Texas Mosquito Control Association

Texas Mosquito Control Association

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Texas Mosquito Control Association (TMCA) is a professional/educational association of individuals in William Cox. J.C. McNeill, IV and Mr. Gus Foyle. R.H. P.J. F.E.

History of the Texas Mosquito Control Association:
The first 25 years (1956-1981)

The history of the Texas Mosquito Control Association (TMCA) is very much intertwined with that of the first few mosquito control districts established in Texas during the early 1950’s. Suffice to say for purposes of this historical summary, that, if the districts and their programs had not come into existence in

07/06/2026
Photos from City of Arlington, TX - City Hall's post 07/06/2026
Photos from Williamson County and Cities Health District's post 07/06/2026
07/06/2026

Don't forget to make plans for the TMCA Fall Meeting in November.

07/06/2026

The Montgomery County Public Health Department has received confirmation from the Texas Department of State Health Services of the first case of West Nile Virus in a resident of Montgomery County for 2026. The resident, a woman in her 50s, resides in the 77355 zip code and was diagnosed with West Nile Virus neuroinvasive disease.

Mosquito season started in May and typically lasts until the end of October. According to the CDC, the most effective way to avoid West Nile Virus is to prevent mosquito bites. Avoid bites by using insect repellants registered with the Environmental Protection Agency, wearing protective clothing when outdoors and removing standing water outside of your home. Standing water creates breeding grounds for mosquitos, where they can lay their eggs and reproduce.

Photos from Harris County Public Health's post 07/03/2026
07/03/2026

🦟🇺🇸 Don't let mosquitoes crash your Fourth of July celebration! Protect yourself with an EPA-registered mosquito repellent and enjoy a safe and bite-free holiday weekend.

07/03/2026

🦟Mosquitoes aren't just annoying - they can carry diseases like West Nile virus. Before you head outside, apply EPA-registered insect repellent, wear long sleeves when possible, and help protect yourself from mosquito bites. Get tips on choosing the right repellant at: www.wcchd.org/fightthebite

07/02/2026

📢 Now available: AFPMB Technical Guide 47 — Aedes Mosquito Vector Control (2026)

Aedes aegypti and Ae. albopictus — the yellow fever and Asian tiger mosquitoes — are daytime-biting, container-breeding vectors that carry Zika, dengue, chikungunya, and yellow fever. Because Aedes mosquitoes thrive in the exact environments where service members live and work, their surveillance and control remain a critical component of the force health protection mission.

The Armed Forces Pest Management Board has released the new fourth edition of TG47, a field-ready quick reference for the identification, surveillance, and control of Aedes vectors. This edition brings refreshed disease-distribution data (including dengue activity current to June 2026), updated surveillance methods (ovitraps, larval indices, BG-Sentinel and other traps, aspirators), and current source-reduction, larviciding, adulticiding, IRS, and fogging guidance with NSNs.

Read and download the updated guide:https://www.acq.osd.mil/eie/afpmb/docs/techguides/tg47.pdf

Photos from Fort Bend County Health & Human Services's post 07/02/2026
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