Natural West Nile Virus Solution
using Muscovy Ducks
This is an interesting article on a natural
West Nile Virus solution courtesy of David E. Bryson at Duck
Haven Farm, 6920 NW 35th Ave Road, Ocala, Florida, 34475, 352-867-5593
- Home of Muscovy Ducks (Mosquito Eaters). The article was originally
sent to Patrick W. Brown, Director Center for Wildlife Ecology
Illinois Natural History Survey. He has received some letters
about Muscovy ducks being excellent fly and insect catchers.
Everyone is trying to use chemicals to solve the problem
with the West Nile Virus when mother nature can do a big part of
it. Call us at the phone number below if you want more information.
More on Muscovys - I read an article on chickens and pest control
(February/March 2003), and thought I would drop you (to Patrick)
a note about my ducks. I have three horses boarded on 6 acres in
Kentucky. For years I had a terrible problem with face flies, deer
flies and ticks. We even had the 2-inch-long "horse flies"
in huge numbers; one year, I swatted 15 during an hour-long riding
lesson. The bites are terribly painful, and the horses go crazy
trying to get away from these bloodthirsty pests.
Then, someone gave me six Muscovy ducks. They did
very well the first summer, but that winter coyotes got all but
one nesting female. She hatched out 16 ducklings, and the fun began.
Those little ducklings were hungry all the time. They would hang
out in the horse stalls, snapping up every fly they could catch.
You've heard the saying, "Like a duck on a June bug,"
haven't you? It's an amazing sight to see: Little bitty ducklings
hunting bugs like cats after mice. These little guys would position
themselves in all the places the flies would lay their eggs, and
feast on the incoming flies. They made a good-sized dent in the
bug population; I haven't had a tick on me since that year, and
I'm a tick magnet.
We kept a closer eye on this Muscovy generation, so
we didn't lose any over the winter. It included eight females, who
hatched out from 12 to 20 ducklings each the following spring. The
coyotes and the cats kept busy, but the females didn't give up.
As a batch of ducklings hatched, they all crowded together, not
really caring which hen they followed. My females would take up
in pairs, two "moms" for about 20 ducklings, then the
rest would start laying again. The last batch hatched in August.
We have a small pond, so the ducks never stray very
far. However, the pasture borders on a subdivision. I've gone out
to feed many an afternoon to see ducks all over the neighborhood.
When I start to feed the horses, the ducks will start to fly in,
or I will call them with a bell. Usually they are already waiting,
as feeding time is 4 p.m. For some reason, my neighbors don't mind
the ducks at all, and will come over to chat with me about what
kind of mischief they've been up to.
Three things that I didn't know earlier about Muscovy
ducks: They are strong fliers, they like to perch on houses, gates,
trees, fences and barn roofs, and they are really quite tame. Also,
we have had the West Nile Virus break out in the horse population
here; I was fortunate to have my ducks on mosquito patrol until
I could get my horses vaccinated. Young ducklings, from the second
day of their lives, go after those bloodsuckers all day long. By
the evening, the little ducklings are so stuffed they can hardly
move. They probably take care of thousands of mosquitoes and other
small insects.
Our yard is practically mosquito-and tick-free without
using any chemicals. Grasshoppers also are a favorite snack, if
the mother ducks don't get them first. The only bugs the ducks don't
care for are the box-elder bugs, except when they see a flying one,
mistaking it for a mosquito. I'm keeping the ducklings out of the
garden, though, as they like to nibble on young vegetable plants,
too.
The Muscovies original name was "Musco Duck",
because it is known as the "Mosquito Duck", for eating
Mosquitoes. One of the main reasons they were brought here several
hundred years ago is to help keep down the mosquito and bug population,
and those they do, and do it well. There are billions of insects
on an acre of land, and the Muscovy ducks are worth their weight
in gold at eating mosquitoes and insects. They eat the mosquito
larvae right in the water, and they nip in the air and eat the ones
flying around. We plan on using solar lights that will come on at
dark and off in the morning. The flies, moths and mosquitoes will
add protein to there diet and further reduce feeding them.
Muscovy owners tell me they will stay around the light
all night eating the bugs that come to the light. They love roaches
and eat them like they are candy; they eat flies, and maggots (good
for horse farms and dairy cattle) and do a lot to keep down the
fly populations. P. Brown wrote this "I am not familiar specifically
with any research on Muscovy Ducks for mosquito control, but dabbling
ducks like mallards, readily consume mosquito larvae in wetlands.
In fact, I suspect that most of the mosquito's that plague people
likely come from situations that do not support ducks (small puddles,
tires, wet meadows, etc.). I vaguely recall some early research
that showed that where wild ducks were found, mosquito larvae were
reduced in abundance because the ducks eat them readily.
Hope the above helps! Patrick W. Brown, Director Center
for Wildlife Ecology Illinois Natural History Survey 607 E. Peabody
Drive Champaign, IL 61820 Telephone: 217/244-4289 Fax: 217/265-0374
email: pbrown@mail.inhs.uiuc.edu
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