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Calgary

Mosquitoes down in Calgary thanks to lack of rain

Calgary is having a mosquito-free summer and an expert says he is even seeing fewer of the pesky bugs in Kananaskis Country too.
Seeing less of these? Mosquitoe populations are down in Calgary this summer. (Robert F. Bukaty/AP file photo)

Calgary is having a mosquito-free summer and an expert says he is even seeing fewer of the pesky bugs inKananaskisCountry too.

John Swann, manager of the insect collection at the University of Calgary, says Calgary is seeing fewer mosquitoes this year.

"I've been looking at the precipitation mapsand we are way below seasonal precipitationand that's the key for mosquito populations," he said.

One of Swann'sKananaskisValleytraps placedin prime mosquito breeding territoryonly had 16 mosquitoes this summer, when he usually catches 100.

Anecdotallypeople are reporting more mosquitoes than usual outside the city in the backcountry. Swann said localized thunderstorms might be to blame.

"If you get literally enough precipitationthat it floods where they laid their eggs around the mud, those insects can hatch and develop in 142hours to be bitingyou."

More grasshoppers in the prairies

The dry weather is proving difficult for farmers, who are not only dealing with a lack of rain, but are experiencing more grasshopper breeding.

Drought in Alberta has parched this farmer's field near Leduc. (Rick Bremness/CBC)

"The farmers are kind of getting really screwed because their crops aren't doing well and they are getting more grasshoppers eating those crops," said Swann. "These things can eat a heck of a lot of vegetation."

Alberta has 42 species of mosquitoes, of which about half exist in the city.