PROGRAM KILL MOSQUITO LARVAE QUICKLY. CONTROL emergence responsibly.

Duplex™-G uses biorational and biological controls to STOP MOSQUITOES BEFORE THEY START. Our founders discovered the molecule (S)-methoprene – the original insect growth regulator (IGR) – one of the first environmentally compatible mosquito control active ingredients. We’re proud of our latest innovation, Duplex™-G larvicide. Duplex™-G larvicide uses dual control with (S)-methoprene and Bti to create a quick killing, long residual granule that lasts for 28-days in continuously flooded sites. Like all of our products, Duplex™-G larvicide works to reduce your environmental footprint.

For more information on Duplex™-G larvicide, come see us at Booth #220, or visit www.CentralMosquitoControl.com.

WWW.MOSQUITO.ORG Duplex is a registered trademark of Wellmark International. Central Life Sciences with design is a registered trademark of Central Garden & Pet Company. ©2020 Wellmark International MON MAR 16 8:00am — 3:00pm Pre-Conference Workshop: Young Professionals (B119) 9:00am — 3:00pm Pre-Conference Workshop: Learn the CDC Bottle Bioassay (B118) Pre-registration required 10:00am — 6:30pm Registration and Internet Hub (Exhibit Hall Lobby) 1:00pm — 5:30pm Speaker Ready Room (C125) 1:00pm — 5:00pm Committee Meetings (C120, C121, C122) AT-A-GLANCE 2:00pm — 4:00pm Poster Set-Up (Exhibit Hall B) 5:00pm — 8:00pm Grand Opening of the Exhibit Hall and Welcome Reception Badge Required for Entry (Exhibit Hall B) TUES MAR 17 7:00am — 5:30pm Registration and Internet Hub (Exhibit Hall Lobby) | Speaker Ready Room (C125) 8:00am — 12:00pm Plenary Session (Oregon Ballroom) 10:00am — 10:30am Refreshment Break (Oregon Ballroom Lobby) 12:00pm — 1:45pm President’s Luncheon and Exhibits Open Badge Required for Entry (Exhibit Hall B) 1:45pm — 3:15pm Mosquito Lightning Legislative & Regulatory History and Spread of WNV and Student Symposium (B112) Symposium I (B114) SLEV strains in the Southwest Symposium (B115) Competition I (B117)

3:15am — 4:00pm Refreshment Break in Exhibit Hall / Ice Cream Social Badge Required for Entry (Exhibit Hall B) 4:00pm — 5:30pm 7th Anthropod Vector Legislative & Regulatory Operations I Student Highlights Symposium (B112) Symposium II (B114) (B115) Competition II (B117) 5:45pm — 7:15pm Latin American Discussion (B115)

WED MAR 18 7:00am — 5:30pm Registration and Internet Hub (Exhibit Hall Lobby) | Speaker Ready Room (C125) 10:00am — 5:00pm Trustee/Commissioner Tour (Off-Site Event)Ticket Required 8:30am — 10:00am Vision 2020 for NASA Earth Observations Latin American Operations Spatial Repellants to Resistance Management Improved Vector-borne Student Competition II/Aerial Protect Civilian and Symposium I (B112) Disease Surveillance and Competition Resources Military: Laboratory Risk Characterization (B115) (B117) and Field Evaluations Symposium I (B114) Symposium I (C124) 10:00am — 10:45am Refreshment Break in Exhibit Hall (Exhibit Hall B) 10:45am — 12:15pm Vision 2020 for Biology/ Latin American Adult Spatial Repellants to Protect Civilian Resistance Management Behavior I American Control I and Military: Laboratory and Field Symposium II (B112) (B114) Symposium I (B115) (B117) Evaluations Symposium II (C124)

12:15pm — 1:45pm Poster Session Luncheon Badge Required for Entry (Exhibit Hall B) 12:15pm — 4:00pm Exhibits Open (Exhibit Hall B) 1:45pm — 3:15pm T wenty Years of West Nile Virus: Past Biology/Behavior II Latin American Adult Control II Young Professionals Present and Future Symposium I (B112) (B114) Symposium II (B115) (B117) Symposium I (C124) 3:15pm — 4:00pm Refreshment Break in Exhibit Hall (Exhibit Hall B) 4:00pm — 5:30pm Latin American Tackling Ticks: Moving Operations/Genetics Adult Contol III Young Professionals Symposium III Beyond Mosquito Control until 5:40pm (Curacao 1) (B117) Symposium II (C124) (Antigua 1) Symposium (Bonaire 1)

5:30pm — 6:30pm Young Professionals Social (C120) Invitation Only Event

THURS MAR 19 7:30am — 1:00pm Registration and Internet Hub (Exhibit Hall Lobby) | Speaker Ready Room (C125) 8:30am — 10:45am Exhibits Open (Exhibit Hall B) 8:30am — 10:00am Social Media and Mosquito Disease/Vector Biology/Behavior IV Larval Control Control Symposium (B112) Studies (B114) (B115) (B117) 10:00am — 10:45am Refreshment Break (Exhibit Hall) 10:45am — 12:00pm AMCA Annual Member Meeting (B114) 1:30pm — 3:00pm Education I (B112) Sewage-associated Mosquito Symposium (B114) Larval Control II (B115) Disease/Vector Studies II (B117) 3:00pm — 3:15pm Refreshment Break (Exhibit Hall Lobby) 3:15pm — 4:45pm Education II Sewage-associated Mosquito Managing the Workforce in the Larvicides for Mosquito Control: (B112) Symposium II (B114) 21st Century Symposium (B115) Development and Applications ) 6:00pm — 7:00pm Pre-Banquet Social (Oregon Ballroom Lobby) Symposium (B117 7:00pm — 9:30pm Banquet Ticket Required (Oregon Ballroom Lobby) FRI MAR 20 7:30am — 11:00am Registration and Internet Hub (Exhibit Hall Lobby) 7:30am — 12:00pm Speaker Ready Room (C125) 7:30am — 11:00am Board of Directors Meeting (Holladay) 8:30am — 10:00am Evidence based Action Decision Making Enhancing Mosquito Control Capacity Innovative Equipment/GPS Thresholds Symposium I (B112) for Response to Natural Disasters I (B114) Techniques (B115) (B117) 10:00am — 10:30am Break (Exhibit Hall Lobby) 10:30am — 12:00pm Evidence based Action Enhancing Mosquito Control Rated SIT: Sexual Activity Public Relations/ Decision Making Thresholds Capacity for Response to No Children Allowed Management (B117) Symposium II (B112) Natural Disasters II (B114) Symposium (B115)

12:00pm Meeting Adjourns – See You in Salt Lake City, Utah in 2021! INTRODUCTION Message from the President i AMCA 2019-2020 Board of Directors ii AMCA 2019-2020 Committee Chairs v Planning Committees vii Meeting Sponsors viii Exhibitor Directory & Booth No. xi General Information xvii MONDAY SCHEDULE TUESDAY PLENARY SESSION TUESDAY AFTERNOON SESSION 1 Mosquito Lightning Symposium 2 Legislative & Regulatory Symposium I 4 History and Spread of WNV and SLEV strains in the Southwest Symposium 4 Student Competition I 5 TUESDAY AFTERNOON SESSION 2 7th Arthropod Vector Highlights Symposium 6 Legislative & Regulatory Symposium II 6 Operations I 6 Student Paper Competition II 7 Trustee/Commissioner Session 8 WEDNESDAY MORNING SESSION 1 Vision 2020 for the Resistance Management Symposium I 9 NASA Earth Observations for Improved Vector-borne Disease Surveillance and Rish Characterization Symposium 9 Latin American Student Competition 10 Operations II/ Aerial Resources 11 Spatial Repellents to Protect Civilian and Military: Laboratory and Field Evaluations Symposium I 11 WEDNESDAY MORNING SESSION 2 Vision 2020 for the Resistance Management Symposium II 12 Biology/Behavior I 13 Latin American Symposium I 14 Adult Control I 15 Spatial Repellents to Protect Civilian and Military: Laboratory and field Evaluations Symposium II 16 Poster Session 17 WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON SESSION 1 Twenty Years of West Nile Virus: Past, Present and Future Symposium I 22 Biology/Behavior II 22 Latin American Symposium II 23 Adult Control II 24 Young Professionals Symposium I 25 WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON SESSION 2 Twenty Years of West Nile Virus: Past, Present and Future Symposium II 26 Biology/Behavior III 26 Mosquito Control District and DOD Collaborations Symposium 27 Adult Control III 27 Young Professionals Symposium II 28 THURSDAY MORNING SESSION 1 Social Media and Mosquito Control Symposium 30 Disease/Vector Studies 30 Biology/Behavior IV 31 Larval Control 32 AMCA ANNUAL MEMBER MEETING 32 THURSDAY AFTERNOON SESSION 1 Education I 33 Sewage-associated Mosquitos Symposium I 34 Larval Control II 34 Disease/Vector Studies II 35 THURSDAY AFTERNOON SESSION 2 Education II 36 Sewage-associated Mosquitos Symposium II 36 Managing the Workforce in the 21st Century Symposium 37 Larvicides for Mosquito Control: Development and Applications Symposium 37 FRIDAY MORNING SESSION 1 Evidence based Action Decision Making Thresholds Symposium I 38 Enhancing Mosquito Control Capacity for Response to Natural Disasters I 38 Innovative Techniques I 39 Equipment/CPS 40 FRIDAY MORNING SESSION 2 Evidence based Action Decision Making Thresholds Symposium II 41 Enhancing Mosquito Control Capacity for Response to Natural Disasters II 41 Rated SIT : Sexual Activity – No Children Allowed Symposium 42 Public Relations/Management 43 EXHIBIT HALL MAP 43 EXHIBITOR KEY 44 MEETING SPACE MAP 45

HOW TO READ THE PROGRAM Day and Date at top of each page

Start – End Time Morning or afternoon Symposium/Session Title Organizer/Moderator: Name Start Time – End Time (may be different from start-end time in main heading, check each symposium/session) Room Location Time Abstract # Presentation Title Presenter, Other Author(s) Time Abstract # Presentation Title Presenter, Other Author(s) And so on A number preceded by a PL indicates a plenary session talk; a number preceded by a P- indicates a poster and all other numbers are oral presentations. If there is no number listed, there is no abstract associated with that particular presentation. Speakers and other authors are found in the program book author index. All author affiliations are listed in the online abstract book. Maps to meeting locations and the exhibitors are on the last pages of the program book. INTRODUCTION Message from the President Jason R. Kinley

Welcome and thank you for attending the 86th annual meeting in Portland, Oregon. The AMCA annual meeting is the signature event that provides mosquito control professionals, commissioners and trustees, researchers and educators, product developers and suppliers, and regulatory and public health agencies the opportunity to discuss experiences, learn about new information and technology, and create strategies to address the latest developments in mosquito and vector control.

Mark Breidenbaugh, AMCA Vice President, has arranged a meeting program that will be undoubtedly informative and stimulating. The response to the requests for submitted symposia, oral and poster presentations was the greatest to date! There are 23 symposia including nearly 330 oral presentations as well as more than 60 posters.

Special recognition goes to the Local Arrangements Committee chaired by Ken Carver and Chris Wirth, Brian Byrd for organizing the Student Competition, Jennifer Henke for organizing the poster session, Lee Cohnstaedt for organizing the Latin American Symposia and Kristy Burkhalter for coordinating the activities for AMCA’s Young Professionals.

A special thank you to Dave Butler, Natalie Perry, Megan Macnee, Evan Wise, and the entire Association Management Group team that serves the AMCA for their assistance with all aspects of the scientific program and the meeting’s activities. Look for AMG staff at the registration desk, and throughout the conference.

Please take time to visit the exhibitor booths displaying the products and services offered by the vendors and thank our exhibitors for their support of the AMCA. A special thanks goes to the vendors who provided stipends for the Young Professionals Industry Shadowing Program. Thirteen YPs were awarded stipends to attend this year’s meeting and will work with their sponsors during the meeting.

Portland offers many unique experiences that highlight the great Pacific Northwest. While you here, take the opportunity to explore the Portland Art Museum or the Oregon Museum of Science and Industry. Stroll through the labyrinth of books at Powell’s City of Books, the world’s largest independent book store with over 1 million new, used, and rare books! Portland is the home of the original Voodoo Doughnut, a sweet experience everyone must have at least once. Be careful in the Shanghai Tunnels, if you dare to go underground.

Thank you. Jason Kinley, AMCA President

i AMCA 2019-2020 BOARD OF DIRECTORS

PRESIDENT Jason Kinley Gem County Mosquito Abatement District 6846 W. Hwy 52 Emmett, ID 83617 Phone: 208-365-5628 [email protected]

PRESIDENT ELECT Ary Faraji, PhD Salt Lake City Mosquito Abatement District 2020 N. Redwood Rd. Salt Lake City, UT 84116 Phone: 801-355-9221 [email protected]

VICE PRESIDENT Mark Breidenbaugh, PhD U.S. Air Force 5400 Russell Lane Fowler, OH 44418 Phone: 330-360-1936 [email protected]

PAST PRESIDENT William E. Walton, PhD University of California Dept. of Entomology Riverside, CA 92521 Phone: 951-827-3919 [email protected]

TREASURER Gary Hatch Davis County Mosquito Abatement 85 North 600 West Kaysville, UT 84037 Phone: 801-544-3736 [email protected]

INDUSTRY DIRECTOR Jason Trumbetta ADAPCO 550 Aero Lane Sanford, FL 32771 Phone: 407-328-6520 [email protected]

ii INTERNATIONAL DIRECTOR Catalina Alfonso-Parra, PhD Max Planck Tandem Group Mosquito Reproductive Biology - Universidad de Antioquia Instituto Colombiano de Medicina Tropical Complejo RutaN, Calle 67 No 52-20 Lab 4-46 Medellin, Columbia Phone: +57 322-2239631 [email protected]

MID-ATLANTIC DIRECTOR Brian Byrd Western Carolina University 416 Health Sciences Building Cullowhee, NC 28205 Phone: 828-227-2607 [email protected]

NORTH ATLANTIC DIRECTOR Robert Duryea Warren County Mosquito Commission PO Box 388 Oxford, NJ 07863 Phone: 908-453-3585 [email protected]

NORTH CENTRAL DIRECTOR Mark Clifton North Shore Mosquito Abatement District 117 Northfield Road Northfield, IL 60093 Phone: 847-446-9434 [email protected]

NORTH PACIFIC DIRECTOR Gregory Barron North Morrow Vector Control District PO Box 192 Boardman, Oregon 97818 Phone: 541-491-6082 [email protected]

SOUTH ATLANTIC DIRECTOR Christopher Lesser Manatee County Mosquito Control District 2317 2nd Avenue West Palmetto, FL 34221 Phone: 941-722-3720 [email protected]

iii SOUTH CENTRAL DIRECTOR Herff Jones Iberia Parish Mosquito Control 611 Old Central Taxiway New Iberia, LA 70560 Phone: 337-365-4933 [email protected]

SOUTH PACIFIC DIRECTOR Gary Goodman Sacramento-Yolo Mosquito and Vector Control District 8631 Bond Road Elk Grove, CA 95624 Phone: 916-685-1022 [email protected]

WEST CENTRAL DIRECTOR Lee Cohnstaedt, PhD United States Department of Agriculture 1515 College Ave Manhattan, KS 66520 Phone: 785-410-9148 [email protected]

TECHNICAL ADVISOR Joseph Conlon American Mosquito Control Association Phone: 904-215-3008 [email protected]

SOCIAL MEDIA COORDINATOR Levy Sun San Gabriel Valley Mosquito and Vector Control District 1145 N. Azusa Canyon Road West Covina, CA 91790 Phone: 626-814-9466 [email protected]

iv AMCA 2019-2020 COMMITTEE CHAIRS

Annual Meeting Committee Ary Faraji

Program Subcommittee Mark Breidenbaugh

Archives Committee Eric Williges

Bylaws & Policy Committee Janet McAllister

Executive Committee Jason Kinley

Finance Committee Gary Hatch

Legislative & Regulatory Committee Angela Beehler

ESA Subcommittee/ Pollinators Subcommittee Michael Riles

Chemical Control Subcommittee Nina Dacko

Clean Water Act Subcommittee Gary Goodman

Pesticide Environmental Stewardship Program (PESP) Subcommittee Gabrielle Sakolsky Hoopes

Washington Conference Subcommittee Bill Walton

Federal Lands Subcommittee William Meredith

Federal Funding Subcommittee Gary Goodman

Unmanned Aircraft Systems Subcommittee Joel Buettner

Membership Committee David Butler

v Nominating / Awards Committees Bill Walton

John N. Belkin Award Subcommittee Larry Hribar

Industry Award Subcommittee Jason Trumbetta

Boyd-Ariaz Grassroots Award Subcommittee Steve Mulligan

Public Relations Committee Joe Conlon

Publications Committee Steve Presley

JAMCA Editorial Board Harry Savage

Newsletter Editorial Board Clark Wood

Special Publications Subcommittee Whitney Qualls

Science & Technology Committee Seth Britch

Training & Member Education Committee Isik Unlu

Young Professionals Committee Stormy Freese

vi 2020 PLANNING COMMITTEES

ANNUAL MEETING COMMITTEE Ary Faraji, Chair, AMCA President-Elect Jason Kinley, AMCA President Mark Breidenbaugh, PhD, AMCA Vice President Jason Trumbetta, AMCA Board, Industry Director Wendy Samz, Education Day Coordinator

PROGRAM COMMITTEE Mark Breidenbaugh, PhD, Chair, AMCA Vice President Lee Cohnstaedt, Co-Chair, Latin American Symposium Catalina Alfonso-Parra, Co-Chair, Latin American Symposium Brian Byrd, Chair, Student Competition

LOCAL ARRANGEMENTS COMMITTEE Kenny Carver, Chair, Washington County Mosquito Control Peter DeChant, Trustee Tour Organizer, Valent Biosciences LLC

AMCA HEADQUARTERS STAFF David Butler, Executive Director Megan MacNee, Deputy Executive Director Natalie Perry, Events Manager Evan Wise, Membership Services Manager Nito Goolan, Accounting Manager

Download the 2020 Annual Meeting Mobile App!

Abstracts, Program, Floor Plans, Exhibitor Lists, Daily Feeds & more on your mobil device — completely free!

Download the mobile app in the app store by searching for ‘CrowdCompass AttendeeHub’. Once you’ve found the app, tap either Get or Install. After installing, a new icon will appear on the home screen. Once downloaded, open the AttendeeHub app and enter AMCA 2020 in the search bar. Tap the name of your event, then tap Download to open it.

Or visit https://event.crowdcompass.com/amca2020

vii MEETING SPONSORS

AMCA is deeply appreciative of and proud to acknowledge the following industry supporters of the 86th Annual Meeting

Diamond Level Supporters

Welcome Reception Meeting Bags Program Book Inside Front Cover Meeting Bag Insert Hotel Keycards Young Professional Industry Shadowing Program Young Professional Dinner

Platinum Level Supporters

Plenary Break Meeting Mobile App Young Professional Industry Shadowing Program Audiovisual

Convention Center Escalator Wraps Student Competition Fund Latin American Symposium & Competition Young Professional Dinner Young Professional Industry Shadowing Program & Industry Travel Award Program

Gold Level Supporters

Wednesday Morning Break Ice Cream Social Latin American Symposium Young Professional Industry Shadowing Program

viii Silver Level Supporters

Young Professional Social Badge Holders Student Competition Fund Young Professional Industry Shadowing Program

Program Book Back Cover Banquet Tables Young Professional Industry Shadowing Program

Bronze Level Supporters

Banquet Tables

Young Professional Industry Shadowing Program

Pre-Banquet Social

ix Bronze Level Supporters continued

Young Professionals Industry Travel Award Program Program Ad Inside back cover

Young Professional Industry Shadowing Program Sponsor of Rachel Pollreis

Young Professional Industry Shadowing Program

Wednesday Afternoon Break Internet Hub Meeting Bag Insert

Young Professional Industry Shadowing Program

AMCA Sustaining Members

AMCA would like to thank the 2018/2019 sustaining members. A full list of current sustaining members is accessible at: https://www.mosquito.org/page/sustainmemberlist

x EXHIBITOR DIRECTORY Booth No A1 Mist Sprayers 423 (A Brand of Valley Industries) 110 W. 3rd Street Ponca, NE 68770 Phone: 877-924-2474 Email: [email protected] www.mistsprayers.com

Adapco, LLC 308 550 Aero Lane Sanford, FL 32771 Phone: 800-367-0659 Email: [email protected] www.MyADAPCO.com

AllPro Vector Group 400 640 Griswold Street, Ste. 200 Northville, MI 48167 Phone: (888) 603-1008 Email: [email protected] www.allprovector.com

AMCA – Young Professionals 422 One Capitol Mall, Suite 800 Sacramento, CA 95814 Phone: 888-626-0630 Email: [email protected] www.amcayps.wordpress.com

American Longray, LLC 221 23287 Foley Street, Unit B Hayword, CA 96565 Phone: 415-830-9494 Email: [email protected] www.pestgoaway.com

American Mosquito Control Association 126 One Capitol Mall, Suite 800 Sacramento, CA 95814 Phone: 888-626-0630 Email: [email protected] www.mosquito.org

AMVAC Environmental Products 408 5225 Clarendon Hills Drive Fort Collins, CO 80526 Phone: 772-205-5280 Email: [email protected] www.amvac-chemical.com

Application Dynamics 202 P.O. Box 152725 Cape Coral, FL 33915 Phone: 239-673-8328 Email: [email protected] www.applicationdynamics.net xi B&G Equipment Co./ Curtis Dyna-Fog/Pelsis 501 135 Region South Drive Jackson, GA 30248 Phone: 678-688-5601 Email: [email protected] www.dynafog.com | www.bgequip.com

BAYER 117 4000 Centre Green Way Cary, NC 27513 Phone: 919-482-5074 Email: [email protected] www.backedbybayer.com

Biogents AG 417 Weissenburg Strasse 22 Regensburg, Germany Phone: 304-209-6369 Email: [email protected] www.biogents.com

Brandenburg UK 225 29 Navigation Drive, Hurst Business Park Brierley Hill, West Midlands, DY5 1UT United Kingtom Phone: 314-708-9620 Email: [email protected] www.b-one.com

BVA Inc. 427 P.O. Box 930301 Wixom, MI 48393 Phone: 248-348-4920 Email: [email protected] www.bvaoils.com

Central Life Sciences 220 1501 E. Woodfield Rd., Ste 200W Schaumburg, IL 60173 Phone: 800-877-6374 Email: [email protected] www.centralmosquitocontrol.com

CFR - Innovations 426 163 Cossette Saguenay, QC G7J0G6 Canada Phone: 418-720-7939 Email: [email protected] www.cfr-innovations.com

Clarke 208 675 Sidwell Court Saint Charles, IL 60174 Phone: 630-894-2000 Email: [email protected] www.clarke.com xii CoDiagnostics Inc. 525 2401 Foothil Drive Salt Lake City, UT 84109 Phone: 801-755-7717 Email: [email protected] www.codiagnotics.com

DEET Education Program 316 11415 Governors Dr. Chapel Hill, NC 27517 Phone: 919-942-8847 Email: [email protected] www.deetonline.org

Dynamic Aviation Group Inc. 521 1402 Airport Rd. Bridgewater, VA 22812 Phone: 540-828-6070 Email: [email protected] www.dynamicaviation.com

EcoRaider 219 8400 River Rd., Suite 2C North Bergen, NJ 7047 Phone: 201-751-0011 Email: [email protected] www.ecoraiderusa.com

EMD Performance Materials Corp. 227 1200 Intrepid Avenue, Ste. 300 Philadelphia, PA 19112 Phone: 856-237-9195 Email: [email protected] www.iR3535.com

Entomological Society of America 302 3 Park Place, Suite 307 Annapolis, MD 21401 Phone: 740-696-3769 www.entocert.org

FMC - Global Environmental Management 320 2929 Walnut Street Philadelphia, PA 19104 Phone: 215-299-6000 Email: [email protected] www.fmc.com

Frontier Precision 304 2716 South Lincoln Avenue, Suite G Jerome, ID 83338 Phone: 208-324-8006 Email: [email protected] www.frontierprecision.com/mosquito

xiii i2LResearch 326 Capital Business Park Cardiff, UK CF32PX Phone: +44 2922400586 Email: [email protected] www.i2LResearch.com

Leading Edge Associates, Inc 216 702 Tulip Tree Court Fletcher, NC 28732 Phone: 828-246-2111 Email: [email protected] www.leateam.com

Local Arrangements Committee 2020 - Portland, OR 324 Portland, OR

Local Arrangements Committee 2021 - Salt Lake City, Utah 523 Salt Lake City, UT

London Foggers 122 505 Brimhall Avenue Long Lake, MN 55356 Phone: (952) 473-5366 Email: [email protected] www.londonfoggers.com

Maverick Drone 300 12931 Eagle Creek Pkwy Savage, MN 55378 Phone: 612-293-8317 Email: [email protected]

MCES, LLC 322 1283 West Airport Blvd. Sanford, FL 32773 Phone: 321-363-4977 Email: [email protected] www.mymces.com

Micron Sprayers Ltd. 403 Penthouse Industrial Estate Bromyard, Herefordshire HR74HS Phone: +44 1885 482897 Email: [email protected] www.microngroup.com

Phenix Print 124 9630 Bruceville Road, Suite 106-288 Elk Grove, CA 95757 Phone: 916-683-1000 Email: [email protected] www.phenixprint.com

xiv Rad Source Technologies, Inc 118 4907 Golden Parkway, Suite 400 Buford, GA 30518 Phone: 678-765-7900 Email: [email protected] www.radsource.com

S.C. Johnson & Son Inc. 120 1525 Howe Street, M.S. 402 Racine, WI 53403 Phone: 262-260-3403 Email: [email protected] www.scjohnson.com

Senecio Robotics 527 Bikat Ha’yareach 4a, Kfar Saba, ZZ 4463107 Israel Email: [email protected] www.senecio-robotics.com

ServDay 305 1024 Serpentine Lane, Suite 101 Pleasanton, CA 94566 Phone: 925-500-8382 Email: [email protected] www.ServDay.com

STUCK 303 1330 Loop Road Lancaster, PA 17601 Phone: 717-392-1128 Email: [email protected] www.stuckbrands.com

Summit Chemical Co. 420 235 S Kresson ST Baltimore, MD 21224 Phone: 410-522-0661 Email: [email protected] www.summitchemical.com

Target Specialty Products 116 15415 Marquardt Ave Santa Fe Springs, CA 90670 Phone: 562-392-2569 Email: [email protected] www.target-specialty.com

Tifone S.R.L. 125 Via Modena 248/A, Ferrara, Italy 44122 Phone: +39 342 8663197 Email: [email protected] www.tifone.com

xv United State Navy Recruiting Command 401 5722 Integrity Drive, Millington, TN 38054

Univar Environmental Science 414 10800 Pecan Park Blvd., Bldg. 1. Ste 300 Austin, TX 78750 Phone: 800-609-9414 Email: [email protected] www.pestweb.com

Valent BioSciences 108 870 Technology Way, Libertyville, IL 60048 Phone: 847-968-4750 Email: [email protected] www.walentbiosciences.com

Vector Disease Control International 404 1320 Brookwood Drive, Suite H Little Rock, AR 72202 Phone: 501-280-0220 Email: [email protected]

VectorBase 119 University of Notre Dame 315 Galvin Science Center, Notre Dame, IN 46556 Phone: 574-631-8045 Email: [email protected] www.vectorbase.org

Wing Beats 121 200 Derby Woods Drive, Lynn Haven, FL 32444 Phone: 850-814-2610 Email: [email protected]

xvi GENERAL INFORMATION

Registration and Internet Hub Hours Located in the Exhibit Hall Lobby Monday, March 16 10:00 am– 6:30 pm Tuesday, March 17 7:00 am– 5:30 pm Wednesday, March 18 7:00 am– 5:30 pm Thursday, March 19 7:30 am– 1:00 pm Friday, March 20 7:30 am – 11:00 am Speaker Ready Room Hours Located in C125 Monday, March 16 1:00 pm– 5:30 pm Tuesday, March 17 7:00 am– 5:30 pm Wednesday, March 18 7:00 am– 5:30 pm Thursday, March 19 7:30 am– 1:00 pm Friday, March 20 7:30 am – 11:00 pm Exhibit Hall Hours Located in Exhibit Hall B Set-up: Monday, March 16 8:00 am – 3:00 pm Viewing Hours: Monday, March 16 5:00 pm– 8:00 pm Tuesday, March 17 12:00 pm– 1:45 pm 3:15 pm– 4:00 pm Wednesday, March 18 10:00 am – 10:45 am 12:15 pm– 4:00 pm Thursday, March 19 8:30 am – 10:45 am Breakdown: Thursday, March 19 10:45 am – 4:00 pm Poster Presentations Poster presenters must locate their poster numbers in this program book and place their posters on the assigned poster boards in the exhibit hall. Presenters are required to attend their posters during the Poster Session on Wednesday, March 18 from 12:15 pm-1:45 pm. Poster Set-up: Monday, March 16 2:00 pm – 4:00 pm Poster Removal: Thursday, March 19 10:45 am – 1:00 pm

Posters not removed by 1:00 pm on Thursday will be placed behind the registration desk and will be discarded if not claimed by 11:00 am on Friday.

xvii ADA Requests AMCA fully complies with the legal requirements of the Americans with Disabilities Act. If any participant of the Annual Meeting is in need of an accommodation, he/she should notify the AMCA registration counter and indicate the type of assistance needed. AMCA cannot ensure the availability of appropriate assistance without prior notice.

Breaks AMCA will NOT provide coffee prior to the start of morning sessions, so please plan accordingly. Sponsored beverage breaks are offered daily. Please refer to the program for times.

Transportation to the Convention Center AMCA is going Green in Portland! When you check in and pick up your name badge at the convention center, show your hotel key from one of the host hotels and you will receive a free pass to ride back and forth from the convention center and your hotel.

Education Day Education Day is on Wednesday, March 18th from 10:00 am to noon. AMCA Volunteers will provide education programs to visitors at The Nest in the Oregon Zoo. Activities include activities related to mosquitos and mosquito biology and their habitats, and public will have the opportunity to have hands-on experiences with various mosquito and mosquito control related items. For information, please see AMCA registration counter.

Internet Hub The Internet Hub is located in the Exhibit Hall Lobby. Complimentary computer stations with internet/email access and word processing are provided. Use of these computers is limited to 15 minutes. These stations are not intended for editing or printing long documents. Please use your hotel business center for these purposes.

Latin American Symposium The 30th Annual Latin American Symposium, held all day Wednesday, has simultaneous English translation of Spanish oral presentations. This is a unique opportunity to learn about mosquito research and control in Latin America. Please see the technician in the back of the room for a headset.

Meals The Monday reception is NOT a full dinner. The Tuesday and Wednesday lunches will be served in the Exhibit Hall. The banquet on Thursday is a full dinner. No breakfasts are served at the Annual Meeting.

Meeting Evaluations The Annual Meeting evaluation will be emailed to all attendees following the meeting. We encourage all attendees to complete the survey so we can continue to improve the AMCA Annual Meeting.

xviii Member Meeting The Annual Member Meeting is on Thursday from 10:45 am – 12:00 pm in B114. The member/business meeting updates the membership on AMCA finances and committee activities as well as new initiatives. All members are encouraged to attend.

Moderators Moderators are required to arrive in their session room at least 10 minutes prior to the start of the session to review the audiovisual aids, timers, and lighting with the projectionist. Papers must be given at the scheduled times. If a paper is canceled or a speaker does not appear, do not advance to the next speaker, but use the open time for questions and discussion.

Name Badge A name badge is required for admission to all meeting sessions and the Exhibit Hall. Individual function tickets are also required for receptions and the banquet.

Speaker Presentations Speakers with PowerPoint presentations should have already uploaded their PowerPoint files online. If you have not done so, contact the audiovisual coordinator in the Speaker Ready Room as soon as possible.

Trustee Tour Pick-up All trustees, commissioners, and their companions should report to the Oregon Ballroom Lobby and the bus will be on MLK street on Wednesday. Please see your tour ticket and registrations for more information.

Young Professionals Activities The AMCA Young Professionals will be hosting numerous events throughout the Annual Meeting. Please see the listing of events below. If you have any questions regarding these activities, please visit the AMCA Young Professionals Booth 422 located in the Exhibit Hall.

Young Professionals Welcome Dinner This YP-only event is sponsored by Central Life Sciences and Clark and requires a ticket for entry, as space is limited. Visit the YP booth to pick up your ticket (if you’ve RSVP’d) or to inquire about availability.

Young Professionals Discussion Panel and Career Round- Table Symposium will be held on Wednesday, March 18 from 1:45 pm - 5:30 pm in C124 meeting room. The symposium will include a panel discussion followed by round-table career discussions with field experts. Check program for more symposium details.

Young Professionals Social will be held on Wednesday, March 18 from 5:30 pm to 6:30 pm in the C120 meeting room. The event will include a one-hour open bar social and light hors d’oeuvres. The event is sponsored by AMVAC. Check program for more details.

Young Professionals Promo Booth will be hosted in the Exhibit Hall at Booth 422. Come see us during breaks for free games, prizes, and group information. Also, don’t forget to bid on our art auction! All proceeds go to the TY Fund. xix AMCA RESEARCH FUND 2019 Research Fund Awardees

Nathan Burkett-Cadena, PhD, “Automated real-time collection and high-fidelity identification of vectors”, University of Florida.

Brian Byrd, PhD, “Rapid identification and characterization techniques for mosquitoes of public health importance”, Western Carolina University.

2020 Research Fund Awardees

Corey Brelsfoard, PhD, ““Non-target effects of autodissemination approaches for mosquito control”, Texas Tech University. Lawrence Reeves, PhD, “Effect of size and circadian activity patterns of nontarget pollinators on their chronic and acute susceptibility to adulticides”, University of Florida.

The AMCA Research Fund (AMCARF) seeks to fund research that will lead to new tools and strategies for mosquito surveillance and control, ultimately protecting the public from mosquito-borne disease and discomfort from mosquito bites.

Contributions to the AMCARF are now being accepted! The AMCA Research Fund is currently accepting contributions for future research on mosquito control and related topics. Contributions can be made online at http://www.mosquito.org/researchfund or by check to: AMCA Research Fund ATTN: Evan Wise One Capitol Mall. Suite 800 Sacramento, CA 95814

AMCA would like to thank the following contributors (since February 28, 2019):

ADAPCO Animas Mosquito Control District Canyon County Mosquito Abatement District Coachella Valley Mosquito and Vector Control District Michigan Mosquito Control Association Vector Disease Control International

xx Monday, March 16, 2020

DAY AT-A-GLANCE Monday, March 16, 2020 10:00 am – 6:30 pm Registration and Internet Hub Exhibit Hall Lobby * early morning coffee and breakfast will be on your own 1:00 pm – 5:30 pm Speaker Ready Room C125 1:00 pm – 5:00 pm Committee Meetings C122-120 2:00 pm – 4:00 pm Poster Set-up Exhibit Hall B 8:00 am-3:00 pm Pre-Conference Workshops B119 & B118 5:00 pm – 8:00 pm Grand Opening of the Exhibit Hall and Welcome Reception Exhibit Hall B (Badge Required for Entry) SCHEDULE

8:00 AM – 3:00 PM Pre-Conference Workshop: Young Professionals B119 Sponsored by AMVAC 9:00 AM – 3:00 PM Pre-Conference Workshop: Learn the CDC Bottle Bioassay Janet McAllister B118 (Pre-registration is required) 1:00 PM – 5:00 PM AMCA Committee Meetings 1:00 PM – 2:00 PM Legislative & Regulatory C122 Membership C121 Finance C120 JAMCA Editorial board C126 2:00 PM – 3:00 PM Legislative & Regulatory C122 Publications C121 Science & Technology C120 3:00 PM – 4:00 PM Science & Technology C120 Public Relations C121 Best Management Practices C122 4:00 PM – 5:00 PM Training & Membership Education C120 Bylaws and Policy C121 Science & Technology SIT Subcommittee

2:00 PM – 4:00 PM Poster Set-Up Exhibit Hall 5:00 PM – 8:00 PM Grand Opening of the Exhibit Hall and Welcome Reception Exhibit Hall B (Badge Required for Entry) Welcome Reception is sponsored by Central Lice Sciences

1 DAY AT-A-GLANCE Tuesday, March 17, 2020 Tuesday, March 17, 2020

7:00 am – 5:30 pm Registration and Internet Hub* Exhibit Hall Lobby * early morning coffee and breakfast will be on your own 7:00 am – 5:30 pm Speaker Ready Room C125 8:00 am – 12:00 pm Plenary Session Oregon Ballroom 10:00 am – 10:30 am Refreshment Break Oregon Ballroom Lobby 12:00 pm – 1:45 pm President’s Luncheon and Exhibits Open Exhibit Hall B 1:45 pm – 3:15 pm Afternoon Sessions • Mosquito Lightning Symposium B112 • Legislative & Regulatory Symposium I B114 • History and Spread of WNV and SLEV strains in the Southwest Symposium B115 • Student Competition I B117

3:15 pm – 4:00 pm Refreshment Break/ Ice Cream Social Exhibit Hall B (Ticket Required) 4:00 pm – 5:30 pm Afternoon Sessions (continued) • 7th Arthropod Vector Highlights Symposium B112 • Legislative and Regulatory Symposium II B114 • Operations I B115 • Student Paper Competition II B117

5:45 pm – 7:15 pm Latin American Discussion B115 8:00 am – 12:00 pm PLENARY SESSIONS Moderator: Mark Breidenbaugh 8:00 AM – 12:00 PM Meeting Room: Oregon Ballroom

8:00 Call to Order Jason Kinley, AMCA President 8:05 Welcome to Portland Emilio Debess, State Public Health Veterinarian with Oregon State Public Health Acute and Communicable Disease Program 8:10 Program Announcements Mark Breidenbaugh, AMCA Vice President/ Program Chair 8:15 Presidential Address Jason Kinley 8:35 Awards Presentation Jason Kinley 9:05 AMCA Memorial Lecture Honoree: Lucas Terracina Lecturer: Scott Willis 10:00 Break – Sponsored by ADAPCO 10:30 The Entomological Society of America’s ACE Public Health, Willet Hossfeld 10:35 The American Mosquito Control Association’s Research Fund, The first 3 years,Craig Stoops 10:45 PL-1 The Reemergence of EEE in 2019: Challenges and Opportunities for Mosquito Control, Edward Walker 11:25 PL-2 Aerial application techniques: fundamental tools for mosquito management – past, present, and future, Mark Latham

President’s Luncheon and Exhibits Open 12:00 PM - 1:45 PM Exhibit Hall B

1:45 pm – 3:15 pm* AFTERNOON SESSIONS * unless otherwise noted

Mosquito Lightning Symposium Moderator: Ary Faraji 1:45 PM – 3:15 PM Meeting Room: B112 1 The weirdest of the weird mosquitoes of the world! Ary Faraji, Stephen Doggett, Christina Liew 2 Do tigers hunt during the day? Diel Activity of the Asian tiger mosquito, Aedes albopictus (Diptera: Culicidae), in Urban and Suburban Habitats of North America Isik Unlu 2 3 How Would Rambo Kill Mosquitoes? With 40mm Larvicide Grenades. Gregory Williams 4 Come out, come out, wherever you are! Hunting for Ixodes ticks in the Sierra Nevada Foothills Elizabeth S Andrews 5 What is the value of mosquito pool testing for CHIK, DEN, and ZIKA viruses in CONUS? Roxanne Connelly 6 Once-upon-a-time: Mosquitoes smell (parts) of you better at night Samuel S.C. Rund 7 Outbreak response - Choose your fate! Jeffrey T Eason 8 Chasing mosquitoes from Zanzibar to Papua New Guinea Jason H Richardson 9 Validated! Dr. John Crawford: mosquitoes, malaria and yellow fever Carl W Doud 10 The mosquito bucket list Sean Amodt 11 Is this working? An Applied-side approach to product assessment Sarah S Wheeler 12 Theoretical impacts of hurricanes on West Nile virus transmission Kevin A. Caillouet, Suzanne Robertson 13 There ain’t no party like a swarming party Catalina Alfonso-Parra 14 Mosquitoes pass through screens to enter traps Jerry Hogsette, Dan Kline 15 Something cool about mosquitoes: Are they capable of high altitude migration? Banu Kesavaraju 16 The Chaos after the Swarm Whitney Qualls 17 Dogs saved South Texas from Zika virus Gabriel Hamer 18 “It’s always been done that way.” Breaking operational norms to meet the challenges of a rapidly evolving vector control industry Jared Dever 19 How I became a mosquito sexologist Robert G. Hancock 20 Hunting Aedes papago in the Sonoran Desert Lawrence E. Reeves

3 Legislative and Regulatory Symposium I Moderator: Gary Goodman 1:45 PM – 3:15 PM Meeting Room: B114 1:45 21 Introduction to the Legislative and Regulatory Symposium Angela J. Beehler 1:48 22 AMCA’s Annual Washington Conference William Walton 1:55 23 CDC support to US states and territories through the ELC program Jeff Borchert 2:13 24 Tackling Local Pesticide Bans Angi Bailey, Katie Fast 2:28 25 Legalization of cannabis: operational and regulatory hurdles to mosquito control in California Samer Elkashef, Gary W Goodman, Peter Bonkrude, Jennifer Henke 2:43 26 An overview of pyrethroid pesticide registration: history, updates, and mosquito control implications Daniel Eugene Dawson 3:01 27 Pesticide residue on rice plants from mosquito control adulticide applications Marcia Reed, Sarah Wheeler, Samer Elkashef, Jay Gan, Jaylan Qiu

History and Spread of WNV and SLEV strains in the Southwest Symposium Moderator: Crystal Hepp and John Townsend 1:45 PM – 3:15 PM Meeting Room: B115 1:45 28 2019 Maricopa County WNV / SLE outbreak review John Townsend, James Will, Dan Damian 2:05 29 A history of arbovirus surveillance in the Coachella Valley, CA Jennifer A. Henke 2:25 30 Ecology of zoonotic flaviviruses in Metropolitan Phoenix, Arizona Nicholas Komar 2:55 31 Movement of WNV and SLEV in the southwestern United States: 2014-present Daryn E Erickson, Jill A Cocking, Jennifer Henke, Darrin Lemmer, Michael Valentine, David Engelthaler, Chase L Ridenour, John Townsend, Kirk Smith, Jim Will, Steven Young, Crystal M. Hepp 4 Student Competition I Moderator: Brian Byrd 1:45 PM – 3:15 PM Meeting Room: B117

1:45 32 The 31st Annual Student Paper Competition of the American Mosquito Control Association Brian D. Byrd 1:50 33 Photodegradation of Truck-Sprayed Etofenprox Kristina Lopez, Matthew Hetherington, Patrick Irwin, Christelle Guedot, Lyric Bartholomay, Susan Paskewitz 2:00 34 Observing Evolutionary Insecticide Resistance Changes using Permethrins in Aedes aegypti Xochitl Estrada, Christopher Vitek 2:10 35 Development of spatial mosquito repellents using biorational products Caleb L. Corona, James S. Klimavicz, Joel R. Coats 2:20 37 They don’t (always) bite: An ecological study of southeastern rock pool mosquitoes Corey A. Day, Eleanor G. Armstrong, Kaylin Lewandowski, Brian D. Byrd 2:30 38 Vertical transmission and venereal transmission of a Mexican strain of Zika virus in Aedes aegypti Jeremy S Marshall, John M. Thomas III, Christopher J. Vitek 2:40 39 Assessing knowledge, attitudes, practices and the risk of tick exposure of park visitors on Staten Island, New York Erin Hassett, Purva Shah, Maria Fernandez, Maria Diuk-Wasser, Samantha Centeno, Laura Harrington 2:50 40 Vector Competence of Aedes aegypti Influenced by Larvicide Exposure Robert L Aldridge, Barry W. Alto, Roxanne C. Connelly, Bernard A. Okech, Blair Siegfried, Kenneth J. Linthicum

3:15 pm – 4:00 pm ICE CREAM SOCIAL Exhibit Hall B (Badge Required for Entry, Ticket Required for Service) Sponsored by Valent BioSciences

5 4:00 pm – 5:30 pm* AFTERNOON SESSIONS * unless otherwise noted 7th Annual AMCA Arthropod Vector Highlight Symposium Moderator: Lee Cohnstaedt 4:00 PM – 5:30 PM 4:00 41 Highlights of vector control Gissella M. Vasquez 4:30 42 Highlights of mosquito biology, 2019 Rebecca Heinig 5:00 43 Highlights of mosquito control and research in Africa 2019 Silas Majambere

Legislative and Regulatory Symposium II Moderator: Gary Goodman 4:00 PM – 5:30 PM Meeting Room: B114 4:004 4 Mosquito control on National Wildlife Refuges William H. Meredith 4:05 45 Creation of a mosquito management plan on National Wildlife Refuges in the Pacific Northwest. Steve Kahl, Bridgette Flanders-Wanner 4:23 46 Pesticides and the ESA: Turning challenges into opportunities Ashlea Frank, Leah Duzy 4:41 47 Salmon recovery and mosquito control: Sharing a river corridor in the Yakima Basin Alexander Conley 4:59 48 ESA considerations in mosquito control: How new species listings can affect oury program Mark E Clifton 5:09 49 USFWS Technical Letter of Assistance for Endangered Species Act Compliance Paul R Bauman 5:19 50 Unmanned Aerial Systems (UAS) Legislative and Regulatory Updates Joel B Buettner

Operations I Moderator: Katie Williams 4:00 PM – 5:30 PM Meeting Room: B115 4:00 51 Controlling invasive Aedes species in Los Angeles County schools David Lopez 4:10 52 Automated county level mosquito surveillance program: combining existing traps with laboratory edge technology and GIS software Hanan Lepek 6 4:20 53 2019 Tangipahoa parish mosquito control operations and technology upgrades Colby Colona 4:30 54 Enhanced routing methods for truck mounted applications in urban environments Ruben S. Rosas, Steve Ramos 4:40 55 Overview of a private mosquito control program using best management practices Dan Killingsworth 4:50 56 An examination of field trials using a BG- Counter with custom fabricated stand in Charlotte County, FL Beth Kovach, Rebecca Owers, Brian Greig, Scott Schermerhorn 5:00 57 First time detection of Aedes aegypti in Placer County (Northern California) in 2019 Mario J Boisvert, Jake W Hartle, Joel Buettner 5:10 58 Initiating environment surveillance for arbovirus diseases after the passage of Tropical Storm Imelda in Harris County, Texas Maximea Vigilant, Dange Duguma, Chris Fredregill 5:20 59 Water lettuce (Pistia stratiotes) habitat associations of Mansonia species (spp) in Ave Maria, Florida Rachel B Bales, Drew Luckow, Peter Brake, Sara Grant, Michael Morrison, Nate Phillips, Keira J. Lucas

Student Competition II Moderator: Brian Byrd 4:00 PM – 5:30 PM Meeting Room: B117 4:00 60 A comparison of collection methods and check distances for invasive Asian long-horned tick, Haemaphysalis longicornis, in Westchester County, NY. Phurchhoki Sherpa, Nicholas Piedmonte, Kathryn Wunderlin, Laura Harrington, Richard Falco 4:10 61 Differentiating mosquito populations using genetic diversity Rachel Christine Malampy, Erin Schuenzel, Christopher Vitek

7 4:20 62 North American Mosquito Project: Population Genetics of Culex tarsalis using Crowdsourcing Methodology Julie C Tsecouras, William Walton, Lee Cohnstaedt 4:30 63 Genetic and phenotypic assessment of the insecticide susceptibility of Culex pipiens and Culex restuans in Illinois Kylee Noel, Chris Stone, Chang-Hyun Kim 4:40 64 Role of odorant receptors in Aedes aegypti reproduction Olayinka David, Andre Luis Costa-da-Silva, Matthew DeGennaro

5:45 PM – 7:15 PM Latin American Discussion B115

8 DAY AT-A-GLANCE Wednesday, March 18, 2020

7:00 am – 5:30 pm Registration and Internet Hub Exhibit Hall Lobby * early morning coffee and breakfast will be on your own 7:00 am – 5:30 pm Speaker Ready Room C125

10:00 am – 5:00 pm Trustee/Commissioner Tour Wednesday, March 18, 2020 Off-site Event (Ticket Required) 8:30 am – 10:00 am Morning Sessions • Vision 2020 for Resistance Management Symposium I B112 • NASA Earth Observations for Improved Vector-borne Disease Surveillance and Risk Characterization Symposium I B114 • Latin American Student Competition B115 • Operations II/Aerial Resources B117 • Spatial Repellents to Protect Civilian and Military: Laboratory and Field Evaluations Symposium I C124

10:00 am – 10:45 am Refreshment Break Exhibit Hall B

10:45 am – 12:15 pm Morning Sessions

• Vision 2020 for Resistance Management Symposium II B112 • Biology/Behavior I B114 • Latin American Symposium I B115 • Adult Control I B117 • Spatial Repellents to Protect Civilian and Military: Laboratory and Field Evaluations Symposium I C124 12:15 pm – 1:45 pm Poster Session Luncheon Exhibit Hall (Badge Required for Entry; Ticket Required)

12:15 pm – 4:00 pm Exhibits Open Exhibit Hall B (Badge Required for Entry; Ticket Required) 1:45 pm – 3:15 pm Afternoon Sessions • Twenty Years of West Nile Virus: Past, Present and Future Symposium I B112 • Biology/Behavior II B114 • Latin American Symposium II B115 • Adult Control II B117 • Young Professionals Symposium I C124 3:15 pm – 4:00 pm Refreshment Break Exhibit Hall B

4:00 pm – 5:30 pm Afternoon Sessions • Twenty Years of West Nile Virus: Past, Present and Future Symposium II B112 • Biology/Behavior III B114 • Mosquito Control District and DOD Collaborations Symposium B115 • Adult Control III B117 • Young Professionals Symposium II C124

5:30 pm – 6:30 pm Young Professionals Social Exhibit Hall B (Invitation Only Event) 8:30 am – 10:00 am* MORNING SESSIONS * unless otherwise noted Vision 2020 for Resistance Management: You might find if you seek Symposium I Moderator: Steven Su 8:30 AM – 10:00 AM Meeting Room: B112 8:307 6 Two years of insecticide resistance evaluations in the North Shore Suburbs of Chicago Justin Harbison 8:50 68 Efficacy andongevity L of Insect Growth Regulators Altosid® (Methoprene) and SumiLarv® (Pyriproxyfen) Against Culex quinquefasciatus Under Semi-natural Conditions in Orange County, Calif. Robert Cummings, Timothy Morgan, Sokanary Sun, Xiaoming Wang, Kiet Nguyen, David Taylor, Tianyun Su 9:10 69 Methoprene resistance in Aedes taeniorhynchus Mark Kartzinel, Eva Buckner 9:30 70 Risk assessment of resistance to biorational mosquito larvicides Tianyun Su 9:50 71 NEVBD pesticide resistance monitoring network: establishing a centralized network to increase regional capacity for pesticide resistance detection and monitoring James C. Burtis, Joseph D. Poggi, Joseph R. McMillan, Scott C. Crans, Scott R. Campbell, Amy Isenberg, Janice Pulver, Theodore G. Andreadis, Philip M. Armstrong, Laura C. Harrington

NASA Earth Observations for Improved Vector-borne Disease Surveillance and Risk Characterization Symposium I Moderator: Helena Chapman and John Haynes 8:30 AM – 10:00 AM Meeting Room: B114

8:30 72 Earth Observations Applied to a Changing World: NASA Health and Air Quality Applications John A Haynes 8:48 73 VectorSurv Gateway tools for tracking the spread of invasive Aedes and risk for Aedes-borne viruses Christopher M Barker 9:06 74 A Thermodynamic Paradigm for Studying Disease Vector’s Habitats & Life Cycles Using NASA’s NextGen Remote Sensing Instruments Jeffrey Luvall 9:24 75 Multiregion Modeling and Prediction of Human Arboviral Disease: West Nile Virus in South Dakota, Louisiana, and Elsewhere Justin K Davis 9:42 76 Using Satellite Data to Enhance One Health Networks in Vector Control Helena J Chapman 9 Latin American Student Competition Moderator: Catalina Alfonso-Parra and Lee Cohnstaedt 8:30 AM – 10:00 AM Meeting Room: B115 8:307 7 Amino acid and acylcarnitine profile in Aedes aegypti (L) during its life cycle and with exposure to permethrin. Olga Karina Villanueva-Segura, Christian Eduardo Flores-Solís, Mayra A. Gómez-Govea, Laura E. Martínez-de-Villarreal, Gustavo Ponce- García, Adriana E. Flores-Suárez, Margarita de la Luz Martínez-Fierro, Iván Delgado-Enciso, Irám Pablo Rodríguez-Sánchez 8:40 65 Macroelements and trace elements profiles correlated with Aedes aegypti sex and live stages Mariana Jimenez, Mayra Gomez, Iram Rodriguez 8:50 79 Identification of Aedes aegypti miRNAs onservedc in class Insecta organisms Daniel Rafael Saldaña-Torres, María de Lourdes Garza-Rodríguez, Hongwei Liang, Margarita de la Luz Martínez-Fierro, Ivan Delgado-Enciso, Laura E. Martínez-de-Villarreal, Yu Zhou, Adriana E. Flores-Suárez, Xi Chen, Chen- Yu Zhang, Gustavo Ponce-García, Irám Pablo Rodríguez-Sánchez 9:00 80 Anopheles species naturally infected with Plasmodium parasites in the Colombian Pacific region Estefani Piedrahita, Vanessa Saavedra, Yeraldine Zuluaga, Juan Pablo Velez, Margarita Correa 9:10 66 Isolation and characterization of bacteria from Aedes aegypti populations and their participation in the insecticide degradation. Diego Carrillo, Mayra Gomez, Iram Rodriguez

9:20 159 A study on distribution and density of Aedes aegypti in the city of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, using entomologic traps - ovitrams for a definition of entomological risk of transmission of dengue Renato Maspero

9:30 83 Surveillance of mosquito species associated with sylvan communities on the Mexico-Guatemala border Rafael Vázquez, Rahuel Chan, Josué De la Cruz, Carlos Espinoza, Cassandra González, Fabián Correa, Aldo Ortega 9:40 84 Evaluation of the efficacy of two larvicide pyriproxyfen formulations for the control of Aedes aegypti using spreading traps in three neighborhoods of Rio de Janeiro Rosilene Alcantara Pinto

10 9:50 85 Blood-feeding preferences of mosquitoes (Diptera: Culicidae) in five different types of land use in Campeche, México Paulina paw Alcocer, Carlos Antonio Abella- Medrano, Andrea Rubí Jiménez, René Segura, Rafael Ojeda Operations II/Aerial Resources Moderator: Krystal Seger 8:30 AM – 10:00 AM Meeting Room: B117 8:30 86 Rise of the machines: BG-Counters’ expanding role in CMCD’s mosquito surveillance program Rebecca Heinig, Jorge Puente, Sara Grant, Peter Brake, Nate Phillips, Keira Lucas 8:40 87 Novel automated sorter: larvae, male and female pupae continuous separator Hanan Lepek 8:50 88 Collection performance of the new BG-Pro Line mosquito traps in comparison to standard mosquito traps in various locations around the world Jennifer McCaw, Caro Degener, Alvaro E. Eiras, Scott A. Ritchie, Charles Abadam 9:00 89 Evaluation of In2Care Mosquito Trap in the United States Virgin Islands Krystal R. Seger, Brett Ellis 9:10 90 Record keeping requirements for small Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (sUAVs) conducting mosquito control Edward S. Horvath, Danta Marie Smith 9:20 91 Different Drones, Different Capabilities: One Size Does Not Fit All Peter D Brake, Keira J Lucas, Patrick P Linn, Sara Grant 9:30 92 What has the latest EEE outbreak taught us about protecting public health? Clark E. Wood, George Balis, Wally Terrill 9:40 93 Aerial Trials Utilizing Imperium: Effect of release height on model predictability. Broox G.V. Boze 9:50 94 Utilizing Drone Technology to Increase Employee Safety Jon Peterson

Spatial Repellents to Protect Civilian and Military: Laboratory and Field Evaluations Symposium I Moderator: Seth C. Britch 8:30 AM – 10:00 AM Meeting Room: C124 8:30 95 Efficacy of a ansfluthrintr spatial repellent to protect against malaria and Aedes-borne viruses: outcomes from phase III field trials. Nicole L Achee

11 8:45 96 Transfluthrin derivatives with unique repellent and mosquitocidal properties Jeffrey Bloomquist, Gary Richoux, Liu Yang, Kenneth Linthicum 9:00 97 Field evaluation of transfluthrin treated military materials against Phlebotomine sand flies (Diptera: Psychodidae) in Thailand Alongkot Ponlawat, Nattaphol Pathawong, Arissara Pongsiri, Seth C. Britch, Robert L. Aldridge, Frances V Goldens, Kenneth J. Linthicum 9:15: 98 Transfluthrin induced fecundity decline in Aedes albopictus and Aedes aegypti Christopher S. Bibbs, Daniel A. Hahn, Phillip E. Kaufman, Rui-De Xue 9:30 99 Efficacy of ansfluthrintr applications against mosquitoes and sand flies in a warm temperate Mediterranean environment in Greece Alexandra Chaskopoulou, Seth C Britch, Kenneth J. Linthicum, Daniel L. Kline, Michail Miaoulis, Ioannis A Giantsis, Frances V Golden, Robert L. Aldridge 9:45 100 Sustained-release devices for Transfluthrin-based repellents Nagarajan Rajagopal, Chris Batich, Daniel Kline

10:00 AM – 10:45 AM BREAK, EXHIBITS OPEN Exhibit Hall B Break Sponsored by Valent BioSciences

10:45 am – 12:15 pm* MORNING SESSIONS * unless otherwise noted

Vision 2020 for Resistance Management: You might find if you seek Symposium II Moderator: Steven Su 10:45 AM – 12:15 PM Meeting Room: B112 10:551 10 Resistance profile of Florida container mosquitoes Casey Parker, C. Roxanne Connelly, Daviela Ramirez 11:15 102 Exploring pyrethroid resistance in Culex tarsalis Tara C. Thiemann, Sumiko De La Vega, Bonnie M. Ryan 11:35 103 High prevalence of pesticide resistant Kdr genotypes in Culex quinquefasciatus mosquitoes in San Diego County, California Ashwini Brahms, Saran Grewal, Allison Bray, Nikos Gurfield 11:55 104 Recap on Pyrethroid Resistance in Mosquitoes Nannan Liu 12 Biology/Behavior I Moderator: Alexandria Watkins 10:45 AM – 12:15 PM Meeting Room: B114 10:45 105 Ornamental bromeliads of local Botanical Gardens serve as breeding sites for pyrethroid-resistant disease vector mosquito species in Collier County, Florida Alexandria Watkins, Cameron Cole, Emory Babcock, Keira J Lucas 10:55 106 Mosquito flight times. A bottle trap summary. Danny M. Miller 11:05 107 Influence of sex ratio and density on the comparative repellency of IR3535® against caged Aedes, Anopheles and Culex mosquitoes Howard Epstein, Ph.D., Silvana Nakayama, Jutta Zurlage 11:15 108 Developments for the Aedes aegypti sterile insect technique program in Lee County, FL Rachel Morreale, Steven Stenhouse, David Hoel, Aaron Lloyd 11:25 109 What happens on islands, doesn’t stay on islands: Patterns of synchronicity in mosquito nuisance and host seeking activity between a mangrove island and an adjacent coastal development Brian J. Johnson, Russell Manby, Gregor J. Devine 11:35 110 Current distribution of invasive Aedes species in the city of South El Monte, then and now Harold A. Morales 11:45 111 Cisterns as challenging peridomestic Aedes aegypti habitats in the United States Virgin Islands Krystal R. Seger, David Delgado, Corey Day, Esther M. Ellis, Gouthami Rao, Brett Ellis, Brian Byrd 11:55 112 Comparison study of host seeking behaviors between female Aedes aegypti, and Culex quinquefasciatus using high-throughput screening system Dae-Yun Kim, Theerachart Limpraset, Michael John Bangs, Theeraphap Chareonviriyaphap 12:05 113 A survey of mosquito diversity collected by the New DynaTrap LED flying insect traps. Braden Wojahn, Georgina V Bingham, Karen McKenzie

13 Latin American Symposium I Moderator: Lee Cohnstaedt and Catalina Alfonso-Parra 10:45 AM – 12:15 PM Meeting Room: B115 10:45 114 Multi-sectoral participation and engagement of traditional authorities in the successful planning and implementation of a long-lasting insecticide- treated hammock net campaign in a remote indigenous region of Panama Mariela Mosquera Renteria, Marcela Outten, Sol Bergido, Nicholas Presley, Dagoberto Atencio, Cipriano Ayarza, Tara Seethaler, Lizbeth Cerezo, Santiago Cherigo, Eneristo Robinson, Leopoldo Gonzalez, Daragh A. Gibson 10:55 115 Spatiol-temporal dynamics of Aedes aegypti in Castilla la Nueva, Meta, Colombia. Results of the surveillance strategy with ovitraps Adolfo Vásquez-Trujillo, Flor Gutierrez-Melo, Wilson Pulido-Murillo, Doris Cardona-Arango, Angela Segura-Cardona, Gabriel Parra-Henao 11:05 116 Anopheles composition in the malaria endemic region of Gracias a Dios, La Mosquitia, Honduras Allan Reyes Garcias, Erick Alvarez, Neila Julieth Mina Possu, Daragh A Gibson, Lizeth Cartagena, Jose Orlinder Nicolas Zambrano, Marissa Bordas, Efrain Burgos, Diana Nuñez Azzad, Sheila B Ogoma, Tara Seethaler, Wilberto Montalvan 11:15 117 The role of the community engagement in an Integrated Vector Management Program in Puerto Rico Julieanne Miranda-Bermúdez, Natasha DeLeon-Rodriguez, Rafael Saavedra-Hernández, Gabriela Algarín-Zayas, Marianyoly Ortiz-Ortiz, Grayson Brown, Luz Crespo-Valentín 11:25 118 A regional arbovirus surveillance system for the Caribbean basin and Latin America Nicole M Nazario, Joanelis Medina, Cesar Piovanetti, Marianyoly Ortiz, Brown Grayson 11:35 119 Biological effectiveness of Icon® 2.5 EW (Lambda- cyhalothrin 25 g. a.i. /L) for the control of mosquito Aedes aegypti vector of Dengue, Chikungunya and Zika virus in Southern México. Luis Alberto Cisneros Vázquez, José Genaro Ordoñez González, Américo David Rodríguez Ramírez, Patricia Penilla Navarro, Kenia Mayela Valdez Delgado, Rogelio Danis Lozano 11:45 120 Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) testing in South America, Caribbean and the United States Brent Satterfield, Seth Egan

14 11:55 121 Use of drones at fine scale for the association of demographic, socioeconomic and environmental factors with the abundance of Aedes aegypti (Linnaeus) mosquitoes Diptera: Culicidae, in persistent areas for the transmission of Dengue, Chikungunya and Zika Kenia Mayela Valdez Delgado, Ildefonso Fernández Salas, Rogelio Danis Lozano, Luis Alberto Cisneros Vázquez, José Genaro Ordóñez González, David Alejandro Moo Llanes 12:05 122 Effectiveness of Actellic 300 CS (Pirimiphos-methyl 28.16%) as alternative ULV formulation to control indoor and outdoor adult Aedes aegypti resting populations, at Monterrey, Northeastern Mexico Ildefonso Fernandez-Salas, Rosa Ma Sanchez- Casas, Jorge E. Rodriguez-Rojas, Ma Teresa DJ Ambriz-Barajas

Adult Control I Moderator: Larry Hribar 10:45 AM – 12:15 PM Meeting Room: B117

10:45 123 Toxicity of -fluvalinate, -cyhalothrin, and -cypermethrin to Aedes aegypti from Marathon, Florida, USA Lawrence J Hribar, Heidi L Murray 10:55 124 Excito-repellency activity of Cananga odorata (Magnoliales: Annonaceae) against mosquitoes Chutipong Sukkanon, Michael J. Bangs, Theeraphap Chareonviriyaphap 11:05 125 Evaluation of Aedes aegypti suppression using Wolbachia Infected Males in Houston TX: methodology and preliminary findings. Saul Lozano, Kevin S Pritts, Dagne Duguma, Chris Fredregill, Roxanne Connelly 11:15 126 Pepper extracts synergize the effects of pyrethroids via multiple mechanisms in Aedes aegypti Ed Norris, Jeffrey Bloomquist 11:25 127 Sterile Insect Technique (SIT) for vector control in the real world Ralph Breslauer 11:35 128 Different mutations in the Voltage-sensitive sodium channel in Aedes aegypti confer variable levels of resistance to pyrethroids and DDT Juan J Silva, Cedric N Kouam, Jeffrey G Scott 11:45 129 Cyclic barrier applications in Panama City Beach, Florida: Utilizing bifenthrin and a Buffalo urbineT for wide area management control of mosquitoes within public spaces. Michael T Riles, James Clauson, Cindy Mulla, Lee Duke, Edward Summers

15 11:55 130 Oxidase, esterase and kdr-associated pyrethroid resistance identified in Culex quinquefasciatus field populations from Collier County, Florida Keira J Lucas, Rachel B. Bales, Kaci D. McCoy, Caroline Weldon

Spatial Repellents to Protect Civilian and Military: Laboratory and Field Evaluations Symposium II Moderator: Seth C. Britch 10:45 AM – 12:15 PM Meeting Room: C124

10:45 131 Transfluthrin Spatial Repellent on US Military Materials Reduces Mosquito Incursion in a Hot- Arid Environment Robert L Aldridge, Seth C Britch, Kenneth J. Linthicum, Daniel L Kline, Frances V Golden, Jeremy Wittie, Jennifer A Henke, Kim Y Hung, Arturo Gutierrez, Melissa Snelling, Cirilo Lora 11:00 132 Measuring Trace Airborne Transfluthrin Threshold Concentrations Bradley Jay Willenberg, Michael Kwan, Alexandar Bosak, Nicholas Smith, Mona Mathew, Andrew Dickerson 11:15 133 Potential for use of transfluthrin against stable flies, Stomoxys calcitrans Jerome A. Hogsette, Daniel L. Kline 11:30 134 Next Generation Controlled Release Devices for Sustained Protection Against Mosquitoes Noel Elman, Sebastian D’hers, Daniel Kline, Lee Cohnstaedt, Melynda Perry, Ulrich Bernier, Craig Stoops, Gissella Vasquez, Michael Fischer, Carmen Flores, Jennifer Stevenson 11:45 135 IVCC: Partnering on bite prevention product development in Africa and Asia Jason H Richardson 12:00 136 Potential US military applications of transfluthrin: treated materials, emanators, and space sprays Seth C Britch

Exhibits Open 12:15 PM – 4:00 PM Exhibit Hall B

16 Poster Session Luncheon 12:15 PM – 1:45 PM Exhibit Hall B

Adult Control P-01 Comparison of Mosquito Repellency Efficacy on Textiles Sprayed with DEET and Permethrin Manni Mo, Songying Mo P-02 Monitoring insecticide resistance patterns of Aedes aegypi and Aedes albopictus in Texas Thalia Rios, Christopher Vitek P-03 Ultra-smooth and hydrophobic surface coating for disrupting the landing of mosquito Chang-Ho Choi, Dong Gun Kim P-04 Screening for insecticide resistance in Aedes sp. and Culex sp. across Central Iowa Samuel James Andrews, Caleb L Corona, Joel Coats P-05 Deploying biorational products as components of mosquito bait strategies Caleb L. Corona, James S. Klimavicz, Joel R. Coats P-06 Study on mosquito control using integrated mosquito management (IMM) in Ansan, South Korea Sumi Na, Jiseon Doh, Jae Seung Yoo, Myoung-ae Yi, Yeon Jae Bae, Hoonbok Yi P-07 An assessment of a lethal ovitrap’s efficacy for time- mortality in a zone of high probability concerning populations of Aedes albopictus (Skuse, 1895) Michael T Riles, James Clauson, Katlyn Cullen, Mark Clifton P-08 Study on current status of mosquitoes in Sejong, South Korea using mosquito trap Jiseon Doh, Sumi Na, Myoung-ae Yi, Young-Cheol Yang, Jae Seung Yoo, Hoonbok Yi P-09 Logistics of a 2,000 trap mosquito surveillance program Nicole Nazario, Jose Sanchez, Pablo Rios, Cesar Piovanetti, Marianyoly Ortiz, Grayson Brown, Lucy Crespo P-10 Does temperature influence mosquito susceptibility to insecticides Ludmila Adobea Akyea, Christopher Vitek P-11 The Protective Power of Nootkatone Jean Amick, Giovanni Salerno P-12 Using annual pesticide resistance testing results of the mosquito vectors Aedes albopictus and Culex pipiens to guide the procurement and application of adulticides in Suffolk, A.V Charles F Abadam P-13 Geospatial Response Identification System (GRIdS): Developing a Risk-Based Driven West Nile Virus Response Grid System using ArcGIS Hot-Spot Analysis Kiet Nguyen, Tim Morgan, Amber Semrow, Laura Krueger, Sokanary Sun, Robert Cummings 17 Behavior/Biology P-14 Comparative field evaluation of the CDC light traps baited with different colored lights and attractants for collecting Phlebotomine sand flies (Diptera: Psychodidae) in Thailand. Nattaphol Pathawong, Thanyalak Fansiri, Arissara Pongsiri, Silas A Davidson, Alongkot Ponlawat P-15 Chronologic Age Characterization of Mosquitoes using IR Spectroscopy and Chemometrics Bradley Guilliams, Harrison Edmonds, Scott Huffman, Brian Byrd P-16 Mosquito population characterization in two urban farms in Miami-Dade County, Florida Augusto C. Carvajal-Velez, Andre Wilke, Chalmers Vazquez, William Petrie, John C. Beier P-17 Socio-ecological risk factors for mosquito production in residential neighborhoods Allison T Parker P-18 Is water the most important stimulus for oviposition site- seeking Aedes aegypti mosquitoes? Stephanie Musick, Leena Visnak, Robert Hancock, PhD P-19 Adult Mosquito Identification using IR Spectroscopy and Chemometrics Harrison Edmonds, Bradley Guilliams, Connor Larmore, Lamyae Sroute, Scott Huffman, Brian Byrd

Disease/Vector Studies P-20 Evidence of West Nile virus and Saint Louis encephalitis virus in pools of mosquitoes testing negative for both viruses using real-time PCR Steven T Peper, Cynthia Reinoso Webb, Shannon L Johnson, Cheryl D Gleasner, Bethany G Bolling, Steven M. Presley P-21 Mosquito-borne disease surveillance in South Texas Christopher Vitek, Juan Garcia, John Thomas P-22 Blood meal analysis and virus detection in mosquitoes collected from U.S. Air Force installations, 2018 - 2019 Leah Colton, Aubri M Pritchett, Faye Geary P-23 First report of natural vertical transmission of dengue virus in Aedes aegypti (Linnaeus) in Koror, Palau Aidil Rahman, Eden Uchel, Tmong Udui, Osiro Lorin, Jorge Munoz, Gilberto Santiago P-24 Towards a semi-automatic early warning system for vector- borne diseases. Panagiotis Pergantas, Chrisovalantis Malesios, Andreas Tsatsaris, Marios Kondakis, Iokasti Perganta, Yiannis Tselentis, Nikos Demiris P-25 Dengue virus Transmission Ability of Aedes albopictus in Korea Yang Sung-Chan, Cho shin-Hyeong

18 P-26 Evaluation of a large scale Dengue Virus surveillance technology using adult oviposition traps in Espirito Santo state, Brazil Carlos V Peçanha, Amanda C Freitas, Ana Paula M V Matos, Victor A I Maia, Bruna R D Souza, Lucas F R Zanandrez P-27 Early season predictors of West Nile virus activity in Lowndes County, Georgia Mark Blackmore, Emily Evans, Dariana Rodriguez, Christopher Adam Slaton P -28 Evaluation of WNV and SLE co-infected mosquito samples in Maricopa County, AZ James Will, John Townsend, Dan Damian, Kirk Smith, Steven Young P-29 The effects of yriproxyfenp on Aedes albopictus fitness and the potential for non-target dissemination Corey L Brelsfoard, Cameron Crabtree P-30 Jamestown Canyon virus associations with Michigan mosquitoes: 2018-2019 Edward Walker, Mary McCarry, Chuck Pearce, John Keven, Rebecca Brandt, William Stanuszek P-31 Testing for Wolbachia infections in Aedes aegypti from El Salvador Andrea Joyce, Ryan Torres, Jose Luis Ramirez

Education P-32 Harnessing the Power of the Science Classroom for Outreach Education Wendy M Samz, Jenifer McBride, Mark McCreary, Eric Jackson P-33 Vector Biology Degree Programs, Training, and Research at Uniformed Services University James C. Dunford P-34 Utilizing Community Partnerships to Provide Interactive STEM Learning Opportunities Rebecca Riley, Ismat Bhuiyan, Elisa Castillo P-35 APC: Trials of an automated mosquito dispenser for laboratory rearing of mosquitoes Mark Quentin Benedict, Priscila Bascuñán, Ellen M Dotson P-36 Bait & switch: determining a preferred CO2 source for mosquito surveillance Rachel E Pollreis

Genetics P-37 Utilization of qPCR to enhance current methodologies to monitor insecticide resistance in Harris County, Texas Kendra Dagg, Elaine Chu, Isabel Cornejo, Christina Alvarez, Chris Fredregill

19 GIS/GOS P-39 Mapping genetic diversity and insecticide resistance of Aedes aegypti in Florida Helen Wagner, Andre da Costa da Silva, Anthony Bellantuono, Matthew DeGennaro

Larval Control P-41 Prioritizing door-to-door yard inspections based on prior breeding status to control Aedes aegypti Crystal Grippin, Jesse Erandio, Mark Nakata, Mir Bear-Johnson P-42 Cemetery vector control: key in the implementation of larviciding in cemeteries breathing sites. Jose C Sanchez, Nicole Nazario, Grayson Brown, Marianyoly Ortiz, Lucy Crespo P-43 Characterization and efficacy of VectoBac® WDG against Aedes aegypti utilizing Unmanned Aerial Systems Keira J Lucas, Peter Brake, Sara Grant, Leanne Lake, Rachel Bales, Richard Ryan, Nate Phillips P-44 Multicentric evaluation of Sumilarv 2MR in semi-field for Aedes aegypti control Josiane Nogueira Müller, Allan Kardec Ribeiro Galardo, Maria de Lourdes da Graça Macoris, Maria Alice Varjal Melo Santos, Ana Paula Sales de Andrade Corrêa, José Bento Pereira Lima

Latin American P-45 Mechanisms associated with pyrethroid resistance in populations of Aedes aegypti (Diptera: Culicidae) along the Caribbean coast of Colombia Paula Pareja Loaiza, Liliana Santacoloma Varon, Gabriela Rey Vega, Doris Gomez Camargo, Ronald Maestre Serrano, Audrey Lenhart P-46 Susceptibility to pyrethroids and kdr mutation L1014F in populations of Culex quinquefasciatus in Colombia Ronald Maestre Serrano, Juan Lara Cobos, Doris Gómez Camargo, Gustavo Ponce Garcia, Paula Pareja Loaiza, Adriana E. Flores P-47 Population genetics of the malaria vector Anopheles cruzii (Diptera: Culicidae) in areas with different levels of anthropogenic modifications Laura C. Multini, Ana L.S. Souza, André B. B. Wilke, Mauro T. Marrelli

P-48 Mosquito control with parasitic nematodes Romanomermis iyengari and Strelkovimermis spiculatus in water of breeding sites of mosquito larvae Noemi Juarez-Perez, Rafael Perez-Pacheco, Nadia Angeles-Valencia, Rafael Perez-Pacheco

20 Management P-49 Surveillance and management of Mansonia in power plant area José Bento P Lima, Allan KR Galardo, Nercy VR Furtado, Noel F Santos Neto, Jéssica Fernanda S Barroso, Dario P Carvalho, Kaio N Ribeiro, Cynara M Rodovalho P-50 Using a spatially explicit mosquito population model to assess mosquito-borne risk in the US Southern High Plains Daniel Eugene Dawson, Chris J. Salice, Lucas Heintzman P-51 Insecticide resistance evaluation of Culex quinquefasciatus in Jackson, MS Milena C Guajardo, Broox Boze, Kris New, Mariah “Cassie” L Scott, Cara Nighohossian, Janet C McAllister

New Product Trials P-52 Toxic effects of botanical extracts on adult and immature stages of Aedes aegypti and Culex pipiens mosquitoes Nicholas A Panella, Dominic Rose

Other P-53 Performance of topical natural 25b exempt mosquito repellents in Florida and Mali, West Africa Gunter C. Muller, Mohamad M. Traore, Edita E. Revay, Amy Junnila, Aboubakr S. Kone, Rabiatou A. Diarra, Sekou F. Traore, Rui-de Xue P-54 Traditional and Novel Vector Projects in Texas Funded through the Centers for Disease Control 2017 Hurricane Crisis Cooperative Agreement Heather Marie Ward, Whitney A Qualls P-55 Efficacy of CDC bottle bioassay kits over time in insecticide resistance testing Cara Nighohossian, Cassie Scott, Milena Guajardo, Janet McAllister P-56 Topical trials in St. Tammany, LA: the state of susceptibility toward pyrethroids and organophosphates Nicholas DeLisi, Sydney Johnson, Lisa Rowley P-57 Determining insecticide resistance levels and resistance mechanisms in populations of Culex tarsalis in San Joaquin County, California Sumiko De La Vega, Bonnie Ryan, Shaoming Huang, Eddie Lucchesi, Tara Thiemann P-58 Yeast fermentation as a cost affordable CO2 source for BG-Sentinel traps Mark Nakata, Crystal Grippin, Jesse Erandio, Mir Bear-Johnson P-59 Local tick diversity and abundance on companion animals in Richmond County, Georgia Annie Rich Thompson, Tiffany Nguyen P-60 Combating Zika and Future Threats: GO Mosquito Community Challenge Campaign Russanne D. Low, Theresa Schwerin, Renee Codsi

21 Systematics P-61 State-level Mosquito Species Distributions and their Voucher Status in the NMNH Collection Alexander Potter, David B Pecor

1:45 pm – 3:15 pm* AFTERNOON SESSIONS * unless otherwise noted

Twenty Years of West Nile Virus: Past, Present and Future Symposium I Moderator: Samer Elkashef 1:15 PM – 3:15 PM Meeting Room: B112

1:47 137 Overview of West Nile Virus in the United States Janet C McAllister 2:07 138 Changing the Public Perception of Mosquito Control David Brown 2:19 139 Responding to WNv disease outbreaks in areas without established mosquito control districts Daniel Markowski 2:31 140 Genomic epidemiology of West Nile virus in California Karthik Gangavarapu 2:43 141 WNv in Dallas County Texas Scott Sawlis 2:55 142 West Nile Virus in North Dakota: 20 Years of Perspective from the Northern Plains Benjamin Prather 3:07 143 West Nile in Louisiana, the Surveillance Perspective Gary A Balsamo, Christine Scott-Waldron, Sean Simonson, Julius Tonzel

Biology/Behavior II Moderator: Chris Lesser 1:15 PM – 3:15 PM Meeting Room: B114

1:454 14 Attraction of Aedes aegypti and Ae. albopictus to a Synthetic Blend of Phytochemicals in a Mesocosm. Robert Hutchison, Babak Ebrahimi, Woodbridge Foster 1:55 145 Novel silver-doped cerium oxide nanoparticles halt maturation of developing ovarioles in adult Aedes aegypti mosquitoes Mona Doshi, Alexandar Bosak, Craig Neal, Nour Isis, Udit Kumar, Aadithya Jeyaranjan, Tamil Selvan Sakthivel, Sushant Singh, Sudipta Seal, Bradley Jay Willenberg

22 2:05 146 Bloodmeal and genetic admixture analyses of Culex pipiens complex (Diptera: Culicidae) mosquitoes in Chicago, Illinois Linda Kothera, John-Paul Mutebi, Joan L Kenney, Kali D Saxton-Shaw, Michael P Ward, Harry M Savage 2:15 147 Sublethal acoustic rupture revealed novel insights of larval mosquito respiration Herbert Joseph Nyberg 2:25 148 Mosquito Fauna after Extensive Flooding in Brownsville, TX Arturo Rodriguez, Fred Barnes, Jesus Rodriguez, Henry Presas, John-Paul Mutebi, Erik Ostrum, Kristen Burkhalter 2:35 149 New records of an exotic louse (Phthiraptera: Ischnocera: Trichodectidae) phoretic on two mosquitoes (Diptera: Culicidae) in Florida Dave Pelley, Sandor Kelly 2:45 150 Effect of elevation on Ixodes pacificus nymph seasonality and abundance in the Sierra Nevada foothills Elizabeth S Andrews, Mark Novak 2:55 151 Comparison of the new Biogents BG-Pro with BG-Sentinel 2 and CDC light traps Jay P Kiser, Karen I Akaratovic, Charles F Abadam

Latin American Symposium II Organizer/Moderator: Lee Cohnstaedt and Catalina Alfonso-Parra 1:15 PM – 3:15 PM Meeting Room: B115 1:45 152 Spatial variation of insecticide resistance in Aedes aegypti from Tapachula, Mexico Francisco Solis Santoyo, Americo D Rodriguez, Karla Saavedra-Rodriguez, R. Patricia Penilla Navarro, Daniel Sánchez, Alfredo Castillo, Alma D López Solís, Cristina Rodriguez, José G Ordóñez González, Geovanni Vázquez Samoya, Elsa P Contreras Mejia, William C Black IV 1:55 153 Design and evaluation of transfluthrin release devices as measure of protection against the bite of mosquito Aedes aegypti Jose Luis Torres-Estrada, Keila Elizabeth Paiz-Moscoso, Florencio Ricardo Diaz-Morales, Ingrid Marcela Quintero-Donis, John Paul Grieco, Nicole Louise Achee, Ildefonso Fernandez-Salas 2:05 154 The use of the Mosquito Magnet Trap for entomological surveillance in Venezuela Yasmin Rubio-Palis, Hernmán Guzmán, Simón Caura

23 2:15 155 Evaluation of a metofluthrin release device as a measure of protection against Aedes aegypti bites Jose Luis Torres-Estrada, Keila Elizabeth Paiz- Moscoso, Ildefonso Fernandez-Salas, Jose Ignacio Navarro-Kraul, John Paul Grieco, Nicole Louise Achee 2:25 156 Effect of two insecticide paints, for the control of Aedes aegypti mosquitoes under laboratory and housing conditions in the miguel aleman village, Sonora, México. (2017-2019). Alejandro Villegas-Trejo, Jorge Castañeda- Gomez, Ricardo Arce-Vega, Jorge F Mendez- Galvan, Marco A Dominguez- Galera, Javier A Pruñosa, Gerardo Alvarez-Hernandez 2:35 157 Low-tech solutions for mosquito surveillance Nathan Burkett-Cadena 2:45 158 Toxic Sugars: Potential Insecticide to Anopheles darlingi and Aedes aegypti in the Peruvian Amazon Karin S Escobedo-Vargas, Maria Bosantes, Victor M Lopez-Sifuentes, Gissella M Vasquez, Michael L Fisher 3:05 160 Life tables of an Aedes aegypti population under uncontrolled laboratory conditions of Bogotá, Colombia. Jesús Eduardo Escobar, Jeimy Tatiana Sua, Diego Soler-Tovar, Ligia Inés Moncada

Adult Control II Moderator: Turnipseed 1:15 PM – 3:15 PM Meeting Room: B117

1:45 161 Outdoor screen house tests of tiki torches fueled with citronella and cedar oil against Aedes aegypti John P Smith, Marjorie Ann Smith 1:55 162 Recent advances in Smart Trap development Michael Weber, Martin Geier, Maximilian Epple, Armin Kordus 2:05 163 Evaluation of insecticide resistance in Aedes aegypti in the Florida Keys Heidi Murray 2:15 164 First Universal Culex Mosquito Reverse Transcriptase PCR Assay Detecting a Single Nucleotide Polymorphism Associated with Knockdown Resistance to Pyrethroids Kelli Hager, Erick Gaona, Amy Kistler, Kalani Ratnasiri, Hanna Retallack, Miguel Barretto, Sarah Wheeler, Eric Haas-Stapleton

24 2:25 165 Comparative behavioral responses of Aedes aegypti, Aedes albopictus and Culex quequinfasciatus (Diptera: Culicidae) to plants base repellent of vetiver compounds Jirod Nararak, Sylvie Manguin, Theeraphap Chareonviriyaphap 2:35 166 The Male Aedes Sound Trap: Field results from Latin American and Pacific regions. Kyran M Staunton, Jianyi Liu, Wei Xiang, Stephan Karl, Jacob Crawford, Pablo Manrique- Saide, Nicole L Achee, John Grieco, Nigel Snoad, Thomas R. Burkot, Scott A. Ritchie 2:45 167 Hindsight is 20/20 in 2020: Learning from the past to optimize pest management practices with malathion (Fyfanon® ULV Mosquito and Fyfanon® EW Insecticide) Donald Powers, Rakim Turnipseed 2:55 168 Multi-year comparison of insecticide resistance in Aedes aegypti and Ae. albopictus mosquitos collected from US/Mexico border cities Heather M. Hernandez, Christopher Vitek, Whitney Qualls 3:05 169 Efficacy of a new mode of action compound Imergard™ WP for Indoor Residual Spraying compared to ActellicTM 300CS measured in a community randomised entomological study Carly Marshall, Olukayode Odufuwa, David Kaftan, Jason Moore, Adam Saddler, David Stewart, Amanda Ross, Sarah Moore

Young Professionals Symposium I & Panel Discussion: Celebrating 10 years of the AMCA Young Professionals Group: Finding your Niche Moderator: Kristy Burkhalter 1:15 PM – 3:15 PM Meeting Room: C124 1:45 Welcome and Introductions 2:00 Panel Discussion and Q&A

Panel: Levy Sun, San Gabriel Valley Mosquito & Vector Control District Emily Dugas, ADAPCO Sydney Crawley, The Scotts Miracle-Gro Company Christopher Bibbs, Central Life Sciences

25 3:15 PM – 4:00 PM BREAK, EXHIBITS OPEN Exhibit Hall B Break Sponsored by Univar Environmental Science

4:00 pm – 5:30 pm* AFTERNOON SESSIONS * unless otherwise noted

Twenty Years of West Nile Virus: Past, Present and Future Symposium II Moderator: Samer Elkashef 4:00 PM – 5:30 PM Meeting Room: B112 4:00 170 West Nile virus in the Northeast: current challenges and future directions Priscilla Matton 4:12 171 More than West Nile virus - maintaining priorities within a full vector program Jennifer A. Henke, Jeremy Wittie 4:24 172 Making the most of mosquito and arbovirus surveillance data Christopher M Barker 4:42 173 Vector index as a driver for control Roxanne Connelly, Brad J. Biggerstaff, Hannah E. Romo 4:54 174 Real-time West Nile virus forecasts during 2018 Nicholas DeFelice 5:06 175 CDC perspective and recommendations for future West Nile Virus vector control Roxanne Connelly, Christopher Gregory

Biology/Behavior III Moderator: Neil Vickers 4:00 PM – 5:30 PM Meeting Room: B114 4:00 176 Attraction to humans by male Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus mosquitoes in an air flow olfactometer Shawn N,D Ward, Robert G Hancock, Connor O’Brien-Stoffa 4:10 177 Larval violence in Neotropical jungle mosquitoes: investigations of interspecific predation mechanics in two Sabethine mosquitoes Taylor E Boyd, Shannon M MacFadden, Robert Hancock 4:20 178 The curious case of nasophilia in Sabethes mosquitoes: Mechanisms and cues of a successful blood meal, exclusively from blood host facial features Connor O’Brien-Stoffa, Shawn Ward, Robert Hancock

26 4:30 179 Mosquito species of South Punjab, Pakistan Shafia Saba, Unsar Naeem-Ullah, Shafqat Saeed, Ishtiaq Ahmad Rajwana, Alamgir Akhtar Khan 4:40 180 A synthetic lure for Anopheles gambiae (Diptera: Culicidae) Nick Nikbakht, Woodbridge A. Foster 4:50 181 Effects of atmospheric turbulence on female mosquito flight activity Neil J Vickers, Kelly Huang, Nadja Reissen, Greg White, Ary Faraji, Marcus Hultmark 5:00 182 Acetylcholinesterase inhibition in adult Aedes aegypti using terpenes and a new class of natural insecticides Jacob Boyd Johnson, Joel R Coats

Mosquito Control District and DOD Collaborations Symposium Moderator: Erica Lindroth 4:00 PM – 5:30 PM Meeting Room: B115 4:00 184 Enhancement of Collier Mosquito Control District’s insecticide resistance management program through collaborative efforts with the Navy Entomology Center of Excellence – CMAVE Detachment Keira J Lucas, Rachel B Bales, Alden S Estep, Christy M Waits, Neil D Sanscrainte, Rhoel R Dinglasan 4:22 185 Cooperative Research Linkages of local Florida Mosquito Control Districts with the Navy Entomology Center of Excellence James Cilek 4:44 186 Mutual Benefits from the Collaboration between Anastasia Mosquito Control District and the Related DoD Agencies Rui-De Xue 5:06 187 Innovative Readiness Training: An Air Force and mosquito abatement district collaboration to benefit public health Mark Breidenbaugh

Adult Control III Moderator: Laura Krueger 4:00 PM – 5:30 PM Meeting Room: B117 4:00 188 Frequency of kdr alleles in Aedes aegypti populations from coastal and high jungle areas in Peru Fanny Castro-Llanos, Carmen Flores-Mendoza, Karin Escobedo-Vargas, Marisa Lozano, Victor O. Osiel Zorrilla, Liz Espada, Helvio Astete, Victor Lopez-Sifuentes, Michael L. Laurin Fisher, Gissella M. Maria Vasquez, Alden S. S Estep 27 4:10 189 Evaluation of Lambda-cyhalothrin Barrier Sprays for Mosquito Control in Southwestern Virginia Benjamin E. McMillan, Carlyle C. Brewster, Nicola T. Gallagher, Sally L. Paulson 4:20 190 High, Medium, Low: Using a Standardized County- Wide Grid Surveillance System to Prioritize Operational Areas for West Nile Virus Control in Orange County, CA Laura Krueger, Kiet Nguyen, Tim Morgan, Amber Semrow, Sokanary Sun, Robert Cummings 4:30 191 Underlying mechanisms of the pyriproxyfen- induced sterilization in female Aedes aegypti Tahmina Ahmed, Thomas Saunders, Jinsong Zhu 4:40 192 Aedes albopictus resistance: a case of study of adulticide rotation and cross-resistance Peter Jiang 4:50 193 Toxicity of Different Groups of Insecticides and Determination of Resistance in Aedes albopictus from Different Habitats Shabab Nasir, Sadia Abbas, Iqra Yousaf 5:00 194 Insecticide Resistance in Culex Mosquitoes throughout the Upper Midwest Trisha R Dubie, Edward Walker, Lyric Bartholomay 5:10 195 Response to the first discovery of Aedes aegypti in San Joaquin County, California, 2019: from surveillance to control Shaoming Huang, Andrew Provencio, Sumiko De La Vega, Aaron Devencenzi, Keith Nienhuis, John Fritz, Eddie Lucchesi

Young Professionals Symposium II & Career Roundtable Discussions Moderator: Kristy Burkhalter 4:00 PM – 5:30 PM Meeting Room: C124 Overview of the Career Roundtables and introduction of experts Kristy Burkhalter, AMCA Young Professionals Advisor

Young Professionals will discuss career information and advice with experts from the following career paths for 15 minutes before moving on to the next table of experts

Mosquito Control Becky Heinig – Collier Mosquito Control District Annie Belchik-Moser – Grant County Mosquito Control District Patrick Prather – Municipal Mosquito

28 Public Relations and Education Eric Jackson – Lee County Mosquito Control District Carol Anne Hagele – San Gabriel Valley Mosquito & Vector Control District

Academia Brian Byrd, Western Carolina University Justin Harbison, Loyola University Chicago

Federal Service/Military Daniel Kline, United States Department of Agriculture John Paul Mutebi, Centers for Disease Control Roxanne Connelly, Centers for Disease Control Elizabeth Dykstra, US Navy

Industry Peter DeChant, Valent BioSciences Corporation Agenor Mafro-Neto, ISCA Technologies Derek Drews, Clarke

5:30 PM – 6:30 PM Young Professionals Social C120 Sponsored by AMVAC Environmental Products

29 DAY AT-A-GLANCE Thursday, March 19, 2020

7:30 am – 1:00 pm Registration and Internet Hub Exhibit Hall Lobby * early morning coffee and breakfast will be on your own 7:30 am – 1:00 pm Speaker Ready Room C125 8:30 am – 10:45 am Exhibits Open Exhibit Hall B 8:30 am – 10:00 am Morning Sessions • Social Media and Mosquito Control Symposium B112 • Disease/Vector Studies B114 • Biology/Behavior IV B115 Thursday, March 19, 2020 • Larval Control B117

10:00 am – 10:45 am Break/Exhibits Open Exhibit Hall B 10:45 am – 12:00 pm AMCA Annual Member Meeting B114

1:30 pm – 3:00 pm Afternoon Sessions • Education I B112 • Sewage-associated Mosquitos Symposium I B114 • Larval Control II B115 • Disease/Vector Studies II B117 3:00 pm – 3:15 am Break/Exhibits Open Exhibit Hall Lobby

3:15 pm – 4:45 pm Afternoon Sessions • Education II B112 • Sewage-associated Mosquitos Symposium II B114 • Managing the Workforce in the 21st Century Symposium B115 • Larvicides for Mosquito Control: Development and Applications Symposium B117

6:00 pm – 7:00 pm Pre-Banquet Social Oregon Ballroom Lobby 7:00 pm – 9:30 pm Banquet Oregon Ballroom (Ticket Required) 8:30 am – 10:00 am* MORNING SESSIONS * unless otherwise noted

Social Media and Mosquito Control Symposium Moderator: Michael Mut 8:30 AM – 10:00 AM Meeting Room: B112 8:30 196 Don’t bring back the Aedes: Video content creation demystified Levy Sun 8:48 197 Who said mosquitoes can’t be fun? Jillian Meek 9:06 198 Best practices for managing negative or inflammatory comments on social media Miranda Schield 9:24 199 Video content: Information that will leave a mark Phillip Stokes, Ricky Telg, Ashley McLeod-Morin 9:42 200 Social Media 202 Michael Mut

Disease/Vector Studies I Moderator: Andrea Joyce 8:30 AM – 10:00 AM Meeting Room: B114 8:30 201 Sentinel Chicken Surveillance Methodologies and Best Practices Milton P. Sterling 8:40 202 Vector competence of Peruvian mosquitoes for orthobunyaviruses isolated from mosquitoes captured in Peru Michael J. Turell, David J. Dohm, Robert B. Tesh, Terry A. Klein 8:50 203 West Nile virus hospitalizations and costs, California, 2004-2017 Vicki Kramer, Robert Snyder, Duc Vugia 9:00 204 Predicting mosquito distributions: Spatiotemporal forecasting for Aedes mosquitoes in the United States Michael A Johansson, Andrew J Monaghan, Sarah T Abusaa, Chris M Barker 9:10 205 Expansion of Borrelia-infected Ixodes scapularis ticks in a leading edge Lyme disease state Abelardo C. Moncayo, Graham Hickling, Brent C. Newman, Sarah Maes, Christine Graham, Rebecca J. Eisen

30 9:20 206 Effects of storage temperature and freeze-thaw cycles on the stability of West Nile virus positive mosquito homogenate in the Ambion® MagMAXTM lysis/binding Solution Jesse Erandio, Crystal Grippin, Mark Nakata, Mir Bear-Johnson 9:30 207 Mosquitoes of the United States Virgin Islands: New and Questionable Records Brian D Byrd, Krystal R. Seger, Aubrey Drummond II, David Delgado, Corey Day, Brett Ellis 9:40 208 The optimization and use of scented sugar baits as a possible early monitoring system for West Nile virus activity Kara L Kelley, Sarah S Wheeler, Marcia Reed

Biology/Behavior IV Moderator: Herff Jones 8:30 AM – 10:00 AM Meeting Room: B115 8:30 209 Ecological role as a vector of Aedes albopictus (Diptera: Culicidae) in Korea Hyunwoo Kim, Sung-Chan Yang, Ji Young Kwon, Hee-Il Lee, Wook-Gyo Lee, Shin-Hyeong Cho 8:40 210 Ovipositional responses of Culex tarsalis to semiochemicals isolated from the Western mosquitofish, Gambusia affinis Adena Why, William Walton 8:50 211 Systematics of Australian Culex (Culex) mosquitoes using whole genome shotgun data and steps toward the description of new species Bryan D Lessard, David K Yeates 9:00 212 State-level Mosquito Species Distributions and their Voucher Status in the NMNH Collection David B Pecor, Alexander Potter 9:10 213 Larval Ecology of Invasive Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus Mosquitoes in Southern California Xiaoming Chloe Wang, Andrew T Shin, Stacia Octaviani, Philip I Shin, Jessica L Bastear, Robert F Cummings, Guiyun Yan 9:20 214 Establishment of the Yellow Fever Mosquito Aedes aegypti (Diptera: Culicidae) in West Valley Mosquito and Vector Control District Patrick Mullens, Tianyun Steven Su, Michelle Q. Brown 9:30 215 Site-specific factors associated with West Nile virus vectors in southern Georgia Mark S Blackmore 9:40 216 Impact of Radiation on Aedes aegypti Microbiome in Relation to SIT Robert L Aldridge, Adam Rivers, Alden Estep, Neil Sanscrainte, Kenneth J Linthicum

31 Larval Control Moderator: Mark Clifton 8:30 AM – 10:00 AM Meeting Room: B117 8:30 217 Field evaluation of modified emergence traps for surveillance of Coquillettidia perturbans in Pasco County, FL Agne Janusauskaite, Dennis Moore 8:40 218 How low can we go? Keeping Culex trap counts below 10 three years in a row Jennifer L. Mullins 8:50 219 Wide-area larval control of floodwater mosquitoes with a Buffalo urbineT and Vectolex WDG Mark E Clifton, Amy Runde 9:00 220 The influence of mangrove cover and tidal flushing on the efficacy and persistence of liquid Bacillus thuringiensis var israelensis applications Brian J. Johnson, Russell Manby, Gregor J. Devine 9:10 221 Controlling WNV Vectors in Minnesota Catch Basins with Altosid® P35, Altosid® pellets and Vectolex® FG Stephen A Manweiler, Kirk A Johnson 9:20 222 Controlling Vectors using Drone Technology at the Minnesota State Fairgrounds Katherine Beadle 9:30 223 Treating Black Flies on large rivers using a bulk treatment system to save staff resources and being more sustainable Casey Herrmann 9:40 224 The community-wide effectiveness of larviciding Culex pipiens pipiens larval habitats along the public right-of-way for control of West Nile virus in Connecticut, USA Joseph R McMillan, Christina A Harden, David Roach, James C Burtis, Joseph D Poggi, Laura C Harrington, Theodore G Andreadis, Philip M Armstrong 9:50 225 Evaluation of Larvicidal Efficacy of Ricinus communis (Castor) Plant Extract and Synthesized Green Silver Nanoparticles against Aedes aegypti L. (Diptera: Culicidae) Shabab Nasir, Muhammad Waris, Iqra Yousaf

10:00 AM – 10:45 PM BREAK, EXHIBITS OPEN Exhibit Hall B

10:45 AM – 12:00 PM AMCA Annual Member Meeting B114

12:00 PM – 1:30 PM* Lunch *On your own

32 1:30 pm – 3:00 pm* AFTERNOON SESSIONS * unless otherwise noted

Education I Moderator: Caralisa Breidenbaugh 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM Meeting Room: B112 1:306 22 Building an APP (Aedes Predator Pod) by calling on Mosquito Assassins as Mosquito Awareness Ambassadors Anita Schiller 1:40 227 G.R.A.V.I.D.: Generating, Retrieving, Academic and Visual Information Cynthia J. Mulla 1:50 228 Medical Entomology & Geospatial Analyses: Bringing Innovation To Teacher Education & Surveillance Studies (MEGA:BITESS) R. T. Trout Fryxell, M. Camponovo, K. Butefish, B. Smith, J. Andseage, J. M. Rosenberg 2:00 229 Developing and Implementing an Education Program Designed to Impact Student Awareness in Lee County, Florida Mark McCreary, Jenifer McBride, Wendy Samz, Eric Jackson 2:10 230 Integration and evaluation of formal education programs about Aedes aegypti ecology and control in Puerto Rico Natasha DeLeon-Rodriguez, Julieanne Miranda-Bermudez, Marianyoly Ortiz, Luz A Crespo-Valentin, Grayson Brown 2:20 231 Engaging community residents in mosquito control: Public perceptions, knowledge, and information search behaviors Shelli D Rampold, Sandra Anderson, Angela Lindsey, Ricky W Telg 2:30 232 Humanizing Mosquito Control and Educating Your Community Members Elizabeth A Morabito 2:40 233 Verifying students are “competent vectors” of our mosquito control message at home Carol Anne Hagele, Levy Sun, Alejandra Gaspar, Kriztian Luna 2:50 234 Multifaceted educational opportunities for local mosquito control Annie Rich Thompson

33 Sewage-associated Mosquitos Symposium I Moderator: Kevin Caillouet 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM Meeting Room: B114 1:30 235 The Science Behind Gravid Water Nina M Dacko 1:52 236 Larval source reduction in combined sewers and catch basins and its relationship to West Nile virus transmission risk in Atlanta, GA Joseph R McMillan, Gonzalo Vazquez-Prokopec 2:14 237 Combined sewers, stream pollution and West Nile virus transmission risk in Atlanta, GA Gonzalo M Vazquez Prokopec, Joseph R McMillan 2:36 238 Septic system density is associated with increased West Nile virus detections in Culex mosquitoes Mark Myer, Scott R Campbell, John M Johnston

Larval Control II Moderator: Sarah Wheeler 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM Meeting Room: B115 1:30 239 Urban larviciding with WALS™ from Culex pipiens to Aedes aegypti Sarah S Wheeler, Steve Ramos, Marcia Reed, Marti Towery, Samer Elkashef 1:40 240 Impact of invasive Aedes species targeted backyard mosquito control measures on local Culex populations Susanne Kluh 1:50 241 Altosid® P-35 field trial to flood-irrigated mosquito production sites in Gem County, Idaho. Cody D. Johns, Jason Kinley 2:00 242 Sacramento-Yolo Mosquito and Vector Control District Evaluation of Sumilarv 0.5G in difficult to control Culex pipiens sources Steven R Ramos, Samer Elkashef, Ryan Wagner, Demetri Dokos, Tony Hedley 2:10 243 Variation in efficacy of four larvicides applied as a residual with three sprayers in a hot-arid environment Frances V Golden, Seth C Britch, Kenneth J. Linthicum, Robert L Aldridge, Bianca J Moreno, Barbara E Bayer, Camila M Leon, Jeremy Wittie, Kim Hung, Arturo Gutierrez, Melissa Snelling, Jennifer Henke 2:20 244 Impacts of wide area larviciding on Culex and Aedes mosquitoes in the Coachella Valley, CA Jennifer A. Henke, Gabriela Perezchica-Harvey, Gerald Chuzel, Chris Cavanaugh, Melissa Snelling, Arturo Gutierrez, Kim Y. Hung, Roberta Dieckmann, Greg Alvarado, Olde Avalos, Mike Martinez

34 Disease/Vector Studies II Moderator: Scott Graham-Derham 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM Meeting Room: B117 1:30 245 First report of AChE1 (G119S) mutation in Anopheles gambiae s.s. in Nigeria. Ifeoluwa Kayode Fagbohun, Emmanuel Taiwo Idowu, Olubunmi Adetoro Otubanjo, Taiwo Sam Awolola 1:40 246 Effect of locally isolated Wolbachia wAlbB induced in Aedes aegypti to suppress dengue transmission in Pakistan Nusrat Jahan, Muhammad Sajjad Sarwar 1:50 247 The Inactivity of West Nile Virus and What Can Result Nina M Dacko 2:00 248 Surveillance of mosquito vectors in migratory bird habitats of South Korea EunJung Lee, Bong Gu Song, Hak Seon Lee, Byung-Eon Noh, Tae-Kyu Kim, Seong Yoon Kim, Jong Yul Roh, Shin-Hyeong Cho, Wook-Gyo Lee 2:10 249 Ivermectin-treated bird feed for West Nile virus control Chilinh Nguyen, Nicholas A Panella, Nicholas Hamby, Nicholas Komar, Brian D Foy 2:20 250 Honey-card based arbovirus surveillance in the United States Kristen L Burkhalter, Brad Biggerstaff 2:30 251 Scientific Risk Assessment for Genetic Control of Malaria Vectors in Africa Geoffrey R. Hosack, Keith R Hayes 2:40 252 Introduction, establishment, and expansion of Aedes aegypti in Albuquerque New Mexico Melise Taylor 2:50 253 Ixodes scapularis range expansion and tick-borne illnesses in Manitoba, Canada a ten-year snapshot (2009 – 2018) Scott Graham-Derham, Richard Baydack, Dana Race, Richard Rusk, Kateryn Rochon, Robbin Lindsay

3:00 PM – 3:15 PM BREAK Exhibit Hall Lobby

35 3:15 pm – 4:45 pm* AFTERNOON SESSIONS * unless otherwise noted

Education II Moderator: Stephen Sickerman 3:15 PM – 4:45 PM Meeting Room: B112 3:154 25 Resources for mosquito control practitioners provided by the Centers of Excellence in Vector-born Diseases Christopher M Barker, Lyric Bartholomay, Rhoel Dinglasan, Laura Harrington, Emily M Mader, Kaci D McCoy, Leslie Nemeth, Susan Paskewitz, Danielle Smith, William Walton, Scott Weaver, Caroline Weldon 3:25 255 GLOBE Observer Mosquito Habitat Mapper: promoting vector education, surveillance and mitigation through a public participatory science campaign Russanne D Low 3:35 256 Geographic Information Systems (GIS) as a tool to build vector-borne disease surveillance capacity in state/territorial health agencies Courtney Youngbar 3:45 257 Revision of the technical manuals of the Ministry of Health aiming at the control of Aedes aegypti: Survey of technical gaps, suggestion of updating of contents and proposal of rational use of methodologies and / or technologies in contingency plans for t Fabio Castelo B F P Njaime 3:55 258 Wing Beats: The Greatest Stories Never Told Stephen Sickerman 4:05 259 Early Michigan’s scourge of mosquitoes and malaria Carl W Doud

Sewage-associated Mosquitos Symposium II Moderator: Kevin Caillouet 3:15 PM – 4:45 PM Meeting Room: B114 3:15 260 Use of microbial profiles to detect adult mosquitoes produced in septic tanks Luisa M Otero, Eric Caragata, George Dimopoulos, Roberto Barrera 3:37 261 Examining relationships between septic tank effluent onulex C quinquefasciatus trap counts and West Nile Virus Marissa K Grossman, Andrew Ruiz

36 3:59 262 The feces of our fathers: mosquito and water quality associations in 600 miles of contaminated ditches Nicholas DeLisi, Evan Davies, Kevin Caillouet 4:21 263 Advocating for change in the way we treat our waste Jennifer Bushnell, Kevin Caillouet

Managing the Workforce in the 21st Century Symposium Moderator: Michelle Brown and Kristen Healy 3:15 PM – 4:45 PM Meeting Room: B115 3:15 264 Straight talk on why diversity causes such heartburn and what we can do to change that Gerry Preciado 3:45 265 Diversity and Inclusivity Policies among Professional Associations R. T. Trout Fryxell 4:00 266 Diversity and inclusivity in the AMCA Jennifer A. Henke, Kristen Healy 4:15 267 Panel Discussion of Diversity and Inclusivity Kristen Healy

Larvicides for Mosquito Control: Development and Applications Symposium Moderator: Bruno Gomes 3:15 PM – 4:45 PM Meeting Room: B117 3:15 268 Physiology studies aiming the development of insecticides targeting Aedes aegypti larvae Fernando Genta 3:37 269 Yeast-Encapsulated Essential Oils as Novel Larvicides Ivy Hurwitz 3:59 270 Yeast-encapsulated essential oils efficiency as larvicide and its impact on oviposition for Aedes mosquitoes Bruno Gomes 4:21 271 Gene expression analyses and killing mechanism following mosquito larvae feeding on EO-encapsulated larvicide Marcelo Ramalho-Ortigao

4:45 PM – 6:00 PM Free Time

6:00 PM – 7:00 PM Pre-Banquet Social Oregon Ballroom Lobby Sponsored in part by CoDiagnostics

7:00 PM – 9:30 PM BANQUET Oregon Ballroom

37 DAY AT-A-GLANCE Friday, March 20, 2020

7:30 am – 11:00 am Registration and Internet Hub Exhibit Hall Lobby * early morning coffee and breakfast will be on your own 7:30 am – 11:00 pm Speaker Ready Room C125 7:30 am – 11:00 am Board of Directors Meeting Holladay Suites

8:30 am – 10:00 am Morning Sessions • Evidence based Action Decision Making Thresholds Symposium I B112 • Enhancing Mosquito Control Capacity for Response to Natural Disasters I B114 • Innovative Techniques B115 • Equipment/GPS B117

10:00 am – 10:30 am Refreshment Break Exhibit Hall Lobby

10:30 am – 12:00 pm Morning Sessions Friday, March 20, 2020 • Evidence based Action Decision Making Thresholds Symposium II B112 • Enhancing Mosquito Control Capacity for Response to Natural Disasters II B114 • Rated SIT: Sexual Activity – No Children Allowed Symposium B115 • Public Relations/ Management B117 12:00 pm Adjourn – See you in Salt Lake City! 8:30 am – 10:00 am* MORNING SESSIONS * unless otherwise noted Evidence based Action Decision Making Thresholds Symposium I Moderator: Rui-De Xue and Erica Lindroth 8:30 AM – 10:00 AM Meeting Room: B112 8:30 272 What is the minimum density of Aedes aegypti that prevents rampant outbreaks of urban arboviruses? Roberto Barrera, Veronica Acevedo, Manuel Amador

8:50 273 Considerations in Developing an Arbovirus Response Plan Sherry Burroughs, Mark Kartzinel 9:10 274 Collecting and using surveillance data to drive mosquito control Gregory White, Nadja Reissen, Brad Sorensen, Jason Hardman, Andrew Dewsnup, Ary Faraji 9:30 275 Optimizing gravid traps to target Aedes aegypti and Ae. albopicutus mosquitoes in southern California Melissa A Doyle

Enhancing Mosquito Control Capacity for Response to Natural Disasters I Moderator: Whitney Qualls and Roxanne Connelly 8:30 AM – 10:00 AM Meeting Room: B114 8:30 276 CDC Hurricane Cooperative Agreement Funding Roxanne Connelly 8:48 277 It’s best to be prepared: Lessons learned from the past prepared Georgia for Hurricane Michael. Thuy-Vi T Nguyen, PhD, MPH, Rosmarie Kelly, PhD, MPH, Byron Lobsinger, R. Christopher Rustin 9:06 278 Enhancing Mosquito Control Capacity in Texas through Hurricane Crisis Cooperative Agreement Funding Whitney A Qualls, Heather Ward 9:24 279 Overview of Florida’s enhancement of mosquito control response after a natural disaster Marah S Clark 9:42 280 Investigating insecticide susceptibility in Florida domestic mosquito populations Eva A Buckner, Barry W Alto, Daviela L Ramirez, Sierra Schluep, Ana L Romero-Weaver, Amy Hallock, Natalie Kendziorski

38 Innovative Techniques Moderator: Dongmin Kim 8:30 AM – 10:00 AM Meeting Room: B115

8:30 281 Innovative Software to Manage Integrated Vector Management in Real Time Zia Siddiqi 8:40 282 Study to determine spatial repellent effects of Synexis Biodefense System on mosquito species in an indoor environment Tristan Grush, Neta Wicker, Jing Zhai 8:50 283 Computer vision algorithms for identification of mosquito species Adam Goodwin, Margaret Glancey, Tristan Ford, Sanket Padmanabhan, Sanchit Hira, Rakhil Immidisetti, Soumyadipta Acharya 9:00 284 Machine learning algorithms efficiently identify swimming pools in aerial imagery that could produce mosquitoes Sarah Erspamer, Robert Ferdan, Ryan Clausnitzer 9:10 285 Mosquito Species Classification from Infrared Spectroscopy and Chemometrics of Container- Inhabiting Aedes Eggs Scott Huffman, Connor Larmore, Bradley Guilliams, Harrison Edmonds, Brian Byrd 9:20 286 Probe-based multiplex qPCR identifies bloodmeal hosts in Anopheles mosquitoes from Papua New Guinea John B Keven, Georgia Artzberger, Mary Gillies, Rex Mbewe, Edward Walker 9:30 287 Mosquito science with iNaturalist: big data collection and validation, knowledge sharing with ‘mosquito AI’ and modeling distributions with citizen observations. Durrell D. Kapan 9:40 288 Automated Real-time Collection and High-Fidelity Identification of ectorsV (ARCHIVe): Mosquito Wingbeat-Based Recognition and Identification Dongmin Kim, Terry DeBriere, Satish Cherukumalli, Greg White, Nadja Reissen, Ary Faraji, Nathan Burkett-Cadena 9:50 289 An update on MosquitoMate’s autocidal approaches to control Aedes mosquitoes Stephen Dobson, Jimmy Mains

39 Equipment/GPS Moderator: Clint Hoffmann 8:30 AM – 10:00 AM Meeting Room: B117 8:30 290 Correction method for determining droplet size from rotating impactor slides Bradley K Fritz, Wesley C Hoffmann, Jane A.S. Bonds, Mark Latham, Bill Reynolds 8:40 291 Development of an Improved Indoor Residual Spraying System Wesley Clint Hoffmann, Inigo Garmendia 8:50 292 Rad Source Technologies RS 2400Q x-ray emitter, an improved and reliable radiation source for the sterile insect technique Brent D. Phelan 9:00 293 Cutting fogging costs with IOT devices Tim Sloncz, Shawn Emerick, Mike Schem 9:10 294 Evaluation of a Consumer Light Trap, could this be a Substitute for the Standard CDC Light Trap? Caroline Efstathion, Lea Bangonan, Mandi Pearson, Rui-De Xue 9:20 295 What Makes a software project successful? Notes from the field Chad Minteer, Linda Glover 9:30 296 Software development does not have to be hard: One district’s path to a new data collection and management system for mosquito and vector control and surveillance. Peter Bonkrude, MS 9:40 297 Surveillance of Michigan mosquitoes with GIS technology Douglas W. Allen, Joyce R McLaughlin, Nathan 9:50 298 Mapping mosquito oviposition sites in conjunction with high resolution land cover data using the NASA GLOBE Observer citizen science mobile app Peder Vernon Nelson, Russanne D. Low, Heather Ann Fischer

10:00 AM – 10:30 AM BREAK Exhibit Hall Lobby

40 10:30 am – 12:00 pm* MORNING SESSIONS * unless otherwise noted

Evidence based Action Decision Making Thresholds Symposium II Moderator: Rui-De Xue and Erica Lindroth 10:30 AM – 12:00 PM Meeting Room: B112 10:30 299 Does the squeaky wheel deserve the attention? Steve Mulligan, Jodi Holeman 10:48 300 Overview of established thresholds for mosquito adulticides in Florida Marah S Clark 11:06 301 To spray or not to spray, that is the question Michael J. Turell 11:24 302 Aerial Adulticiding Planning and Evaluation at Manatee County MCD Mark D Latham 11:42 303 How Anastasia Mosquito Control District makes the decision for control action based on the evidence thresholds Rui-De Xue

Enhancing Mosquito Control Capacity for Response to Natural Disasters II Moderator: Whitney Quails Roxanne Connelly 10:30 AM – 12:00 PM Meeting Room: B114 10:304 30 CDC grant supports Louisiana gulf coast mosquito district Herff MP Jones 10:48 305 Enhancing Mosquito Control Capacity in Pasco County, Florida Adriane N. Rogers 11:06 306 Breaking Ground on Mosquito Control and Surveillance in the City of Harlingen, Texas Josh Ramirez 11:24 307 Enhancing Mosquito Abatement Efforts to Local Municipalities During Natural Disasters Martin Reyes Jr, Edgar Chapa 11:42 308 Building Mosquito Control Response Capacity in Harris County through the 2017 Public Health Response Cooperative Agreement Chris Fredregill, Kendra Dagg, Elaine Chu, Salvador Rico, Rebecca Riley, Dagne Duguma

41 Rated SIT: Sexual Activity – No Children Allowed Symposium Moderator: Steve Mulligan 10:30 AM – 12:00 PM Meeting Room: B115 10:30 309 Developing Sterile Insect Technique for Aedes aegypti control in the U.S. Kenneth J Linthicum, Robert L. Aldridge, JD Kline, Barbara Bayer, Bianca Moreno, Seth C. Britch, Rudy Xue, Vindhya Aryaprema, Courtney Cunningham, Chen Chao, Dylan Tussey, Daniel A. Hahn 10:45 310 Large-scale suppression of Aedes aegypti in California by release of Wolbachia-infected male mosquitoes Jacob E Crawford, Stephen Dobson, Jodi Holeman, Steve Mulligan, Bradley White 11:00 311 Automated sex sorting, packaging and distribution for simple SIT at scale for operators or abatement districts Ralph Breslauer 11:15 312 The role of SIT in an IVM programme against Aedes albopictus in Germany Norbert Becker, Bjoern Plukota, Artur Jost, Xenia Augsten 11:30 313 Autocidal methods against Aedes mosquitoes Stephen L Dobson 11:45 314 Wolbachia SIT for urban control of Aedes aegypti: A four-year study Jodi J Holeman, Steve Mulligan, Jacob Crawford, Stephen Dobson

Public Relations/Management Moderator: Aaron Lloyd 10:30 AM – 12:00 PM Meeting Room: B117 10:30 315 Comparing the information needs of the [State] public with [State] mosquito control programs online content Ashley McLeod-Morin, Michaela Shaw, Ricky Telg, Angie Lindsey, Sandra Anderson 10:40 316 Public health vector control logo: national unification Aaron M Lloyd, Eric D Jackson, Joe Conlon 10:50 317 Public cognizance and sensitization Shafia Saba, Ata-ur-Rehman Khan 11:00 318 Outreach to beehive owners in our district: lessons learned Patrick M Irwin, Dan R Bartlett 11:10 319 The NACCHO model for capacity-building in local vector programs Shannon Davis, Chelsea Gridley-Smith 42 11:20 320 Employee morale - how mosquito program managers can support a quality work experience Mark E Smith 11:30 321 Building Capacity Through the Vector Control Collaborative Rebecca Riley, Chris Fredregill, Dagne Duguma, Maxime Vigilant, Kendra Dagg 11:40 322 Developing a program to address the breeding of Aedes and Culex mosquitoes associated with stormwater structures in Los Angeles County. Mark A. Daniel

EXHIBIT HALL MAP

OREGON CONVENTION CENTER HALL B

43 EXHIBITOR DIRECTORY BOOTH NO.

A1 Mist Sprayers (A Brand of Valley Industries) 423 Adapco, LLC 308 AllPro Vector Group 400 AMCA - YP 422 American Longray, LLC 221 American Mosquito Control Association 126 AMVAC Environmental Products 408 Application Dynamics 202 B&G Equipment Co. / Curtis Dyna-Fog / Pelsis 501 Bayer 117 Biogents AG 417 Brandenburg UK 225 BVA Inc. 427 Central Life Sciences 220 CFR - Innovations 426 Clarke 208 CoDiagnostics 525 DEET Education Program 316 Dynamic Aviation Group Inc. 521 EMD Performance Materials Corp. 227 Entomological Society of America 302 FMC - Global Environmental Management 320 Frontier Precision 304 Gambusia Solutions 124 i2LResearch 326 LAC Committee 2020 - Portland, OR 324 LAC Committee 2021 - Salt Lake City, Utah 523 Leading Edge Associates 216 Foggers 122 MCES, LLC 322 Micron Sprayers Ltd. 403 Rad Source Technologies, Inc. 118 Reneotech Inc. DBA EcoRaider 219 S.C. Johnson & Sons Inc. 120 Senecio Robotics 527 ServDay 305 STUCK 303 Summit Chemical Co. 420 Target Specialty Products 116 Tifone S.R.L. 125 Univar 414 U.S. Navy 401 Valent Bio Sciences 108 Vector Disease Control International 404 Vect0r Base 119 Wingbeats 121

44 OREGON CONVENTION CENTER MEETING SPACE MAP

Level 1

Hall A North Ramp Lot Loading Dock

1-9 Loading Docks Exhibit Exhibit Loading Docks = Rollup Door Hall A1 Hall A 10-18 Ramp

= Entrance Interior ‘MAX” METROPOLITAN AREA RAPID TRANSIT Security = Air Wall Doors Oce = Freight Elevator FOOD N.E. HOLLADAY ST.

Column FIRSTAID AID FIRST Exhibit A101 Exhibit A102 A Lobby A103A

FOOD Hall B Hall E Pre-Function A104

A109

A108 A105 A107 Exhibit Exhibit FOOD B110 A106 Pre-Function E Lobby B B111 Hall D Hall C B112 Pre-Function D

E148 B113 E141 B119 E147 B114 E142 Column B118

C TRIMET BUS B117 E143 D140 B115

FOOD C120 E146 Lobby E Pre-FunctionLobby C E144 D139 C121 B116

E145 D138 C122

F152 C126 D137 C123 C125 D136 F151 Lobby DD134 FOOD C124 Lobby F D133 C128 C127 D135 Level 1 Connector F150 G132 G131 G130 G129

F149 Ginkoberry Concourse GINKOBERRY ENTRANCE

PORTLAND STREETCAR N.E. MARTIN LUTHER KING JR. BLVD. TRIMET BUS

APPROXIMATE CEILING EXHIBIT HALLS SQUARE FEET THEATER CLASSROOM ROUNDS 10’X10’ EXHIBITS DIMENSIONS HEIGHT A 30,000 170’ x 170’ 30’ 3,040 1,740 1,430 154 A-A1 60,000 170’ x 340’ 30’ 6,460 3,828 3,250 308 A-A1-B 90,000 340’ X 265’ 30’ 4,880 469 A-A1-B-C 155,000 430’ X 360’ 30’ 8,370 819 A-A1-B-C-DLevel 2 222,000 700’ X 315’ 30’ 11,870 1,213 A-A1-B-C-D-E 255,000 800’ X 320’ 30’ 13,550 1,393 A1-B 60,000 170’ X 340’ 30’ 3,928 3,450 317 A1-B-C 124,000 280’ X 445’ 30’ 6,960 661 A1-B-C-D 195,000 575’ X 340’ 30’ 10,440 1,055 A1-B-C-D-E 225,000 700’ X 320’ 30’ 12,120 1,234 B 30,000 170’ X 170’ 30’ 2,592 1,469 1,410 135 B-C 93,000 350’ X 265’ 30’ 4,900 493 B-C-D 162,000 530’ X 305’ 30’ 8,650 887 =Entrances B-C-D-E 195,000 1,020’ X 190’ =Freight30’ Elevator 11,400 1,067 C 61,000 180’ X 340’ 30’ 6,288 3,600 3,250 328 HOLLADAY C-D 130,000 380’ X 340 30’ 13,476 7,680 7,000 ENTRANCE722 Holladay C-D-E 162,000 305’ X 530’ 30’ 8,820 Lobby 897 D 61,000 180’ X 340’ 30’ 6,290 3,600 3,250 327 Holladay D-E 93,000 350’ X 265’ 30’ 5,070Suites 505

E Terrace 30,000 170’ X 170’ 30’ 2,666 VIP1,680 1,440 147 Suite B

CEILING Ballroom201 LOBBIES SQUAREService Corridor FEET 10’X10’ EXHIBITS Ballroom HEIGHT 256 Ballroom202 Pre-Function A Ballroom 11,400 65’ Oregon 12 257 Ballroom Ballroom Portland Pre-Function C Ballroom 11,400 65’ Ballroom203 12 255 Ballroom 258 Pre-Function D Ballroom 4,750 65’ 12 254 Ballroom Operations Ballroom204 251 Oces Ballroom Lobby Pre-Function E Ballroom 4,750 65’ 12 253 LEVEL 1 LEVEL 2 GinkoberryBallroom Concourse Lobby 13,000 VIP 65’ 12 Ballroom Suite D M.L. King Jr. Exhibit Halls Oregon Ballroom Lobby Stir Bistro 252 & Lounge Ginkoberry Concourse Portland Ballroom Retail Foods Holladay Suites Level 1 Connector VIP Suite B & D

M.L. KING JR. LOBBY LEVEL SKYVIEW TERRACE ENTRANCE M.L. King Jr. Lobby Stir Bistro & Lounge Holladay Lobby

APPROXIMATE CEILING 10’ X 10’ BALLROOMS SQUARE FEET THEATER CLASSROOM ROUNDS RECEPTION DIMENSIONS HEIGHT EXHIBITS PORTLAND BALLROOM 251 or 256 4,000 88’ x 46’ 28’ 437 254 180 460 13 252 4,700 88’ x 54’ 28’ 412 249 210 550 15 253, 254, 257 or 258 4,200 88’ x 48’ 28’ 394 239 180 490 16 255 4,700 88’ x 54’ 28’ 412 250 210 550 15 251 & 258 or 256-257 8,200 88’ x 94’ 28’ 827 491 420 960 27 253-254 8,400 88’ x 96’ 28’ 820 490 420 980 30 253-258 or 254-257 8,400 176’ x 48’ 28’ 828 495 390 980 32 251-252 or 255-256 8,700 176’ x 50’ 28’ 919 523 420 1,020 29 252-253 or 254-255 8,900 88’ x 96’ 28’ 982 590 490 1,040 29 251 & 257-258 or 256-257-258 12,400 88’ x 142’ 28’ 1,472 821 700 1,450 43 252-253-254 or 253-254-255 13,100 88’ x 148’ 28’ 1,595 887 700 1,540 43 251 & 258-257-256 16,400 88’ x 188’ 28’ 1,806 1,110 900 1,920 60 252-253-254-255 17,800 88’ x 198’ 28’ 2,056 1,233 970 2,090 56 253-254-257-258 16,800 176’ x 96’ 28’ 1,886 1,155 910 1,970 62 251-252-253-258 or 254-255-256-257 17,100 176’ x 98’ 28’ 1,890 1,256 910 2,000 59 251-252-253-254-257-258 25,500 176’ x 146’ 28’ 2,942 1,844 1,430 3,000 89 253-254-255-256-257-258 25,500 176’ x 146’ 28” 2,942 1,844 1,430 3,000 89 251-252-253-254-255-256-257-258 34,200 176’ x 198’ 28’ 4,220 2,442 1,950 4,000 110 OREGON BALLROOM 201, 202, 203 or 204 6,300 110’ x 58’ 25’ 696 398 320 700 27 201-202 or 202-203 or 203-204 12,600 110’ x 116’ 25’ 1,458 646 640 1,400 54 201-203 or 202-204 18,900 110’ x 174’ 25’ 2,241 1,292 1,040 2,100 90 201-204 25,200 110’ x 232’45 25’ 3,024 1,710 1,360 2,800 126 FMC-advert-AMCA2020-d.qxp_AMCA-program-2017 1/29/20 12:21 PM Page 1 Good Science. Good Sense.

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