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Consultation on Guidance to accompany the Statutory Nuisance Provisions of the Public Health etc (Scotland) Act 2008

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SECTION 7 - MIDGES

Intoduction

Biting midges are found world-wide and are in the genus Culicoides along with mosquitoes. Many prey on other insects whilst others feed on mammals or birds - only a few feed on humans. There is one dominant species that causes nuisance by biting humans Culicoides impunctutaus. Other species found include Culicodes obsoletus (the garden midge), Culicoides halophilus (associated with salt marshes) and Culicoides nubeculosus (commonly found in stables and cattkle sheds).

Life Cycle

The egg and pupal stages are very short (a few days) but the larval stage lasts for around 10 months. Some larva live in muddy margins of lochs, some on salt marshes and others in farmyards or drainage ditches. The Highland Midge prefers blankets doghs, raised mires or poorly drained acidic grasslands. The larva need significant moisture and hence are concentrated in high rainfall areas.

Habitat

Midges can drift passively for more than 1km from larval breeding grounds and this is one reason why localized larval treatment is of limited use as the midges can travel a large distance. In sheltered woodland sites there is much less dispersion and hence a greater concentration of biting.

Health Impact

Midges are biting and blood-sucking insects and one of the main impacts arises from the irritation caused by the bite. There are many diseases for which midges are vectors but few transmissible to humans and even fewer indigineous to the UK.

Nuisance

Midges have a habit of of attacking in numbers generally in the evenings. Whilst they are active between April and October, most biting occurs from June to August.

Habitat manipulation

It is unlikely that given the concentration of midges (estimated at up to 24 million larva per hectare) and the distance of travel any wholesale method of landscape modification would be feasible. However on a localized basis it has been found that dam construction to flood land and keep standing water between the midge and the bredding ground.

Insecticde and Larvicide applications

The larval breeding grounds of the Highland Midge are associated with damp areas of rough moorland bearing Sphagnum or Polytrichum mosses and the rush Juncus articulatus. The larvae occur within the top 10mm of soil and treatment relies on washing the larvicide into the soil (thus rain is key to successful treatment).

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Page updated: Tuesday, October 14, 2008