West Nile virus can be sampled from the environment by the pooling of trapped mosquitoes via ovitraps, carbon dioxide-baited light traps, and gravid
traps, testing blood samples drawn from wild birds, dogs, and sentinel
monkeys, as well as testing brains of dead birds found by various animal
control agencies and the public.
Testing of the mosquito samples requires the use of reverse-transcriptase PCR (RT-PCR)
to directly amplify and show the presence of virus in the submitted
samples. When using the blood sera of wild birds and sentinel chickens,
samples must be tested for the presence of WNV antibodies by use of immunohistochemistry (IHC)[60] or enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA).[61]
Dead birds, after necropsy, or their oral swab samples collected on specific RNA-preserving filter paper card,[62][63]
can have their virus presence tested by either RT-PCR or IHC, where
virus shows up as brown-stained tissue because of a substrate-enzyme reaction.
West Nile control is achieved through mosquito control, by elimination of mosquito breeding sites such as abandoned pools, applying larvacide to active breeding areas, and targeting the adult population via lethal ovitraps and aerial spraying of pesticides.
Environmentalists
have condemned attempts to control the transmitting mosquitoes by
spraying pesticide, saying the detrimental health effects of spraying
outweigh the relatively few lives that may be saved, and more
environmentally friendly ways of controlling mosquitoes are available.
They also question the effectiveness of insecticide spraying, as they
believe mosquitoes that are resting or flying above the level of
spraying will not be killed; the most common vector in the northeastern
United States, Culex pipiens, is a canopy feeder.
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