The LSU 
                    AgCenter is providing mosquitofish (Gambusia affinis) 
                    to the New Orleans area in an effort to suppress mosquito 
                    populations in the many abandoned swimming pools in the city.
                  Experts 
                    estimate New Orleans has more than 6,000 abandoned pools, 
                    and each has the potential of being a breeding ground for 
                    a multitude of mosquitoes.
                  Mark Schexnayder, 
                    the LSU AgCenter’s hurricane recovery coordinator and 
                    a Louisiana Sea Grant Extension agent, has been coordinating 
                    this effort between Operation Blessing and the New Orleans 
                    Mosquito and Termite Control Board to ensure that the mosquito 
                    numbers don’t get out of hand.
                  Schexnayder 
                    said using the mosquitofish was the idea of Steve Sackett, 
                    research entomologist and field superintendent for the New 
                    Orleans Mosquito and Termite Control Board.
                  Sackett 
                    said he had used fish before to control mosquitoes in the 
                    city but never to this magnitude.
                  "Before 
                    Katrina we would use minnow traps to catch a few fish in drainage 
                    ditches to use for this purpose, but with the potential for 
                    West Nile Virus and other disease problems that we could see 
                    from having this many abandoned pools, we had to think bigger," 
                    Sackett said. 
                  The combination 
                    of resources from the various agencies involved in the project 
                    has provided what was needed to be successful.
                  "We’ve 
                    gotten off to a good start with the help of Operation Blessing, 
                    which gave us $25,000 to put the fish farm back in operation 
                    at the Orleans Parish Prison," Schexnayder said.
                  Operation 
                    Blessing is an international relief organization that has 
                    donated a considerable amount of money, manpower and equipment 
                    to the New Orleans recovery effort.
                  With this 
                    grant in hand, Schexnayder contacted the LSU AgCenter’s 
                    Aquaculture Research Station in Baton Rouge about donating 
                    some mosquitofish, and the result is that Orleans Parish now 
                    has the world’s largest Gambusia fish breeding facility.
                  "Dr. 
                    [Robert] Romaire and his staff at the Aquaculture Station 
                    have been phenomenal in this effort. They have been draining 
                    their ponds in Baton Rouge and giving us fish to put in the 
                    abandoned swimming pools," he said.
                  Romaire, 
                    LSU AgCenter professor and director of the Aquaculture Research 
                    Station, said the mosquitofish are a native species found 
                    in just about any water body in Louisiana.
                  "Many 
                    of our experimental ponds at the Aquaculture Research Station 
                    that are used in catfish research and crawfish research have 
                    large populations of mosquitofish. Although they are not part 
                    of our targeted research program at the station, they do add 
                    the benefit of controlling mosquito populations at the station," 
                    Romaire said. 
                  He said 
                    in addition to providing fish to stock the swimming pools, 
                    the LSU AgCenter is providing mosquitofish breeding stock 
                    to the New Orleans Mosquito and Termite Control Board to help 
                    in establishing the mosquitofish breeding facility.
                  Romaire 
                    said, "We are also providing technical assistance on 
                    rearing/breeding mosquito fish as requested by the New Orleans 
                    Mosquito and Termite Control Board and our AgCenter colleagues 
                    based in New Orleans." 
                  Many other 
                    fish species will consume mosquito larvae and are effective 
                    in controlling mosquito populations, but the mosquitofish 
                    have some noticeable advantages.
                  One advantage 
                    is that they are tolerant to poor water quality where other 
                    mosquito larvae-consuming fish are not. Another advantage 
                    is that mosquitofish do not lay eggs. They give birth to live 
                    young. Therefore, no special environment is required.
                  Mosquitofish 
                    produce from 50 to 100 young at intervals of about every six 
                    weeks. The young are born at about one-fourth inch in length 
                    and grow to about 3 inches at maturity. 
                  As soon 
                    as they are born they begin to eat mosquito larvae and are 
                    able to consume about 100 per day.
                  The mosquitofish 
                    can tolerate a wide range of temperatures and have a life 
                    expectancy of about three years. 
                  For additional 
                    information on the mosquitofish project in New Orleans, contact 
                    Mark Schexnayder at (504) 838-1170 or mschexnayder@agcenter.lsu.edu.