Sometimes 鈥 too rarely 鈥 happy things happen by accident.

On the remote island of Palmyra, directly south of Hawaii, the removal of rats also killed off the population of the Asian tiger mosquito.

Nobody planned that, but it turned out that black rats were the main blood source for these mosquitoes, and without them, the pests could not survive.

Palmyra Atoll is about 900 miles south of Hawaii Island. Courtesy U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

The unexpected benefit opens the door to new mechanisms in the Hawaiian Islands for controlling mosquitoes by denying them access to their favorite blood sources.

The Asian tiger mosquito, Aedes albopictus, is a bad bug. It鈥檚 a small, black mosquito with white stripes. It bites in the daytime. It鈥檚 common in Hawaii, and 聽as well as chikungunya, Zika and yellow fever.

In the main Hawaiian Islands, we have eight species of mosquitoes, six of which bite humans. Most of those also carry diseases.

A rat on a Palmyra coconut frond in 2005, before the eradication. Island Conservation and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

Hawaii鈥檚 four mosquito species that bite in the daytime are Aedes albopictus (Asian tiger mosquito), Aedes aegypti (yellow fever mosquito), Aedes japonicus (Asian bush mosquito), and Wyeomyia mitchelli (Bromeliad mosquito).

The two that bite at night are Culex quinquefasciatus (southern house mosquito) and Aedes vexans (inland floodwater mosquito).

Two other mosquito species in the islands don鈥檛 bite humans.

on how killing off Palmyra鈥檚 bird-killing, crab-killing, seedling-killing black rats also eliminated the mosquito species was published Feb. 28, 2018, in the journal Biology Letters.

Black rats are also known as ship rats, roof rats and house rats. They climb trees, and the sides of houses, live around people, eat coconuts, birds, eggs, seedlings, macadamia nuts and avocados. Basically, they鈥檒l eat anything people will, and more.

One of the great conservation efforts across the globe is rat control. Two islands around Hawaii have been cleared of rats: Mokapu off Molokai and Mokolii off Oahu. The removal of rats from Lehua Island off Niihau is underway.

Rats probably got to Palmyra on Navy ships during World War II, when a runway was built there. The low coral island is now a wildlife sanctuary operated by The Nature Conservancy and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Rats have been among the primary threats to the island ecosystem.

After years of work, rats were finally removed from Palmyra in 2011 in of Island Conservation, The Nature Conservancy and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

A rat eradicator is flown under a helicopter to gain access to the rodents in treetops on Palmyra in 2011. Island Conservation and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

One of the leaders of that effort was Alex Wegmann, who ran the rat eradication as U.S. Pacific Islands’ program manager for Island Conservation. Wegmann is now The Nature Conservancy鈥檚 Palmyra program director.

Within a couple of years, conservation teams on the island noticed that not only were the rats gone, but so were the annoying day-biting Asian tiger mosquitoes.

鈥淎necdotal biting reports, collection records, and regular captures in black-light traps showed the species was present before rat eradication. Since then, there have been no biting reports and no captures over 2 years of extensive trapping,鈥 say the paper鈥檚 authors.

The scientists say it鈥檚 the first time that killing off one unwanted species has also resulted in the removal of a second unwanted species. And that鈥檚 important, because 鈥渋t suggests that preferred host abundance can limit mosquito populations, opening new directions for controlling important disease vectors that depend on introduced species like rats,鈥 the authors say.

But killing off the rats on larger islands might not have the same result, if only because there are manhy more mammals on most larger land areas to provide blood meals.

On Palmyra, after black rat removal, the only remaining mammals are humans slathered in mosquito repellant. But in the main islands, there are dogs, cats and mice and other kinds of rats. On the other hand, if rat eradication can reduce mosquito populations, then other mosquito control methods might be more effective.

Targeted efforts in the past on other islands have succeeded in removing mosquitoes, but they readily return. That hasn鈥檛 happened on Palmyra, perhaps because without rats, it鈥檚 no longer a viable place for them.

鈥淭he Palmyra eradication seems different: lack of recovery over 6 years suggests that conditions on Palmyra have become unsuitable for Aedes,鈥 the paper鈥檚 authors say.

There鈥檚 still another species of mosquito on Palmyra, Culex quinquefasciatus, the southern house mosquito and a night biter. It鈥檚 another bad one, capable of carrying bird malaria, as well as human disease like Zika virus, a couple of kinds of encephalitis and West Nile virus.

The officials in charge of Palmyra are now looking at other techniques to try to remove that mosquito as well.

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About the Author

  • Jan TenBruggencate

    Jan TenBruggencate was the science and environment writer and Kauai Bureau Chief for the Honolulu Advertiser. He left to start a communications consulting firm, Island Strategy LLC. His science writing has generated awards from the Hawaii Audubon Society, Hawaiian Academy of Science, The Nature Conservancy, the Conservation Council for Hawaii and others.