email protected] www.dynafog.com 413 The DEET Education Program 1667 K. Street NW CSPA Suite 300 Washington, DC 20006 Phone: 800-662-4837 Email: [email protected] www.deetonline.org 206 Digital Map Products 18831 Von Karman Avenue Irvine, CA 92612 Phone: 949-333-5126 Email: [email protected] www.digmap.com 412 Dynamic Aviation Group, Inc. P.O. Box 7 Bridgewater, VA 22812 Phone: 540-828-6070 Email: [email protected] www.dynamicaviation.com 607 xiii Electronic Data Solutions P.O. Box 31 Jerome, ID 83338 Phone: 208-324-8006 Email: [email protected] www.elecdata.com 601 EMD Performance Materials Corp. One International Plaza Suite 300 Philadelphia, PA 19113 Phone: 484-652-5680 Email: [email protected] www.emd-performance-materials.com 611 Florida Mosquito Control Association 11625 Landing Place North Palm Beach, FL 33408 Phone: 772-321-2515 Email: [email protected] www.floridamosquito.org 605 FMC Corporation 1735 Market Street Philadelphia, PA 19103 Phone: 215-299-6000 www.fmc.com 610 Gambusia Solutions 4670 Pacific Street Rocklin, CA 95677 Phone: 916-652-4231 Email: [email protected] www.gambusiasolutions.com 111 Georgia Mosquito Control Association 65 Billy B. Hair Drive Savannah, GA 31408-9068 Phone: 912-790-2546 Email: [email protected] www.gamosquito.org 613 Jasmic, LLC P.O. Box 369 Hazlet, NJ 07730 Phone: 732-888-9224 Email: [email protected] www.jasmic.net 513 Leading Edge Associates, Inc. 456 Walker Road Waynesville, NC 28786 Phone: 828-246-2111 Email: [email protected] www.leateam.com xiv 103 London Foggers P.O. Box 406 Long Lake, MN 55356 Phone: 952-473-5366 Email: [email protected] www.londonfoggers.com 520 MCES, LLC 2499 Old Lake Mary Road #102 Sanford, FL 32771 Phone: 407-864-4500 Email: [email protected] www.mymces.com 105 Mosquito Trac/Airwolf Aerospace 15369 Madison Road Middlefield, OH 44062 Phone: 440-321-5838 Email: [email protected] www.airwolfaerospace.com 518 New Mountain Innovations 6 Hawthorne Rd Old Lyme, CT 06371 Phone: 860-691-1876 Email: [email protected] www.newmountain.com 107 Pro-Lab Diagnostics 21 Cypress Blvd., Suite 1070 Round Rock, TX 78665 Phone: +1 512-832-9145 Email: [email protected] www.pro-lab.com 114 Response Biomedical 1781 75th Avenue West Vancouver, BC, Canada V6P 6P2 Phone: 604-456-6069 Email: [email protected] www.responsebio.com 204 SC Johnson Entomological Research 1525 Howe St. Racine, WI 53403 Phone: 262-260-4881 Email:[email protected] 106 Springstar P.O. Box 2622 Woodinville, WA 98072 Phone: 425-487-6011 www.springstar.net 213 xv Summit Chemical Co. 235 S. Kresson Street Baltimore, MD 21224 Phone: 800-227-8664 Email: [email protected] www.summitchemical.com 317 Target Specialty Products 15415 Marquardt Avenue Santa Fe Springs, CA 90670 Phone: 562-802-2238 Email: [email protected] www.target-specialty.com 311 Tifone Ambiente SRL Via Modena 248/A Ferrara, Italy 44124 Phone: 39-532-730586 Email:[email protected] www.tifone.com 516 Univar Environmental Sciences 11305 Four Points Drive Building 1, Suite 210 Austin, TX 78726 Phone: 800-609-9414 Email: [email protected] www.UnivarES.com 416/417 Valent BioSciences Corporation 870 Technology Way Libertyville, IL 60048 Phone: 847-968-4700 Email: [email protected] www.valentbiosciences.com 403 Vector Disease Control International 1320 Brookwood Drive, Suite H Little Rock, AR 72202 E-mail: [email protected] www.vdci.net 212 Westham Co. 5950 Berkshire Place Dallas, TX 75225 Phone:888-966-2483 Email:[email protected] 313 xvi General Information Registration and Internet Hub Hours Located in the River Concourse Sunday, February 7 Monday, February 8 Tuesday, February 9 Wednesday, February 10 Thursday, February 11 10:00 am – 6:30 pm 7:00 am – 5:30 pm 7:30 am – 5:30 pm 7:30 am – 1:00 pm 7:30 am – 12:00 pm Speaker Ready Room Hours Located in Gwinnett Boardroom Sunday, February 7 Monday, February 8 Tuesday, February 9 Wednesday, February 10 Thursday, February 11 1:00 pm – 5:30 pm 7:00 am – 5:30 pm 7:30 am – 5:30 pm 7:30 am – 1:00 pm 7:30 am – 12:00 pm Exhibit Hall Hours Located in Exhibit Hall A Set-up: Sunday, February 7 8:00 am – 3:00 pm Viewing Hours: Sunday, February 7 Monday, February 8 5:00 pm – 8:00 pm 12:00 pm – 1:45 pm 3:15 pm – 4:00 pm Tuesday, February 9 7:30 am -8:30 am 10:00 am – 10:45 am 12:15 pm – 1:45 pm 3:15 pm – 4:00 pm Wednesday, February 10 7:30 am– 10:30 am Breakdown: Wednesday, February 10 10:45 am – 5:00 pm Poster Presentations Poster presenters must locate their poster numbers in this program book and place their posters on the assigned poster boards in Exhibit Hall A. Presenters are required to attend their posters during the Poster Session on Tuesday, February 9 from 12:00 pm – 2:00 pm. Poster Set-up: Sunday, February 7 2:00 pm – 4:00 pm Poster Removal: Wednesday, February 10 10:30 am – 2:00 pm Posters not removed by 2:00 pm on Wednesday will be placed behind the registration desk and will be discarded if not claimed by noon on Thursday. xvii Breaks AMCA will NOT provide coffee prior to the start of the morning sessions, so please plan accordingly. Sponsored beverage breaks are offered daily. Please refer to the program for times. Education Day Education Day is on Tuesday, February 9 from 8:00 am – 1:00 pm. AMCA V olunteers will provide educational programs to visitors at the Esther F. Garrison School of Visual and Performing Arts. Activities include presentations related to mosquitoes and mosquito control, and students will have the opportunity to have hands-on experiences with various mosquito and mosquito control related items. For information, please see the AMCA registration counter. Internet Hub The Internet Hub is located in the River Concourse. Complimentary computer stations with internet/email access and word processing are provided. Use of these computers is limited to 15 minutes. These stations are not intended for editing or printing long documents. Please use the hotel business center for these purposes. Latin American Symposium The 26th Annual Latin American Symposium, held all day Tuesday, has simultaneous English translation of Spanish oral presentations. This is a unique opportunity to learn about mosquito research and control in Latin America. Please see the technician in the back of the room for a headset. Meals The Sunday reception is not a full dinner. The Monday and Tuesday lunches will be served in the Exhibit Hall. The banquet on Wednesday is a full dinner. No breakfasts are served at the Annual Meeting. Meeting Evaluations The internet-based Annual Meeting evaluation will be emailed to all attendees following the meeting. We encourage all attendees to complete the survey so we can continue to improve the AMCA Annual Meeting. Member Meeting The Annual Member Meeting is on Wednesday from 10:45 am – 12:15 pm in Chatham Ballroom C. The member/business meeting updates the membership on AMCA finances and committee activities as well as new initiatives. All members are encouraged to attend. xviii Partners in Professionalism: Public Health Credentialing Options with the Entomological Society of America In many markets certification and certificate (or degree) programs are a proven way to build practitioner training, increase professionalism, and provide customers with a sense of trust. Public health control is no exception. AMCA members have indicated a desire for a professional credentialing program. But launching a new certification or certificate program can be an arduous and expensive undertaking. Join us in meeting room 101 on Tuesday, February 9 at 12:15 pm for this session as we explore some options as a partnership with the Entomological Society of America and then open up the presentation for audience discussion. Moderators Moderators are required to arrive in their session room at least 10 minutes prior to the start of the session to review the audiovisual aids, timers, and lighting with the projectionist. Papers must be given at the scheduled times. If a paper is canceled or a speaker does not appear, do not advance to the next speaker, but use the open time for questions and discussion. Name Badge A name badge is required for admission to all meeting sessions and the Exhibit Hall. Individual function tickets are also required for receptions and the banquet. Speaker Presentations Speakers with PowerPoint presentations should have already uploaded their PowerPoint files online. If you have not done so, contact the audiovisual coordinator in the Speaker Ready Room as soon as possible. Special Needs AMCA fully complies with the legal requirements of the Americans with Disabilities Act. If any participant of the Annual Meeting is in need of special accommodations, he/she should notify the AMCA registration counter and indicate the type of assistance needed. AMCA cannot ensure the availability of appropriate assistance without prior notice. Trustee Tour Pick-up All trustees, commissioners, and their companions should report to the water taxi on Wednesday. Please see your tour ticket and registration for more information. Young Professionals Activities The AMCA Young Professionals will be hosting numerous events throughout the Annual Meeting. Please see the listing of events below. If you have any questions xix regarding these activities, please visit the AMCA Young Professionals booth located in the Exhibit Hall. Young Professionals Welcome Dinner Will be held on Monday, February 8 from 6:30 pm – 8:00 pm at a local restaurant. Meet at the entrance of the first floor lobby of the Hyatt Regency Savannah (across the river from the convention center via ferry) by 6:15 pm. Attendees will pay for their own meal and drinks. Young Professionals Career Round-Table Symposium will be held on Tuesday, February 9 from 1:45 pm - 5:30 pm in meeting room 105/106. The symposium will include a brief meeting followed by round-table career discussions with field experts. Check program for more symposium details. Young Professionals Social will be held on Tuesday, February 9 from 5:30 pm to 6:30pm in Chatham Ballroom C. The event will include a one hour open bar social and light hors d’oeuvres. The event is sponsored by AMVAC. Check program for more details. Young Professionals Promo Booth will be hosted in the Exhibit Hall at booth #603. Come see us during breaks for free games, prizes, and group information. xx Sunday, February 7, 2016 SCHEDULE 1:00 PM – 4:00 PM AMCA Committee Meetings Meeting Rooms: 103/104/105/106 1:00 PM – 2:00 PM Public Relations Meeting Room 105 Legislative & Regulatory Meeting Room 104 Membership Meeting Room 103 2:00 PM – 3:00 PM Finance Meeting Room 105 Legislative & Regulatory Meeting Room 104 Publications Meeting Room 103 Archives Meeting Room 106 3:00 PM – 4:00 PM Training & Member Education Meeting Room 105 Bylaws & Policy Meeting Room 104 JAMCA Editorial Board Meeting Room 103 Science & Technology Meeting Room 106 2:00 PM – 4:00 PM Poster Set-Up Exhibit Hall A 5:00 PM – 8:00 PM Grand Opening of the Exhibit Hall and Welcome Reception Exhibit Hall A, (Badge Required for Entry) 1 Notes Monday, February 8, 2016 8:00 AM – 12:00 PM PLENARY SESSION Organizer/Moderator: Wayne Gale 8:00 AM – 12:00 PM Chatham Ballroom C 8:00 Call to Order Ken Linthicum, AMCA President 8:05 Welcome to Savannah Dignitary from the State of Georgia 8:10 Program Announcements Wayne Gale, AMCA Vice President/Program Chair 8:15 Presidential Address Ken Linthicum 8:35 Awards Presentation Ken Linthicum 9:05 AMCA Memorial Lecture Honoree: Oscar Fultz Lecturer: Joe Conlon 10:00 Break 10:30 PL-1 Are We Superheroes Fighting Transformers? Dan Strickman 11:15 PL-2 WOTUS and NPDES: Impacts Real and Imagined on Mosquito Control Carlton Layne, Executive Director of Aquatic Ecosystem Restoration Foundation President’s Luncheon and Exhibits Open 12:00 PM - 1:45 PM Exhibit Hall A 2 Monday, February 8, 2016 1:45 PM – 3:15 PM* AFTERNOON SESSIONS *unless otherwise noted Recent and Emerging Vector-Borne and Zoonotic Disease Threats to the US Organizer/Moderator: Seth Britch 1:45 PM - 2:45 PM Meeting Room 102/103/104 1:45 1 Chikungunya in the Americas Stephen Higgs, Yan-Jang S. Huang, Dana L. Vanlandingham 2:00 2 Determining the susceptibility of American Culex mosquitoes to Japanese encephalitis virus Dana Vanlandingham, Yank-Jang S. Huang, Susan M. Hettenbach, Julie N. Harbin, Lee W. Cohnstaedt, Alan D.T. Barrett, Stephen Higgs 2:15 3 Emerging pathogens associated with the Lone Star Tick, Amblyomma americanum Katherine Sayler, John Lednicky, Anthony Barbet, Jeff Abbott, Michael Dark, Amanda Loftis 2:30 4 Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome and Sin Nombre virus ecology in California Mark Novak, Bryan Jackson, Vicki Kramer Adult Control I/Surveillance Moderator: James Burgess 1:45 PM - 3:05 PM Meeting Room 200/201/202 1:45 7 Comparison of a novel gas source with CO2 gas cylinder for adult mosquito surveillance John Prohaska, Frank Cornine, Todd Duval 1:55 8 Eight years of hourly trapping of host seeking mosquitoes in southwest Florida James Burgess, T. Wayne Gale, Tom Miller 3 Monday, February 8, 2016 2:05 9 Evaluation of the CDC Autocidal Gravid Ovitrap for the surveillance of La Crosse virus vectors Brian Byrd, Monica Henry, Yanju Li, Sean O’Connell, Charles Sither, Roberto Barrera, Manuel Amador 2:15 10 The new BG Sentinel 2.0: Comparing old and new Biogents traps and lures Charles Abadam, Karen Akaratovic, Jay Kiser 2:25 11 Comparison of carbohydrate sources in yeast-fermentation CO2 generators for mosquito surveillance Robert Aldridge, Seth C. Britch, Sandra A. Allan, Maia Tsikolia, Lesly Carolina Calix, Kenneth Linthicum 2:35 12 Field evaluation of the BG-Counter, a new surveillance tool to remotely measure mosquito densities Catherine Pruszynski, Martin Geier, Michael Weber 2:45 13 A comparison of CDC light trap and Reiter gravid trap data in Vector Index calculations Broox Boze, Daniel Markowski 2:55 14 Mosquito Bite! A mobile application for tracking mosquito bites Michael Reiskind 4 Monday, February 8, 2016 Biology and Behavior I Moderator: Richard Wilkerson 1:45 PM - 2:45 PM Meeting Room 203/204/205 1:45 15 DDT and land use, not global warming, drives broad scale changes in mosquito populations over the past century Ilia Rochlin, Dominick Ninivaggi, Ary Faraji, Christopher Barker, A. Marm Kilpatrick 1:55 16 The North American Mosquito Project (NAMP) 2015 update: Aedes vexans population structure Lee Cohnstaedt, Phillip Schumm 2:05 17 The genus Aedes nearly disappears but is rediscovered in plain view Richard Wilkerson, Yvonne-Marie Linton, Dina Fonseca, Ted Schultz, Dana Price, Daniel Strickman 2:15 18 Temperature dependent development rates of container-inhabiting mosquitoes Kristen Healy, Emily Boothe, Dina Fonseca 2:25 19 The Siren’s Song: Exploitation of female flight tones to passively capture male Aedes aegypti mosquitoes Brian Johnson, Scott Ritchie 2:35 20 Florida Keys Mosquito Control District and the USDA collaborating to bring an understanding of invasive mosquito species to community schools Beth Ranson 209 Field evaluation of three traps used for collection of host-seeking Culex quinquefasciatus in Louisiana Emily Boothe and Kristen Healy 2:45 Student Competition I Moderator: Brian Byrd 1:45 PM - 2:35 PM Meeting Room 105/106 1:45 27 Chikungunya and dengue mosquito resting and sugar-feeding behavior in urban areas of Ecuador Diana Naranjo, Whitney Qualls, John 5 Monday, February 8, 2016 Beier, Eduardo Gómez, Stephanie Pinela, Virginia Pinela 1:55 66 Adding an IGR to Mosquito Barrier Treatments to Increase Their Residual Effectiveness in Suburban Backyards Glen Skiles, Kyndall Dye, Nicola Gallagher, Grayson Brown 2:05 22 Modeling optimum use of attractive toxic sugar bait stations for effective malaria vector control in Africa Lin Zhu, John Marshall, Whitney Qualls, Yosef Schlein, John Beier 2:15 23 Sublethal effects of Temprid® on bed bug (Cimex lectularius) behaviors and implications for control Sydney Crawley, Michael Potter, Kenneth Haynes Education/ Public Relations/ General Organizer/Moderator: Shelly Redovan 1:45 PM - 2:35 PM Meeting Room 102/103/104 1:45 44 Mastering the mosquito control message and media interview Jill Oviatt 1:55 45 Making the mosquito the hero – The shaping of a public relations campaign Kelly Middleton, Jason Farned, Levy Sun 46 Clicking to the masses Adrian Salinas 210 Pennies per person: Digital advertising closing the gap between people and vector control Levy Sun 211 REPEL: (Reach out, Educate, Provide, Everyone, Local) Cindy Mulla 2:05 2:15 2:15 3:15 PM – 4:00 PM ICE CREAM SOCIAL Exhibit Hall A (Badge Required for Entry, Ticket Required for Service) 4:00 PM – 5:30 PM* AFTERNOON SESSIONS *unless otherwise noted 6 Monday, February 8, 2016 Recent and Emerging Vector-Borne and Zoonotic Disease Threats to the US Continued Organizer/Moderator: Seth Britch 4:00 PM - 5:00 PM Ogelthorpe 4:00 5 4:15 6 4:30 4:45 Factors affecting the ability of American mosquitoes to transmit Rift Valley fever virus Mike Turell Rift Valley fever in the US: Commerce, networks, climate and susceptible vector and host populations Seth Britch, Kenneth J. Linthicum, Assaf Anyamba, Andrew J. Monaghan 143 Factors that influence the transmission of West Nile virus in Florida Jonathan Day 144 Zika virus: A new vector-borne scourge in the Americas Harry Savage Student Competition II Organizer/Moderator: Brian Byrd 4:00 PM - 5:00 PM Meeting Room 105/106 4:00 24 Quantitative analysis of vector behavior following subacute expose to prallethrin, an active ingredient in Duet® Kyndall Dye, Grayson Brown, Kenneth Haynes, Douglas Johnson 4:10 25 Blood-feeding behavior of Puerto Rican Aedes aegypti exposed to pyrethroidtreated fabric Natasha Agramonte 4:20 26 Chemical compounds identified in domestic dog odors Chris Holderman, Philip Kaufman, Matthew Booth, Ulrich Bernier 4:30 21 Terpenoids are capable of enhancing synthetic insecticides against Aedes aegypti 7 Monday, February 8, 2016 Edmund Norris, Lyric Bartholomay, Joel Coats 4:40 28 Ecology of La Crosse Virus (LACv) vectors along forest-to-field ecotones in western North Carolina Marcelo Schwarz, Gideon Wasserberg, Brian Byrd 4:50 29 Development of a novel molecular method for La Crosse virus detection from Aedes mosquito vectors in Knox County, TN Cassandra Urquhart, Doris D’Souza, Amy Lambert, Rebecca Trout-Fryxell Adult Control II/ Repellents/Chemical Moderator: John Smith 4:00 PM - 5:20 PM Meeting Room 200/201/202 4:00 30 Evaluation of repellent-treated U.S. military combat uniforms Ulrich Bernier, Natasha Agramonte, Melynda Perry, Amy Johnson 4:10 31 OFF! Clip-on repellent device with metofluthrin tested on Aedes aegypti (Diptera: Culicidae) for mortality at different time intervals and distances Christopher Bibbs, Rui-De Xue 4:20 32 Relative efficacy of novel spatial repellents for mosquito control Joel Coats, Edmund Norris, James Klimavicz, Aaron Gross 4:30 33 Research study effective for mosquito repellent products in Thailand, with Aedes aegypti mosquito resistant strain and susceptible strain of pyrethroid chemical groups Benjawan Tuetun, Atthapong Chumkiew, Anuluck Junkum, Daruna Jumpakaew, Benjawan Pittasawat 4:40 34 Next generation of controlled release microdevices for field and personal protection against mosquitoes Noel Elman, Ulrich Bernier, Melynda Perry, Craig Scoops, Daniel Kline, Pablo Gurman 8 Monday, February 8, 2016 4:50 35 Exploiting the K&D in vitro bioassay system for evaluating new mosquito control products John Smith 5:00 36 Metofluthrin emanators reduce Aedes aegypti survival and biting intensity: results of field trails in Cairns, Australia Jonathan Darbro, Ordwell Muzari, Arthur Giblin, Scott Ritchie, Greg Devine 5:10 37 Comparisons of the efficacy of Duet and Kontrol 30-30 in Lee County, Florida Rachel Morreale, T. Wayne Gale, Jonathan Hornby 5:20 212 Novel compounds to control susceptible and resistant population of An. gambiae Aaron Gross, Fan Tong, Rafique Islam, Baonan Sun, Paul Carlier, Jeffrey Bloomquist Education/Public Relations/ General Organizer/Moderator: Shelly Redovan 4:00 PM - 5:30 PM Meeting Room 102/103/104 4:00 38 Vector biology and control in Iran: Challenges and opportunities Ary Faraji, Seyed Hassan MoosaKazemi, Kamran Akbarzadeh, Javad Karimi, Mohammad Reza Fakoorziba, Mahmood Iranpour, Randy Gaugler 4:10 39 “Dauntless Dottie” and the origins of mosquito control in the Pacific Northwest Gordon Patterson 4:20 40 Connecting with kindergartners through mosquito education Eric Jackson, Brian Murphy, Neil Wilkinson 4:30 41 Best practices in educational outreach: Can an informational website effectively replace quality classroom-based education programs? Shelly Redovan, Eric Jackson 4:40 42 Wing Beats: Cut, copy, paste, print Stephen Sickerman 9 Monday, February 8, 2016 4:50 43 A multi-faceted approach to community outreach Rebecca Riley, Sandra Kachur, Mustapha Debboun Biology and Behavior II Organizer/Moderator: Don Shroyer 4:00 PM – 5:00 PM Meeting Room 203/204/205 4:00 47 Teasing apart the behavioral responses of Culex tarsalis to fish-associated semiochemicals in wind tunnel bioassays Adena Why, Emerson Lacey, Ring Carde, William Walton 4:10 48 Blood feeding habits of mosquitoes in Chicago John-Paul Mutebi, Linda Kothera, Joanie Kenney, Harry Savage 4:20 49 Transcription sequencing in Aedes aegypti larvae exposed to pesticides Liming Zhao, Barry Alto, Dagne Duguma 4:30 50 Evaluating the efficacy of household bleach wash solution as egg wash to increase survival rates in captive Toxorhynchites rutilus colonies Anita Schiller 4:40 51 Exploiting the autogenous nature of Aedes albopictus Don Shroyer 4:50 52 Bite Back! Julio Abreu and James Forehand 5:30 PM – 7:00 PM LATIN AMERICAN DISCUSSION Oglethorpe Auditorium 10 Tuesday, February 9, 2016 7:30 am – 8:30 am 8:30 am – 10:00 am* Break MORNING SESSIONS *unless otherwise noted Latin American Student Competition and Symposium I Organizer/Moderator: Lee Cohnstaedt and Ildefonso Fernández-Salas 8:30 AM - 10:00 AM Oglethorpe Auditorium 8:30 53 Evaluation of the toxic activity of plant extracts on Triatoma pallidipennis, an important vector in Chagas disease transmission Laura Mayela Montes-Rincon, Jesús Antonio Davila-Barboza, Ana Karen Leal-Olvera, Lucio Galaviz-Silva, Zinnia Judith Molina-Garza 8:40 54 Mutations kdr in the para-gene in Triatominae (Hemiptera: Reduviidae) vectors of Chagas disease in Mexico Jesús Antonio Davila-Barboza, Gustavo Ponce-García, Beatriz LopezMonroy, Irám Rodríguez-Sánchez, Pablo Manrique-Saide, Alejandro Villegas, Azael Che-Mendoza, Adriana Flores-Suarez 8:50 55 Expression levels of cytochrome P450 (CYP4C52v1, CYP68y3, CYP9K34, CYP9M10, CYP9J40 and CYP9AL1) determined by RT-qPCR in larvae of Culex quinquefasciatus exposed to different insecticides Irám Pablo Rodríguez-Sánchez, Olga Villanueva-Segura, Beatriz LopezManroy, Michelle Zamudio-Osuna, Laura Martínez de Villarreal, Adriana Flores-Suárez, Jesús Villarreal-Pérez, Gustavo Ponce-García 9:00 56 The role of morphological and physiological traits in the acoustic behavior of Aedes aegypti: First step in the sound-based attraction technique in Colombia Hoover Pantoja, Francisco Vargas, Ximena Bernal, Guillermo Rua, Horacio 11 Tuesday, February 9, 2016 Cadena, Natalia Bedoya, Alejandro Vergara, Freddy Ruiz 9:10 57 CHIKV in field populations of Aedes aegypti in San Marcos, Guerrero, México Martha Lopez, Karina Villanueva, Adriana Flores, Iram Sanchez, Gerardo Trujillo, Javier Valdes, Gustavo PonceGarcía 9:20 58 First report of Aedes aegypti transmission of chikungunya virus in the Americas Esteban Eduardo Díaz-González, Tiffany Kautz, Alicia Dorantes-Delgado, Rose Langsjoen, Rubing Chen, Rosa Sánchez-Casas, Scott Weaver, Ildefonso Fernández-Salas 9:30 59 The art state of Chikungunya virus (CHIK-V) Mayra A Gomez-Govea, Olga Villanueva-Segura, Beatriz LopezManrroy, Gustavo Ponce-García, Gabriel Ruiz-Ayma, Laura E. Martínez de Villarreal, Adriana Flores-Suarez, Irám Pablo Rodríguez-Sanchez 9:40 60 Incidence and genomic diversity Chikungunya fever in Nuevo León, México Irám Pablo Rodríguez-Sánchez, Michelle de Jesús Zamudio-Osuna, Mayra Alejandra Gómez-Govea, Adriana Elizabeth Flores-Suárez, Gustavo Ponce-García, Laura Elia Martínez de Villarreal, Jesús Zacarías Villarreal-Pérez 9:50 61 Larval indexes of Aedes aegypti (Diptera: Culicidae) and its relation to the occurrence of cases of Dengue and Chikungunya in the province of Orellana, Ecuador Glenda Velásquez Serra, Silvio Silva Salas, Jorge Luis Llangari Cujilema 12 Tuesday, February 9, 2016 Student Competition III Organizer/Moderator: Brian Byrd 8:30 AM - 9:30 AM Meeting Room 203/204/205 8:30 62 Detection of CHIKV in field populations of Aedes aegypti in Guerrero State, Mexico Martha Lopez, Karina Villanueva, Adriana Flores, Iram Sanchez, Gerardo Trujillo, Javier Valdez, Gustavo Ponce 8:40 63 Population Structure of Aedes aegypti in the Southeastern United States Kristen Hopperstad and Michael Reiskind 8:50 64 Tests to reverse selection to pyrethoid resistance in Aedes aegypti populations from the South of Mexico Farah Zamira Vera Maloof, Connor Hendrich, Ashley Janich, Paisley Byrnes, Karla Saavedra-Rodriquez, William C. Black IV 9:00 65 Host specific response to DEET selection in Anopheles coluzzi and Aedes aegypti James Ricci and Bradley White 9:10 67 Is resistance accumulating in Louisiana’s mosquitoes? Deciphering the susceptibility status of Culex quinquefasciatus to three larvicides Nicholas DeLisi and Kristen Healy 13 Tuesday, February 9, 2016 Backyard Spraying: The Pest Management Professionals Perspective Symposium Organizer/Moderator: Janet McAllister 8:30 AM - 9:50 AM Meeting Room 102/103/104 8:30 68 Introduction and goals of the backyard spraying symposium Janet McAllister 8:40 69 Available products in mosquito control Ron Harrison 9:05 70 Best Management Practices Brian Forschler and Tiffany Nguyen 9:30 71 Individual accounts and spraying for communities contracting mosquito management for municipalities and communities Mike Swan and Patrick Prather Adult Control III/New Tech and NonTargets Moderator: Michael Hudon 8:30 AM - 9:50 AM Meeting Room 200/201/202 8:30 72 What can you do with 100 million transgenic mosquitoes? Derric Nimmo, Andrew McKemey, Camilla Beech 8:40 73 Aerial release of sterile/treated male mosquitoes to combat disease Ralph Breslauer, Hanan Lepek 8:50 74 Optimization of production and quality control for Aedes albopictus males for inundative field release Hanano Yamada, James Mains, Corey Brelsfoard, Stephen Dobson 9:00 75 Male mosquitoes as delivery vehicles for insecticide Corey Brelsfoard, James Mains, Stephen Dobson 14 Tuesday, February 9, 2016 9:10 76 ADAM, Auto-Dissemination Augmented with Males: A novel strategy to control Aedes aegypti Jodi Holeman, Katherine Ramirez, James Mains, Corey Brelsfoard, Stephen Dobson, Anthony Cornel, Steve Mulligan 9:20 77 A Wolbachia-based autocidal approach to control Aedes albopictus James Mains, Hanano Yamada, Corey Brelsfoard, Robert Rose, Stephen Dobson 9:30 78 Wolbachia pipientis infected male mosquito release pilot program to control Aedes albopictus in Los Angeles County Susanne Kluh, Harold Morales, Tanya Posey, Angela Brisco, J. Wakoli Wekesa, James W. Mains, Corey Brelsfoard, Stephen L. Dobson 9:40 79 Wildlife Lighting Certification Program: Protecting wildlife through responsible lighting practices Michael Hudon Break, Exhibits Open 10:00 AM - 10:45 AM Exhibit Hall A 10:45 AM – 12:15 PM* MORNING SESSIONS *unless otherwise noted Disease Vector I/ Surveillance Moderator: Craig Stoops 10:45 AM - 12:15 PM Meeting Room 200/201/202 10:45 80 Development and field evaluation of the Sentinel Mosquito Arbovirus Capture Kit (SMACK) Brian Johnson, Tim Kerlin, Sonja HallMendelin, Andrew van den Hurk, Stephen Doggett, Cheryl Toi, Ken Fall, Scott Ritchie 15 Tuesday, February 9, 2016 10:55 81 Honey-card surveillance of arboviruses in Florida: Can we beat the chicken? Nathan Burkett-Cadena, Thomas Unnasch, Jennifer Gibson, Rui-de Xue, James McNelly, Miranda Lauth, Alberto VanOlphen 11:05 82 Mosquito pools? How do they fit? Early arbovirus detection in Panama City Beach, Florida Michael Riles, James Clauson 11:15 83 Laboratory evaluation of the rapid analyte measurement platform (RAMP) dengue virus assay Kristen Burkhalter, Harry Savage 11:25 84 Variation in species composition and diversity of mosquitoes relative to arbovirus activity in Lowndes County, Georgia Mark Blackmore, Elizabeth Ann Broadie, Jamaica L. Hill, J. Erin Parker 11:35 85 Mosquito control and arboviral surveillance in Harris County and the City of Houston, Texas Mustapha Debboun, Martin Reyna Nava, Rebecca Riley, James Dennett, Kyle Flatt, Umair Shah 11:45 86 Update on mosquito research in the Entomology Department at U.S. Naval Medical Research Unit 6, Peru Craig Stoops, Gissella Vasquez, Victor Lopez-Sifuentes, Carmen FloresMendoza 11:55 87 Estimating current and future distribution of malaria and its primary vectors in northern South America based on climatic and anthropogenic changes Temitope Alimi, Douglas Fuller, Whitney Qualls, Socrates Herrera, Myriam Arevalo-Herrera, Martha Quinones, Marcus Lacerda, Jon Beier 12:05 88 Diversifying with dengue-the RAMP platform Paolo Lobo, Adriana Cajiao, Crystal Selluski, Pamela Tan, Angela Carter 16 Tuesday, February 9, 2016 Backyard Spraying: The Pest Management Professionals Perspective Symposium Organizer/Moderator: Janet McAllister 10:45 AM - 12:05 PM Meeting Room 102/103/104 10:45 89 One bird, two stones. How MADs and backyard operators can co-exist for a common cause Joey Osborne 11:05 90 Business model for individualized mosquito control Heather Gordy 11:25 91 Training needs for pest management professionals Claudia Riegel, Janet McAllister 11:45 92 The use of backyard treatments by mosquito control districts for routine and targeted mosquito control Brendan Carter, Erin Cloherty, Sarah Michaels, Claudia Riegel Latin American Symposium II Organizer/Moderator: Lee Cohnstaedt and Ildefonso Fernández-Salas 10:45 AM - 12:25 PM Oglethorpe Auditorium 10:45 93 Diet on Aedes aegypti larval stage as a determining factor in the tolerance of insecticides Abdiel Martin-Park, Beatriz LopezMonroy, Maria Torres-Sepúlveda, Gustavo Ponce-García, Consuelo RuizHerrera, Laura Martinez de Villarreal, William Black IV, Iram RodriguezSanchez 10:55 94 Evaluation of organic and inorganic substrates for mass production of parasitic nematodes of mosquito larvae Rafael Pérez Pacheco, Alicia Alonso Ramos, Dalila Pérez Pablo, Edward Platzer 17 Tuesday, February 9, 2016 11:05 95 Metabolites of Aedes aegypti larval stage in the tolerance of spinosad Irám Pablo Rodríguez-Sánchez, José Alfonso Flores-Leal, Olga Karina Villanueva-Segura, Grifith Lizarraga, Alfredo Ignacio Córdova-Galván, 11:15 96 Deltamethrin resistance in Aedes aegypti (Diptera: Culicidae) from Mexico Yamili Contreras-Perera, Gustavo Ponce-García, Beatriz Lopez-Monroy, Olga Villanueva-Segura, Valentin Uc, Azael Che-Mendoza, Pablo ManriqueSaide, Adriana E. Flores- Suarez 11:25 97 Effect of mating in the cuticular hydrocarbons of female and males of Aedes aegypti (Diptera: Culicidae) Samantha D. Ruiz-Aguirre, Leopoldo Cruz-López, Gabriel FuentesMaldonado, Ildefonso Fernandez-Salas, Armando Ulloa 11:35 98 Measurement of aerially sprayed droplets through a canopy to recognize cloud and spray dispersion in common mosquito resting sites Grifith Lizarraga and Jesse Julien 11:45 99 Mosquito records from Mexico VII: The mosquitoes of Queretaro State Aldo Ortega, Adelfo Sánchez, Félix Ordóñez, Quetzaly Siller, Ramón Méndez 11:55 100 Ticks infesting some domestic animals in Tapachula, Chiapas, Mexico Noe Lopez-Lopez, Jorge TorresManzon, Jose A. Juarez-Ordaz, Sergio E Bermudez, Armando Ulloa 12:05 101 Anthropophilic biting activity of Kerteszia species in a malaria endemic region of department of Tolima in Colombia. Jesus Eduardo Escobar, Ranulfo Gonzalez, Martha Quinones 18 Tuesday, February 9, 2016 12:15 102 Potential resistance mechanisms (organophosphates, carbamates and pyrethroids) in Triatoma dimidiata Coast-Pacific genotype from Mexico Arturo Acero Sandoval, Américo Rodríguez Ramírez, Teresa López Ordóñez, J. Genaro Ordóñez González, Francisco Solís-Santoyo, Patricia Penilla-Navarro Student Competition IV Organizer/Moderator: Brian Byrd 10:45 AM - 12:00 PM Meeting Room 203/204/205 10:45 Withdrawn 11:00 104 The oviposition of Aedes albopictus in response to Copepoda in field conditions Jimmie Teague and Gideon Wasserberg 11:15 105 Modeling mosquito population dynamics using surveillance, treatment, and climate data in Tarrant County Daniel Dawson, Nina Dacko, Christopher Salice 11:30 106 Toxicity and physiological action of basic amines to mosquito and cockroach Minyuan Tie, Baonan Sun, Maia Tsikolia, Ulrich Bernier, Jeffrey Bloomquist 11:45 107 Mosquito surveillance in the Tongatapu Island Group, Kingdom of Tonga Tom Swan, Jon Harding, Milen Marinov 19 Tuesday, February 9, 2016 12:15 PM - 1:15 PM Partners in Professionalism Meeting Room 101 Poster Session Luncheon and Exhibits Open 12:15 PM - 1:45 PM Exhibit Hall A Adult Control P-01 The behavior of Anopheles gambiae s.I. on bendiocarb powder treated electrostatic net in eave tubes: Observations using a simple novel video surveillance system suited for the field. Michael Cordel, Issa Lyimo, Ladslaus Mnyone, Kija Ng’habi, Andreas Rose, Sergius Sperling P-02 Implementing the CDC bottle bioassay for pesticide resistance testing of Culex pipiens and Cx. tarsalis in Placer County Jessica Stevenson, Mary Sorensen P-03 Activity patterns of Aedes albopictus within a diverse environment of residential and agricultural use and introduction of a new slow-release pyriproxyfen formulation for controlling wild vector populations Roberto Pereira, Philip Koehler, Alexandra Chaskopoulou P-04 Residual effectiveness of lambdacyhalothrin on Aedes albopictus in Virginia Benjamin McMillan, Jake Bova, Sally Paulson P-05 Field evaluations of residual pesticide applications and misting system on militarily relevant materials against medically important mosquitoes in Thailand Arissara Pongsiri, Alongkot Ponlawat, Kijchalao, Kijchalao, Seth Britch, Kenneth Linthicum P-06 Characterization of Culex tarsalis and Cx. quinquefasciatus (Diptera: Culicidae) response variability to pyrethroid and organophosphate insecticides may improve interpretation of CDC bottle bioassay results Mary Sorensen and Jessica Stevenson 20 Tuesday, February 9, 2016 P-07 Operational aspects of the CDC Autocidal Gravid Ovitrap Veronica Acevedo-Soto, Manuel Amador, Gilberto Félix, Roberto Barrera Behavior/Biology P-08 The effects of La Crosse virus infection on repellent response in Aedes albopictus and Aedes triseriatus Kevin Chan, Sally Paulson, Carlyle Brewster P-09 Spermathecal lobe usage in Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus Carrie De Jesus and Michael Reiskind P-10 Aedes aegypti surveillance in Fresno County 2013-2015 Jodi Holeman, Steve Mulligan, Charlie Smith, Katherine Ramirez P-11 Attraction of phlebotomine sandflies (Diptera: Psychodidae) to modified CDC light traps with light-emitting diodes of different colors Jorge Jesus Rodriguez-Rojas, Wilfredo Arque-Chunga, Ildefonso Fernández- Salas, Eduardo A. Rebollar- Téllez P-12 Nondestructive DNA extraction for vouchering mosquitoes and sand flies Loannis Giantsis, Alexandra Chaskopoulou, Marie Claude Bon Disease Vector Studies P-13 Ecology of West Nile fever across four European countries: History of WNV transmission, vector population dynamics & vector control response Alexandra Chaskopoulou, Gregory L’Ambert, Duscan Petric, Romeo Bellini, Thomas Groen, Lawrence Marrama, Dominique Bicout P-14 Validity of a novel morphological character to distinguish female Culex restuans and Culex pipiens collected from gravid traps Brian Byrd, Bruce Harrison, Tyler McKinnish, Kevin Caillouet, Michael Hutchinson, Ryan Harrison, Yanju Li, Cody Dunlap 21 Tuesday, February 9, 2016 P-15 Identification of La Crosse, dengue, and chikungunya vectors collected from sticky traps using morphological and molecular methods Brian Byrd, Marissa Taylor, Bruce Harrison, Monica Henry, Charlie Sither, Dawn Wesson, Manuel Amador, Roberto Barrera P-16 Population structure of Anopheles nuneztovari in Colombia Nelson Naranjo-Diaz, Stefani A. Piedrahita, Yilmar Espinosa, Camilo Orozco, Juan C. Hernandez, Margarita M Correa P-17 Effects of ascogregarine infections on container-inhabiting Aedes mosquitoes in southwestern Virginia Joshua Bernick and Sally Paulson P-18 Dissecting the composition of the midgut microbiota of a Colombian field-collected malaria vector Ana Priscila Bascuñan, Yadira GaleanoCastañeda, Paula A. Urrea, Julián Rodríguez-Zabala, David Serre, Margarita M Correa P-19 Role of intestinal bacterial symbionts on growth and development of Triatoma dimidiate Rene Montejo-Lopez, Teresa LopezOrdonez, Liliana Lopez-Tirado P-20 Effect of malathion and bendiocarb selection pressure on a KDR Aedes aegypti field strain from Tapachula, Chiapas Francisco Solis-Santoyo, Alfredo CastilloVera, R. Patricia Penilla-Navarro, Juan Cisneros Hernandez, Alma Lopez-Solis, Americo D Rodriguez- Ramirez P-21 Insecticide resistance status of Aedes albopictus from Tapachula, Chiapas, Mexico Alma Lopez-Solis, Francisco SolisSantoyo, Patricia Penilla-Navarro, Alfredo Castillo-Vera, Juan Cisneros Hernandez, Americo Rodriguez Ramirez P-22 First molecular detection of Rickettsia sp. in Rhipicephalus sanguineus from Rocky Mountain spotted fever-endemic region of Northeastern Mexico Aldo Ortega, Antonio Castillo, Sarai Cueto, Francisco Sánchez, Tere Valdes 22 Tuesday, February 9, 2016 P-23 Mosquito biodiversity and potential risk of chikungunya transmission in school environments in Southern, Mexico Armando Elizondo-Quiroga, Samanta Lucía Del Río-Galván, Alejandro GaitánBurns, Maricela Laguna-Aguilar, Esteban Eduardo Díaz-González, Iliana Rosalía Malo-García, Ildefonso Fernández-Salas Education P-24 Mosquito clip art Molly Nee P-25 Integration of mosquito ecology laboratory exercises into biological, geoscience, and environmental science courses: Using ovitraps to create authentic learning experiences Brian Byrd, Diane Styers, Laura DeWald, Gideon Wasserberg Equipment P-26 A comparison between two sampling methods for container-inhabiting Aedes in southwestern Virginia Jake Bova and Sally Paulson Genetics P-27 Genetic variability in Aedes aegypti (L.) (Diptera: Culicidae) in localities of north central region of Mexico Rafael Perez, Veronica Avila, Urbano Nava, Adriana Flores-Suarez, Aldo Ortega P-28 Phylogenetics of Aedini mosquitoes John Soghigian, Marco Notarangelo, Todd Livdahl Management P-29 Challenges to the community health workers model for the control of malaria in Cameroon Kathryn Mishkin 23 Tuesday, February 9, 2016 New Product Trials P-30 An experimental design to test the effectiveness of autodissemination stations containing pyriproxyfen in reducing juvenile Aedes albopictus populations Isik Unlu, Devi Suman, Yi Wang, Kim Klingler, Nicholas Indelicato, Gregory Williams, Scott Crans, Randy Gaugler P-31 New lethal ovitrap for control of Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus Casey Parker, Alexandra Chaskopoulou, Roberto Pereira, Philip Koehler P-32 A smart Internet of Things (loT) device for monitoring mosquito trap counts in the field while drinking coffee at your desk Martin Geier, Michael Weber, Andreas Rose, Ulla Obermayr, Catherine Pruszynski, Michael Doyle Operations P-33 Regular introduction of the invasive mosquito Aedes albopictus into the southern German state of Bavaria, via international traffic, between 2012 and 2015 Andreas Rose, Ingeborg Schleip, Carola Kuhn, Egbert Tannich P-34 Establishing an Aedes aegypti threshold in Maricopa County, Arizona James Will and John Townsend Other P-35 Prevalence of head lice in lacandon children of the town of Lacanja Chansayab in Ocosingo, Chiapas Maricela Laguna-Aguilar, Rosa María Sánchez Casas, Cuauhtémoc Villarreal Treviño, Illiana Rosalía Malo García, Nicole Achee, John Grieco, Ewry Arvid Zárate Nahón, Ildefonso Fernández Salas P-38 Map-based exploration of population biology data in VectorBase Ioannis Kirmitzoglou, Robert M. MacCallum, George K. Christophides 24 Tuesday, February 9, 2016 Public Relations P-36 Interagency dengue prevention training in Martin County, Florida Carlyn Porter P-37 Use of location-based social media for outreach and surveillance Ada Barros Heiser 1:45 PM – 3:15 PM* AFTERNOON SESSIONS *unless otherwise noted Disease Vector II Moderator: Roger Nasci 1:45 PM - 2:55 PM Meeting Room 200/201/202 1:45 108 Hourly distributions of EEEV vectors and respective infection rates in freshwater hardwood swamp habitats of southeastern Virginia Jay Kiser, Karen Akaratovic, Charles Abadam 1:55 109 The potential role of invasive species in the transmission of La Crosse encephalitis viral genotypes associated with severe disease Abelardo Moncayo, Katie Westby, Amy Lambert, Rebecca Trout-Fryxell 2:05 110 First detection of St Louis encephalitis virus in California in 12 years Gregory White 2:15 111 Disease surveillance in Harris County, Texas, 2015 Martin Reyna Nava 2:25 112 Comparison of mosquito-based surveillance WNV indicators in an operational MAD setting Roger Nasci and Christopher Xamplas 2:35 113 Spotlighting West Nile virus in Harris County: What a difference a year makes! Cheryl Battle-Freeman, Yvonne Randle, Martin Reyna Nava, Monique Jackson, Joyce Landry, Mustapha Debboun 25 Tuesday, February 9, 2016 2:45 114 Relevance of RT-qPCR cycle threshold values and antibody titers in freeranging birds to the endemic/epidemic profile of West Nile virus transmission in Orange County, California Tim Morgan, Carrie Fogarty, Robert Cummings, Kiet Nguyen, Laura Krueger, Albert Trinidad, Martine Jozan 2:45 213 The Invasive Mosquito Project (IMP): A monitoring and educational tool Lee Cohnstaedt Remotely Piloted Aircraft Symposium Moderator: Bill Reynolds 1:45 PM - 3:15 PM Meeting Room 102/103/104 1:45 115 Development of unmanned aerial systems for mosquito control - Part I Randy Gaugler, Greg Williams, Scott Crans, Shaun Kenny, Ishik Unlu, Yi Wang 2:10 116 Development of unmanned aerial systems for mosquito control - Part II Gregory Williams, Randy Gaugler, Scott Crans, Shaun Kenny, Isik Unlu 2:30 117 UAS operational surveillance technology Bill Reynolds 2:55 118 Commercial aerial larviciding applications - Have we made it? Bill Reynolds Young Professionals Symposium I: Career Roundtable Discussions Organizer/Moderator: Kristen Burkhalter 1:45 PM - 3:15 PM Meeting Room 105/106 1:45 Welcome and overview of the AMCA Young Professionals group Levy Sun, AMCA Young Professionals Committee Chair 1:50 YP members’ meeting AMCA Young Professionals Committee 26 Tuesday, February 9, 2016 2:20 Overview of the Career Roundtable and introduction of experts Kristen Burkhalter, AMCA Young Professionals Advisor The YP committee will host a YP group members’ meeting, which will be open to all YPs and any nonYP AMCA members interested in learning more about the YP group. The meeting will include time for questions and discussion. Following the members’ meeting, symposium participation will be limited to YPs. The roundtable portion of the symposium will feature 2-3 experts from 6 different career paths. Young Professionals will have the chance to discuss career information and options with experts from each field for 20 minutes before moving on to the next table of experts. Mosquito Control Ary Faraji, Salt Lake City Mosquito Vector Control District Mike Alburn, Delta Vector Mosquito Control District James Will, Maricopa County Environmental Services Department State Public Health Wendy Varnado, Mississippi State Department of Health Sharon Sims, Deet Education Program and Methodist Rehabilitation Center Industry Research and Development Angela Carter, Response Biomedical Paolo Lobo, Response Biomedical Tom Janousek, Pest Consulting Services Academia Roxanne Connelly, University of Florida Michael Reiskind, North Carolina State University Stephen Dobson, University of Kentucky CDC Janet McAllister, Division of Vector Borne Diseases, Arbovirus Diseases Branch, CDC Roberto Barrera, Division of Vector Borne Diseases, Dengue Branch, CDC Military Mark Breidenbaugh, US Air Force Craig Stoops, US Navy 27 Tuesday, February 9, 2016 Full biographies for all our expert participants can be found on the AMCA YP Facebook page; in addition, requests for delivery via email may be made to any YP Committee member or by sending an email to [email protected] 2:25 Rotation # 1 2:45 Rotation # 2 Break, Exhibits Open 3:15 PM - 4:00 PM Exhibit Hall A 4:00 PM – 5:30 PM* AFTERNOON SESSIONS *unless otherwise noted Young Professionals Symposium II: Career Roundtable Discussions Organizer/Moderator: Kristen Burkhalter 4:00 PM - 5:30 PM Meeting Room 105/106 4:00 Rotation #3 4:20 Rotation #4 4:40 Rotation #5 5:00 Rotation #6 5:20 Closing remarks and group photo Kyndall Dye, AMCA Young Professionals committee Co-chair Remotely Piloted Aircraft Symposium Moderator: Bill Reynolds 4:00 PM - 5:30 PM Meeting Room 102/103/104 4:00 119 Using multi-spectral imagery paired with infrared technology to identify mosquito breeding habitat in the Florida Keys Heidi Murray 4:30 120 Use of remotely piloted aerial vehicles for chemical delivery in pest control Ken Giles 5:00 121 Dropping larvicide from 20 feet: A UAV evaluation Jennifer Henke 28 Tuesday, February 9, 2016 Larval Control I Moderator: Rachel Morreale 4:00 PM - 5:20 PM Meeting Room 200/201/202 4:00 122 The evaluation of VectoPrime FG in a microbial bucket and field trial, including the aerial calibration of VectoPrime FG and its operational use in Pinellas County Leanne Lake 4:10 123 Physiochemical properties of pyriproxyfen as mosquito larvicide Kamal Chauhan 4:20 124 Does pyriproxyfen prevent pupation or adult eclosion of Aedes mosquitoes? Kristen Stevens, Philip Koehler, Roberto Pereira 4:30 125 The efficacy of Natular™ G30 and MetaLarv® S-PT in Lee County, Florida during summer of 2015 Rachael Morreale, T. Wayne Gale, Jonathan Hornby 4:40 126 Evaluation of Natular XRT for larval control in a vacuum sewer system in York County, Virginia Leah Henretta, Elizabeth Hodson, Michelle Slosser, Derek Drews 4:50 127 Withdrawl 5:00 128 First report of Bacillus sphaericus resistance in wild populations of Culex pipiens (Diptera: Culicidae) in California with note on susceptibility to other pesticides Tianyun Su, Min-Lee Cheng, Jennifer Thieme, Matt Ball, Chris Ocegueda 29 Tuesday, February 9, 2016 5:10 129 Cross resistance to Lysinibacillus sphaericus in spinosad-resistant Culex quinquefasciatus is overcome by a Cyt1A-BinA recombinant of Bacillus thuringiensis Tianyun Su, Min Lee Cheng, Margaret Wirth, Jennifer Thieme, Hyun-Woo Park, Denis Bideshi, Brian Federici Operations and Management Moderator: Doug Carlson 4:00 PM - 5:30 PM Meeting Room 203/204/205 4:00 130 A cost-benefit analysis of illustrative Aedes albopictus eradication and management plans in Brisbane, Queensland Jonathan Darbro, Paul Mwebaze, Yara Halasa, Brian Montgomery, Donald Shepard, Greg Devine 4:10 131 Moving rapidly from discovery to commercial collaboration: How to prepare your data to accelerate new mosquitocide delivery Rajeev Vaidyanathan 4:20 132 Mosquito control in an area of massive infestation of Aedes albopictus in SouthWest Germany Norbert Becker, Björn Pluskota, Stefanie Schön, Egbert Tannich, Jonas Schmidt-Chanasit, Carola Kuhn, Artur Jöst 4:30 133 Realizing the benefits of Esri AcrGIS online and cloud technology for mosquito control operations Ryan Pierson 4:40 134 Controlling mosquitoes on private property: Balancing statutory authority with landowners’ preference Doug Carlson and Diane Richards 4:50 135 Field Data Submission (FDS) – management system of biosurveillance data and vector surveillance management Luke Mitchell and Yvonne-Marie Linton 30 Tuesday, February 9, 2016 5:00 214 Computer Methods: Test trial results David DeMay 5:10 137 Sustainability: Measuring the impact on mosquito control operations Mark Smith 5:20 138 Targeting vector control interventions by defining WNV human risk in space and time Dominick Ninivaggi, Scott Campbell, Tom Iwanejko, Ilia Rochlin 5:30 PM – 6:30 PM YOUNG PROFESSIONALS SOCIAL Chatham Ballroom C 31 Wednesday, February 10, 2016 7:30 AM – 8:30 AM Break 8:30 AM – 10:00 AM* MORNING SESSIONS *unless otherwise noted Next Generation Application Technology Symposium Moderator: Jason Richardson 8:30 AM - 9:40 AM Meeting Room 102/103/104 8:30 139 A new field-tested compression sprayer for indoor residual spraying Peter Obenauer, Joe Diclaro II 8:50 140 Investigations with misting systems, barrier treatments, and space sprays operationalized with a mobile pesticide app Seth Britch, Kenneth Linthicum, Robert Aldridge 9:10 141 Eave tubes with electrostatically coated liners for delivering insecticides against endophilic mosquitoes Matthew B. Thomas and Bart G.J. Knols 9:30 142 Incorporating a low-cost imaging system into mosquito abatement operations Clint Hoffmann, Chenghai Yang, Brad Fritz Disease Vector III Organizer/Moderator: Jonathan Day 8:30 AM - 9:50 AM Meeting Room 200/201/202 8:50 145 Spatial-temporal patterns of mosquitoborne bunyaviruses in the northeastern US Theodore Andreadis, Philip Armstrong, John Anderson 32 Wednesday, February 10, 2016 9:00 146 Update on Heartland virus (Bunyaviridae: Phlebovirus): a human pathogen transmitted by ticks Harry Savage, Marvin Godsey, Nicholas Panella, Kristen Burkhalter 9:10 147 Transmission of Heartland virus (Bunyaviridae: Phlebovirus) by experimentally infected Amblyomma americanum (Acari: Ixodidae) Marvin Godsey, Kristen Burkhalter, Angela Bosco-Lauth, Mark Delorey, Harry Savage 9:20 148 Zoonotic disease in a peripheral population: Persistence and transmission of Leishmania major in a putative sink-source system in the Negev Highlands, Israel Gideon Wasserberg, Ruti Berger, Alon Warburg, Laor Orshan, Burt Kotler 9:30 149 Overview of imported cases and outbreaks of mosquito-borne arboviruses Roberto Barrera 9:40 150 Experimental perturbations of Culex spp. mosquito productivity and its potential impact on West Nile virus transmission Joseph McMillan, Andrea Lund, Daniel Mead, Rebecca Park, William Koval, Uriel Kitron, Gonzalo Vazquez Prokopec 9:50 207 Utilizing a customized mobile field data management application for mosquito larval control and surveillance Tim McGonegal Adult Control IV/ Equipment Organizer/Moderator: Suzanne Bartlett 8:30 AM - 10:00 AM Meeting Room 203/204/205 8:30 151 Revisiting aerosol sampling reading methods Derek Drews and Jacob Hartle 8:40 152 Droplet penetration, characterization, and efficacy of aerial applications of Dibrom ULV adulticide in a desert environment 33 Wednesday, February 10, 2016 Ary Faraji, Nelson Long, Nadja Mayerle, Gary Hatch, Robbie Allen, Malcolm Williams, Peter Connelly, Sammie Dickson 8:50 153 Measurement of aerially sprayed droplets through a canopy to recognize cloud and spray dispersion in common mosquito resting sites Grifith Lizarraga and Jesse Julien 9:00 154 45° or 0°: Efficacy of ULV sprayer nozzle discharge direction in urban Gainesville, Florida against Aedes aegypti Peter Jiang and Muhammad Farooq 9:10 155 Effect of ground travel speed on dispersion and efficiency of truck mounted ULV sprayer against caged Aedes aegypti Muhammad Farooq, Jennifer Gibson, Lisa Drake, Mike Smith, Jeremy Anderson, James Cilek, Rui-De Xue 9:20 156 Evaluation of three electric-powered handheld ULV foggers with Aqualuer 20-20 against Aedes albopictus Mike Smith, Kinsey Camelio, Jennifer Gibson, Lisa Drake, Rui-De Xue 9:30 157 Oil versus water adulticide formulations and their interaction with equipment and each other Gordon Morrison, Kurt Vandock, Britt Baker, Jason Trumbetta 9:40 158 Improved operations in mosquito control through innovation Suzanne Bartlett and James McNelly 9:50 159 The 3 Rs of reducing pesticide packaging waste Dave McLaughlin The Power of One Symposium Organizer/Moderator: Jason Kinley and Bruce Christensen 8:30 PM - 10:00 PM Oglethorpe Auditorium 8:30 Introduction Bruce Christensen 34 Wednesday, February 10, 2016 8:40 165 Starting with why - The art & science of public health Jason Clark 9:00 168 A better mozzie trap: A twisted journey through my mosquito trap obsession Scott Ritchie 9:20 166 Been there, swatted that - traveling the globe through entomology Jennifer Remmers 9:40 215 The invaluable nature of a long-term mosquito surveillance program and dataset Lyric Bartholomay Break, Exhibits Open 10:00 AM - 10:45 AM Exhibit Hall A 10:45 AM – 12:15 PM AMCA ANNUAL MEMBER MEETING Chatham Ballroom C 12:30 PM – 2:30 PM TRUSTEE/ COMMISSIONER TOUR Off-site Event Ticket Required 12:15 PM - 1:45 PM* LUNCH *on your own 1:45 PM – 3:15 PM* AFTERNOON SESSIONS *unless otherwise noted Next Generation Application Technology Organizer/Moderator: Graham White 1:45 PM – 3:15 PM Meeting Room 102/103/104 35 Wednesday, February 10, 2016 1:45 160 Design and role of pyriproxyfen autodissemination stations for dengue vector control Yi Wang, Devi Suman, Isik Unlu, Kshitij Chandel, Gregory Williams, Randy Gaugler 2:05 161 Innovative indoor residual spraying (IRS) equipment for malaria vector control John Clayton 2:25 162 What is old, is now new: larviciding with thermal fog technology James Cilek, Jennifer Knapp, Christy Waits 2:45 163 Development of a new modular aerial spray system and night application capability for the U.S. Air Force Mark Breidenbaugh, Karl Haagsma, Seth Britch, Kenneth Linthicum, Robert Aldridge 3:05 164 Aerial operations utilizing NOTAR technology in Volusia County, Florida James McNelly and Suzanne Bartlett The Power of One Symposium Organizer/Moderator: Jason Kinley and Bruce Christensen 1:45 PM - 3:15 PM Oglethorpe Auditorium 1:45 Introduction Bruce Chrstensen 1:55 169 Vectors from Iowa to California: Diverse opportunities working at a state public health agency Renjie Hu and Mark Novak 2:15 167 A foundation in medical entomology could be the key to dream opportunities, including great collaborations, travel, and job offers anywhere in the world Sara Erickson 2:35 170 Integrated mosquito management – why a medical entomologist can do this job Jason Kinley 36 Wednesday, February 10, 2016 2:55 216 When medical entomology and sustainability collide Lyell Clarke III Adult Control V/ ATSB, Flies, Attractants Organizer/Moderator: Jerome Hogsette 1:45 PM - 2:45 PM Meeting Room 203/204/205 1:45 171 Evaluation and adaptation of attractive toxic sugar baits (ATSB) for control of mosquitoes in Coachella Valley, California Whitney Qualls, Gunter Muller, Rui-de Xue 1:55 172 Preliminary investigations of the sugarfeeding behavior of Aedes aegypti in Ecuador Whitney Qualls, John Beier, Diana Naranjo, Eduardo Gomez 2:05 173 Potential attractiveness and impact of Terminix Allclear ATSB® concentrate to honey bees during nectar dearth Kirk Tubbs 2:15 2:25 2:35 Withdrawn 175 Stable fly (Stomoxys calcitrans) management in zoological parks Jerome Hogsette 176 Black fly control at the Greater Los Angeles County Vector Control District Paul O’Connor and Susanne Kluh Using the Private Cloud and Mobile Platforms for Effective Data Management Organizer/Moderator: Walt Wilson 1:45 PM - 3:15 PM Meeting Room 200/201/202 37 Wednesday, February 10, 2016 1:45 177 Out of the Dark Ages: Then vs. now Beth Carey-Kovach 2:15 218 The development and implementation of GEOPRO Database at the Collier Mosquito Control District Adrian Salinas 2:05 178 Global impact: International mosquito data management Derek Wright 2:35 179 New developments in mosquito data technology Walt Wilson 6:00 PM – 7:00 PM PRE-BANQUET SOCIAL Georgia International Gallery 7:00 PM - 9:30 PM BANQUET Chatham Ballroom Ticket Required 38 Thursday, February 11, 2016 8:30 AM – 10:00 AM* MORNING SESSIONS *unless otherwise noted Resistance/Susceptibility Organizer/Moderator: Lawrence Hribar 8:30 AM - 9:40 AM Meeting Room 102/103/104 8:30 180 Monitoring resistance in Culex tarsalis and Culex pipiens collected from a single site over time Jacob Hartle and Paula Macedo 8:40 181 Nationwide mosquito susceptibility screening against six active ingredients Stephanie Richards, Jo Anne Balanay, Melinda Fields, Kurt Vandock 8:50 182 Evidence for resistance to bifenthrin by Aedes aegypti in the Florida Keys Lawrence Hribar 9:00 183 Assessment of spray efficacy and resistance status during a West Nile virus and Saint Louis encephalitis virus outbreak in Maricopa County, Arizona Cassie Scott, Janet McAllister, Kirk Smith, James Will, Steven Young, John Townsen 9:10 184 Impact of insecticide resistance on paternity success in Aedes aegypti Miguel Moreno-Garcia, Karla Saavedra-Rodriguez, William Black IV 9:20 185 Susceptibility of natural and synthetic molecules, capable of inhibiting the enzyme acetylcholinesterase in vitro, on enzymes involved in insecticide mechanism Aurora Carreño, Angela Palacio, Thalita Vieira, Mario Silva, Vladimir Kouznetsov, Jonny Duque 9:30 186 Characterization of resistance in Anopheles gambiae: Mechanisms and magnitude Jeffrey Bloomquist, Fan Tong, Aaron Gross 39 Thursday, February 11, 2016 Mosquito SIT Symposium and New Aerial Release Options Organizer/Moderator: Ralph Breslauer 8:30 AM - 10:00 AM Oglethorpe Auditorium 8:30 187 How do you like your mosquitoes… All natural? With frosting? Stephen Dobson, Hanano Yamada, James Mains, Corey Brelsfoard 8:50 188 Develop a Wolbachia-based incompatible insect technique (IIT) for dengue vector control through a field trial Zhiyong Xi, Xiaoying Zheng, Ziqiang Yan, Yu Wu, Wei Qian, Jian Zhu 9:10 189 Species control through aerial application with SIT Kurt Friedemann 9:20 190 The age old problem of getting it in the right place at the right time Derric Nimmo 9:40 191 Technology to safely release millions of treated male mosquitoes from the air to combat disease Ralph Breslauer and Hanan Lepek Vector Mosquito Control Response to Suspect Human Cases Symposium Organizer/Moderator: Dr. Rui-De Xue 8:30 AM - 10:00 AM Meeting Room 200/201/202 8:30 192 Public health response to invasive Aedes mosquitoes in California Renjie Hu, Marco Metzger, Vicki Kramer 8:45 193 Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services vector control response Adriane Rogers 9:05 194 Manatee County Mosquito Control District’s response to mosquito-borne diseases Mark Latham and Christopher Lesser 40 Thursday, February 11, 2016 9:25 217 Development of improved surveillance technology for Stegomyia mosquitoes Daniel L. Kline 9:45 195 Anastasia Mosquito Control District’s response to suspect human cases in St. Johns County, northeast Florida Rui-De Xue Break 10:00 AM - 10:30 AM 10:30 AM – 12:00 PM* MORNING SESSION *unless otherwise noted Vector Mosquito Control Response to Suspect Human Cases Symposium Continued Organizer/Moderator: Dr. Rui-De Xue 10:30 AM - 12:00 PM Meeting Room 200/201/202 10:30 196 Lee County Mosquito Control District’s response to suspected cases & outbreak of mosquito-borne diseases Wayne Gale 10:55 197 Mosquito-borne disease outbreaks and the Navy Entomology Center of Excellence James Cilek 11:30 198 Response to mosquito-borne diseases in Florida by the Florida Medical Entomology Laboratory Roxanne Connelly Arthropod Vector Highlights Symposium Organizer/Moderator: Lee Cohnstaedt 10:30 AM - 12:00 PM Oglethorpe Auditorium 10:30 199 Highlights in vector biology Elizabeth Andrews 11:00 200 Highlights of vector control technology Whitney Qualls 11:30 201 Highlights of flea-borne typhus (Rickettsia spp.) disease research, cat flea control techniques, and abatement 41 Thursday, February 11, 2016 proceedings, 2015 Laura Krueger and Robert Cumming 42 Thursday, February 11, 2016 Larval Control II Organizer/Moderator: James McNelly 10:30 AM - 11:40 PM Meeting Room 102/103/104 10:30 202 Suppression of Aedes albopictus, the Asian tiger mosquito, using a “hot spot” approach Nicholas Indelicatos, Isik Unlu, Kim Klingler, Ary Faraji, Daniel Strickman 10:40 203 Role of biotic and abiotic factors in controlling strategies for the immature stages of mosquitoes Shabab Nasir 10:50 204 Flying into action: Helicopter larval treatments for MMCD Jon Peterson 11:00 205 Agnav flow controller for aerial larviciding Lai Nguyen 11:10 206 Toward mosquito control with a green alga: Expression of genes from Bacillus thuringiensis israelensis in the chloroplast of Chlamydomonas Seongjoon Kang, Obed W. Odom, Saravanan Thangamani, David L. Herrin 11:20 Moved to 9:50 Wednesday 11:30 208 Domestic inspections for the surveillance and control of Aedes albopictus and Aedes aegypti in Volusia County, central Florida James McNelly, Suzanne Bartlett, Jesse Julien 43 Author Presentation Number AUTHOR INDEX Blackmore, M..................84 Bloomquist, J........106, 186 Bon, M.C.....................P-12 Booth, M..........................26 Boothe, E........................18 Bosco-Lauth, A.............147 Bova, J...............P-04, P-26 Boze, B...........................13 Breidenbaugh, M...........163 Brelsfoard, C......74, 75, 76, 77, 78, 187 Breslauer, R............73, 191 Brewster, C..................P-08 Brisco, A..........................78 Britch, S.....6, 11, 140, 163, P-05 Broadie, E. A...................84 Brown, G...................66, 24 Burgess, J.........................8 Burkhalter, K...83, 146, 147 Byrd, B.....9, 28 P-14, P-15, P-25 Byrnes, P........................64 A Abadam, C..............10, 108 Abbott, J............................3 Acero Sandoval, A........102 Acevedo-Soto, V.........P-07 Achee, N......................P-35 Agramonte, N............25, 30 Akaratovic, K...........10, 108 Akbarzadeh, K................38 Aldridge, R......11, 140, 163 Alimi, T............................87 Allan, S............................11 Allen, R.........................152 Alonso Ramos, A............94 Alto, B.............................49 Amador, M.....9, P-07, P-15 Anderson, J...................145 Anderson, J...................155 Anderson, T..................127 Andreadis, T..................145 Andrews, E....................199 Anyamba, A......................6 Arevalo-Herrera, M.........87 Armstrong, P.................145 Arque-Chunga, W.... ...P-11 Avila, V........................P-27 C Cadena, H.......................56 Caillouet, K..................P-14 Cajiao, A.........................88 Calix, L. C.......................11 Camelio, K....................156 Campbell, S..................138 Carde, R..........................47 Carlson, D.....................134 Carreño, A.....................185 Carter, A..........................88 Carter, B..........................92 Castells Sierra, X.........P-03 Castillo, A....................P-22 Castillo Vera, A..P-20, P-21 Chan, K.......................P-08 Chandel,K.....................160 Chaskopoulou, A........P-03, P-12, P-13, P-31 Chauhan, K...................123 Che-Mendoza, A.......54, 96 Chen, R...........................58 Cheng, M. L..........128, 129 Christophides, G..........P-38 Chumkiew, A...................33 Cilek, J..........155, 162, 197 Cisneros Hernandez, J... P-20, P-21 Clark, J..........................165 Clauson, J.......................82 Clayton, J......................161 Cloherty, E......................92 Coats, J.....................21, 32 Cohnstaedt, L..............2, 16 B Baker, B........................157 Balanay, J.A................. 181 Ball, M...........................128 Barbet, A...........................3 Barker, C.........................15 Barrera, R.....9, P-07, P-15, 149 Barrett, A...........................2 Barros Heiser, A..........P-37 Bartholomay, L................21 Bartlett, S......158, 164, 208 Bascuñan, A. P............P-18 Battle-Freeman, C.........113 Baydack, R....................136 Becker, N......................132 Bedoya, N.......................56 Beech, C.........................72 Beier, J........22, 27, 87, 172 Bellini, R......................P-13 Berger, R.......................148 Bermudez, S.................100 Bernal, X.........................56 Bernardi, C....................174 Bernick, J.....................P-17 Bernier,U......26, 30, 34,106 Bibbs, C..........................31 Bicout, D......................P-13 Bideshi, D......................129 Black IV, W.......64, 93, 184 44 Author Presentation Number F Fakoorziba, M.R..............38 Fall, Ken..........................80 Faraji, A.....15, 38, 152, 202 Farned, J.........................45 Farooq, M..............154, 155 Federici, B.....................129 Félix, G........................P-07 Fernández-Salas, I.....P-11, P-23, P-35, 97, 58 Fields, M.......................181 Flatt, K.............................85 Flores-Leal, J.A...............95 Flores-Mendoza, C.........86 Flores-Suárez, A.E.........54, 55, 57, 59, 60, 62 P-27,96 Fogarty, C.....................114 Fonseca,D.................17, 18 Forschler, B.....................70 Friedemann, K..............189 Fritz, B...........................142 Fuentes-Maldonado, G...97 Fuller, D..........................87 Connelly, P....................152 Connelly, R...................198 Contreras-Perera, Y........96 Cordel, M.....................P-01 Córdova-Galván, A.I.......95 Cornel, Anthony..............76 Cornine, F.........................7 Correa, M ...........P-16, P-18 Crans, S......115, 116, P-30 Crawley, S.......................23 Cruz-López, L.................97 Cueto, S......................P-22 Cummings, R........114, 201 Curry, P.........................136 D Da Silva, R....................174 Dacko, N.......................105 Darbro, J.................36, 130 Dark, M.............................3 Davila-Barboza, J. A.53, 54 Dawson, Daniel.............105 Day, J............................143 De Jesus, C.................P-09 Debboun, M......43, 85, 113 Decker, T......................174 Del Río-Galván, S. L...P-23 DeLisi, N.........................67 Delorey, M.....................147 Dennett, J........................85 Devine, G................36, 130 DeWald, L...................P-25 Díaz-González, E. E.P-23, 59 Dickson, S.....................152 Diclaro II, J....................139 Dobson, S....74, 75, 76, 77, 78, 187 Doggett, S.......................80 Dorantes-Delgado, A......58 Doyle, M......................P-32 Drake, L................155, 156 Drews, D...............126, 151 D'Souza, Doris................29 Dudar, Colleen..............136 Duguma, D......................49 Dunlap, C....................P-14 Duque, J........................185 Duval, T.............................7 Dye, K.......................66, 24 G Gaitán-Burns, A...........P-23 Galaviz-Silva, L...............53 Gale, T. W...8, 37, 125, 196 Galeano-Castañeda,Y.P-18 Gallagher, N....................66 Gaugler, R............38, P-30, 115, 116, 160 Geier, M.................12, P-32 Giantsis, I....................P-12 Giblin, A..........................36 Gibson, J.........81, 155, 156 Giles, D.........................120 Godsey, M.............146, 147 Gómez, E................27, 172 Gómez-Govea, M.A..59, 60 Gonzalez, R..................101 Gordy, H..........................90 Graham-Derham, S.......136 Grieco, J......................P-35 Groen, T......................P-13 Gross, A..................32, 186 Gurman, P.......................34 H Haagsma, K..................163 Halasa, Y......................130 Hall-Mendelin, S..............80 Harbin, J............................2 Harding, J......................107 Harrison, R......................69 Harrison, B.........P-14, P-15 Harrison, Ryan............P-14 Hartle, J.................151, 180 Hatch, G........................152 Haynes, K.................23, 24 E Ebrahimi, B...................174 Elizondo-Quiroga, A....P-23 Elman, N.........................34 Erickson, S....................167 Escobar, J.E..................101 Espinosa, Y.................P-16 45 Author Presentation Number Healy, K....................18, 67 Hendrich, C.....................64 Henke, J........................121 Henretta, L....................126 Henry, M..................9, P-15 Hernandez, J...............P-16 Herrera, S.......................87 Herrin, D........................206 Hettenbach, S...................2 Higgs, S........................1, 2 Hill, J...............................84 Hodson, E.....................126 Hoffmann,C...................142 Hogsette, J....................175 Holderman, C..................26 Holema, J..............P-10, 77 Hopperstad, K.................63 Hornby, J..................37, 125 Hribar, L.........................182 Hu, R......................169, 192 Huang, Y.J....................1, 2 Hudon, M........................79 Hutchinson, M.............P-14 Kiser, J....................10, 108 Kitron, U........................150 Klimavicz, J.....................32 Kline, D...........................34 Klingler, K............P-30, 202 Kluh, S....................78, 176 Knapp, J........................162 Knols, B.........................141 Ko, H.J..........................103 Koehler, P.......P—03, P-31, 124 Kohl, K..........................127 Kothera, L.......................48 Kotler, B........................148 Kouznetsov, V...............185 Koval, W........................150 Kramer, V..................4, 192 Krueger, L.............114, 201 Kuhn, C...............P-33, 132 L Lacerda, M......................87 Lacey, E..........................47 Laguna Aguilar, M......P-23, P-35 Lake, L..........................122 Lambert, A..............29, 109 L'Ambert, G.................P-13 Landry, J.......................113 Langsjoen, R...................58 Latham, M.....................194 Lauth, M..........................81 Layne, C......................PL-2 Leal-Olvera, A.K..............53 Lednicky, J........................3 Lepek, H..................73, 191 Lesser, C.......................194 Li, Y.........................9, P-14 Linthicum, K......6, 11, P-05, 140, 163 Linton, Y.M..............17, 135 Livdahl, T.....................P-28 Lizarraga, G......95, 98, 153 Llangari Cujilema, J.L.....61 Lobo, P............................88 Loftis, A.............................3 Long, N.........................152 Lopez, M...................57, 62 López Ordóñez, T.........102 Lopez-Lopez, N.............100 Lopez-Monroy, B......54, 55, 69, 93, 96 Lopez-Ordonez, T.......P-19 Lopez-Sifuentes, V..........86 Lopez-Solis, A.....P-20, P21 Lopez-Tirado, L...........P-19 Lund, A..........................150 Lyimo, I........................P-01 I Indelicato, N........P-30, 202 Iranpour, M......................38 Iwanejko, T....................138 J Jackson, E................40, 41 Jackson, B........................4 Jackson, M....................113 Janich, A.........................64 Jiang, P.........................154 Johnson, B................19, 80 Johnson, A......................30 Johnson, D......................24 Jöst, A...........................132 Jozan, M.......................114 Juarez-Ordaz, J............100 Julien, J...........99, 153, 208 Jumpakaew, D................33 Junkum, A.......................33 K Kachur, S........................43 Kang, S.........................206 Karimi, J..........................38 Kaufman, P.....................26 Kautz, T...........................58 Kenney, J........................48 Kenny, S...............115, 116 Kerlin, T...........................80 Kijchalao, K..................P-05 Kilpatrick, A. M................15 Kinley, J........................170 Kirmitzoglou, I..............P-38 46 Author Presentation Number M MacCallum, R..............P-38 Macedo, P.....................180 Mafra-Neto, A................174 Mains, J..............74, 75, 76, 77, 78, 187 Malo García, I.R.........P-23, P-35 Manrique-Saide, P....54, 96 Marinov, M....................107 Markowski, D..................13 Marrama, L..................P-13 Marshall, J.......................22 Martínez de Villarreal, L.E... 55, 59, 60, 93 Martin-Park, A.................93 Mayerle, N.....................152 Mboera, L......................174 McAllister, J.......68, 91, 183 McGonegal, T...............207 McKemey, A....................72 McKinnish, T................P-14 McLaughlin, D...............159 McMillan, J....................150 McMillan, B..................P-04 McNelly, J......81, 158, 164, 208 Mead, D........................150 Méndez, R.......................99 Metzger, M....................192 Michaels, S.....................92 Middleton, K....................45 Miller, T.............................8 Mishkin, K....................P-29 Mitchell, L......................135 Mnyone, L....................P-01 Molina-Garza, Z.J...........53 Monaghan, A.....................6 Moncayo, A...................109 Montejo-Lopez, R........P-19 Montes-Rincon, L. M.......53 Montgomery, B..............130 Moosa-Kazemi, S. H.......38 Morales, H.......................78 Moreno-Garcia, M.........184 Morgan, T......................114 Morreale, R.............37, 125 Morrison, G...................157 Muller, G.......................171 Mulligan, S.............P-10, 76 Murphy, B........................40 Murray, H......................119 Muzari, O........................36 Mwebaze, P..................130 Mwebembezi, E............174 Nava, U.......................P-27 Nee, M.........................P-24 Ng'habi, K....................P-01 Nguyen, T.......................70 Nguyen, K.....................114 Nguyen, L......................205 Nimmo, D................72, 190 Ninivaggi, D.............15, 138 Norris, E....................21, 32 Notarangelo, M............P-28 Novak, M...................4, 169 O Obenauer , P.................139 Obermayr , U................P-32 Ocegueda, C.................128 O'Connell, S......................9 O'Connor, P..................176 Odom, O.......................206 Ordóñez, F......................99 Ordóñez González, J.G................................102 Orozco, C....................P-16 Orshan, L......................148 Ortega, A.....P-22, P-27, 99 Osborne, J......................89 Oviatt, J...........................44 P Palacio, A......................185 Panella, N.....................146 Pantoja, H.......................56 Park, R..........................150 Park, H.W......................129 Parker, C............P-03, P-31 Parker, E. ........................84 Patterson, G....................39 Paulson, S........P-04, P-08, P-17, P-26 Penilla-Navarro, P......P-20, P-21, 102 Pereira, R....P-03, P31, 124 Perez, R......................P-27 Pérez Pablo, D................94 Pérez Pacheco, R...........94 Perry, M....................30, 34 Petersen, L....................144 Peterson, J....................204 Petric, D.......................P-13 Piedrahita, S................P-16 Pierson, R.....................133 Pinela, S..........................27 Pinela, V..........................27 Pittasawat, B...................33 Platzer, E........................94 Pluskota, B....................132 Ponce-García, G......54, 55, 57, 59, 60, 61, 93, 96 Pongsiri, A...................P-05 Ponlawat, A.................P-05 N Naranjo, D...............27, 172 Naranjo-Diaz, N...........P-16 Nasci, R........................112 Nasir, S.........................203 47 Author Presentation Number Porter, C......................P-36 Posey, T..........................78 Potter, M.........................23 Prather, P........................71 Price, D...........................17 Prohaska, J.......................7 Pruszynski, C........12, P-32 Sánchez Casas, R.M.P-35, 58 Savage, H.48, 83, 146, 147 Schiller, A........................50 Schlein, Y........................22 Schleip, I......................P-33 Schmidt-Chanasit, J ......132 Schön, S.......................132 Schultz, T........................17 Schumm, P.....................16 Schwarz, M.....................28 Scoops, C.......................34 Scott, C.........................183 Selluski, C.......................88 Serre, D.......................P-18 Shah, U...........................85 Shepard, D....................130 Shroyer, D.......................51 Sickerman, S...................42 Siller, Q...........................99 Silva, M.........................185 Silva Salas, S..................61 Sither, C..................9, P-15 Skiles, G..........................66 Slosser,M......................126 Smith, J...........................35 Smith, M................155, 156 Smith, C.......................P-10 Smith, M........................137 Smith, K........................183 Soghigian , J................P-28 Solís-Santoyo, F.........P-20, P-21, 102 Sorensen, M......P-02, P-06 Sperling, S...................P-01 Stevenson, J......P-02, P-06 Strickman, D..PL-1, 17, 202 Styers, D......................P-25 Su, T.....................128, 129 Suman, D............P-30, 160 Sun, B...........................106 Sun, L..............................45 Swan, T.........................107 Swan, M..........................71 Q Qian, W.........................188 Qualls, W...........22, 27, 87, 171, 172, 200 Quinones, M............87, 101 R Race, D.........................136 Ramirez, K.............P-10, 76 Randle, Y......................113 Ranson, B.......................20 Rebollar-Téllez, E........P-11 Redovan, S.....................41 Reiskind, M......14, P-09, 63 Remmers, J...................166 Reyna Nava, M......85, 111, 113 Reynolds, W..........117, 118 Ricci, J............................65 Richards, D...................134 Richards, S...................181 Riegel, C...................91, 92 Riles, M...........................82 Riley, R.....................43, 85 Ritchie, S.....19, 36, 80, 168 Rochlin, I. ................15, 138 Rodriquez-Rojas, J. J..P-11 Rodríguez Ramírez, A...P20, P-21, 102 Rodríguez-Sánchez, I.P.54, 55, 60, 61, 95 Rodríguez-Zabala,J.....P-18 Rogers, A......................193 Rose, A..............P-32, P-33 Rose, R...........................77 Rose, A........................P-01 Rua, G.............................56 Ruiz, F.............................56 Ruiz-Aguirre, S................97 Ruiz-Ayma, G..................59 Ruiz-Herrera, C...............93 Rusk, R.........................136 T Tan, Pamela....................88 Tannich, Egbert...P-33, 132 Taylor, Marissa............P-15 Teague, Jimmie............104 Thangamani, S..............206 Thieme, J..............128, 129 Thomas, M....................141 Tie, M............................106 Toi, C..............................80 Tong, F..........................186 Torres-Manzon, J..........100 Torres-Sepúlveda, M......93 Townsen, J..........P-34, 183 Trinidad, Albert..............114 Trout-Fryxell, R.......29, 109 S Saavedra-Rodriguez,K..184 Salice, Christopher.......105, 127 Salinas, A........................46 Sanchez, I................ 57, 62 Sánchez, A......................99 Sánchez, F..................P-22 48 Author Presentation Number Trujillo, G...................57, 62 Trumbetta, J..................157 Tsikolia, M................11,106 Tubbs, K........................173 Tuetun, B........................33 Turell, M............................5 Wirth, M.........................129 Woodbridge, F..............174 Wu, Y............................188 X Xamplas, C...................112 Xi, Z...............................188 Xue, Rui-de ......31, 81,155, 156, 171,195 U Uc, V...............................96 Ulloa, A...................97, 100 Unlu, I.................P-30, 115, 116, 160, 202 Unnasch, T......................81 Urquhart, C.....................29 Urrea, P.......................P-18 Y Yamada, H........74, 77, 187 Yan, Z...........................188 Yang, C.........................142 Young, S.......................183 V Vaidyanathan, R...........131 Valdes, J.........................57 Valdes, T.....................P-22 Valdez, J.........................62 van den Hurk, A..............80 Vandock, K............157, 181 Vanlandingham, D........1, 2 VanOlphen, A..................81 Vargas, F........................56 Vasquez, G.....................86 Vazquez Prokopec, G...150 Velásquez Serra, G.........61 Vera-Maloof, F. Z............64 Vergara, A.......................56 Vieira, T.........................185 Villanueva-Segura, O.K...55, 59, 95, 96 Villarreal Treviño, C.....P-35 Villarreal-Pérez, J. Z.55, 60 Villegas, A.......................54 Z Zamudio-Osuna, M...55, 60 Zárate Nahón, E.A.......P-35 Zhao, L. Z........................49 Zheng, X.......................188 Zhu, L..............................22 Zhu, J............................188 W Waits, C........................162 Walton, W.......................47 Wang, R........................136 Wang, Y.......P-30, 115, 160 Warburg, A....................148 Wasserberg, G....28, P-25, 104, 148 Weaver, S.......................58 Weber, M...............12, P-32 Wekesa, W......................78 Wesson, D...................P-15 Westby, Katie................109 White, G........................110 White, B..........................65 Wilkerson, R....................17 Wilkinson, N....................40 Will, J...................P-34, 183 Williams, G.................P-30, 115, 116,160 Williams, M....................152 49 Notes EXHIBITOR KEY ADAPCO, Inc. Ag-Nav AllPro Vector Group American Longray LLC American Mosquito Control Association AMCA Young Professionals AMVAC Environmental Products Application Dynamics Arro-Gun Spray Systems LLC Aventech Research Inc. Bayer Environmental Science Biogents BioQuip Products, Inc. BVA Inc. Central Life Sciences Clarke Control Solutions Curtis Dyna-Fog LTD The DEET Education Program Digital Map Products Dynamic Aviation Group, Inc. Electronic Data Solutions EMD Performance Materials Corp. Florida Mosquito Control Association FMC Gambusia Solutions Georgia Mosquito Control Association Jasmic, LLC Leading Edge Associates, Inc. London Foggers MCES, LLC Mosquito Trac/Airwolf Aerospace New Mountain Innovations Pro-Lab Diagnostics Response Biomedical SC Johnson Entomological Research Springstar Summit Chemical Company Target Specialty Products Tifone Ambiente SRL Univar Environmental Sciences Valent BioSciences Corporation Vector Disease Control International Westham Co. 51 203 110 411 318 113 603 217 319 100 511 211 221 219 312 301 503 104 413 206 412 607 601 611 605 610 111 613 513 103 520 105 518 107 114 204 106 213 317 311 516 416/417 403 212 313
© Copyright 2026 Paperzz