1. Introduction
Aedes mosquitoes (Diptera: Culicidae) pose domestic and international threats because of their rapid invasive spread and potential to transmit multiple pathogens of medical and veterinary importance [
1]. A unique
Aedes-related mosquito-borne disease is La Crosse viral disease, neuroinvasive forms cause La Crosse encephalitis (LACE), which is also the leading pediatric arboviral disease in the continental United States [
2]. Increasingly recognized since 1997, La Crosse viral disease has been prevalent in southern Appalachia, where approximately 75% of all cases now occur [
2,
3]. Symptoms vary among individuals, but immunocompromised individuals and children less than 15 years old may present with symptoms similar to commonly associated illnesses (e.g., fever, aches, fatigue, headache) in conjunction with reported mosquito bites [
4]. If infection worsens, neurological symptoms may present, including seizures, coma, encephalitis, hemiparesis, paralysis, and/or cognitive disorders [
4,
5]. An outdated assessment of the economic burden of LACE estimated that the financial costs range from
$48,775–
$3,090,398 (2003 USD) per case, at an average of
$791,374 over 89.6 years of life adjusted for disabilities [
6,
7]; this equates to
$1,199,112 (
$73,905–
$4,682,658) in 2021.
The causative agent for La Crosse viral disease is the La Crosse virus (LACV), which is transmitted via the bite of a LACV-infected
Aedes mosquito [
8,
9].
Aedes triseriatus Say is the primary LACV vector,
Ae. albopictus Skuse is an accessory vector involved with transmission, and
Ae. japonicus Theobald may also be an accessory vector [
10,
11,
12,
13]. All three mosquitoes will oviposit their eggs into similar water-filled artificial and natural habitats (e.g., containers and tree holes), and females will blood feed on humans and sciurid hosts (e.g., squirrels, chipmunks, and groundhogs) [
14,
15]. Importantly, LACV is maintained in the environment via zoonotic transmission with their sciurid hosts [
16] and transovarial transmission from female to offspring [
17]. Epidemiological work in southern Appalachia demonstrated that LACE cases are associated with a combination of natural and artificial oviposition sites [
15,
18,
19] and that LACE cases are focal and repetitive at specific sites [
20,
21], suggesting mosquito management and education is a potential solution to disease prevention. Knowing
Ae. triseriatus and
Ae. albopictus are feeding on the same LACV-reservoir hosts, ovipositing in the same natural and artificial environment, and that LACV is focal to specific sites provides us with opportunities to identify and manage these mosquitoes and potentially LACV.
Understanding the temporal and spatial trends of these disease vectors permits the design of targeted mosquito management and control [
22]. To reduce the burden of LACV, it is critical to monitor
Aedes mosquito populations, which includes discovering precisely when and where infected mosquitoes occur in a given region. Fortunately, the surveillance and control of immature and adult
Aedes spp. has been researched for decades, with techniques specifically developed for
Ae. aegypti L. and the accessory LACV vector
Ae. albopictus [
23,
24,
25]. Because LACV vectors are associated with human habitats and share similar ecologies to
Ae. aegypti and
Ae. albopictus, standard methods for
Aedes surveillance can be used for LACV vectors. Like
Ae. aegypti, LACV vectors can be collected with oviposition containers (~ovitraps) strategically placed in suspected LACV-positive areas, which are typically described as habitats with increased vegetation and many hardwood trees and containers such as cemeteries, parks, forests, and schools [
26,
27,
28,
29]. Captured eggs can be reared to adults, and those adults can be screened for LACV [
28,
30]; the results can be used to identify sites with persistent mosquito populations and LACV infection, which then allows for targeted-mosquito control.
Typically for many arboviruses (e.g., Zika virus, West Nile virus), public health departments apply adulticides to kill adult mosquitoes after a positive human case is identified; a therapeutic and expensive approach for mosquito-borne diseases since mosquito control only occurs after human cases are reported [
31]. Unfortunately, the southern Appalachian region has minimal and sporadic mosquito surveillance and management programs. The region’s existing mosquito surveillance infrastructure is limited, primarily dedicated to West Nile virus and concentrated in more urban or metropolitan areas, which does not include the correct surveillance efforts for either LACV or the
Aedes vectors. Affordable mosquito surveillance and management are dependent upon effective and inexpensive surveillance methods that do not exist; unfortunately, a LACV surveillance program does not exist, thereby creating a public health need to improve LACV and
Aedes surveillance.
Successful communication of science and health is more multifaceted than most realize due to the complexity of the material, the way it is communicated, and challenges in reaching potentially vulnerable audiences [
32]. The source of the information and the delivery method in which the material is presented has an impact on the public’s receptiveness to the information. Health and science communication can be improved when it comes from individuals inside the same community as those receiving the information because they often share the same knowledge, values, and beliefs of that community (NASEM 2017). Multiple reviews and meta-analyses indicate that for mosquito control to be effective, engaging the community in those efforts is necessary [
23,
24,
25]. Additionally, effective science communication on these important issues can build, maintain, and/or restore trust, but efforts must be planned and intentional to be effective [
33,
34]. To our knowledge, there are no extant public health campaigns against LACV, and most U.S.-based mosquito campaigns target West Nile virus transmitted by
Culex mosquitoes [
35,
36] or
Ae. aegypti-associated diseases such as Zika [
37]. Thus, there is an additional public health need to create a LACV campaign that also improves health and science communication specifically for LACE to minimize cases and a campaign developed by members of the community for the community would likely be well received and potentially adopted.
The people who identify and develop mosquito and LACV surveillance, management, and informational campaigns have a plethora of job titles and skill sets. Some are medical entomologists who study mosquito vectors, pathogen transmission cycles, and disease ecology. Most public health departments employ a diverse set of trained individuals who may have limited entomology training but often specialize in other disciplines (e.g., epidemiology, environmental health, data management, toxicology, policy, education, geospatial technologies, and health and science communication). Unfortunately, entomology, geoscience, and science communication careers are currently understaffed, which leads to less monitoring and longer response times to problems, putting our human and animal health and food security at risk [
32,
38,
39,
40]. Thus, there is an additional need to increase the awareness of these many disciplines and sciences and to develop a workforce with the desire to pursue these fields. In the absence of this workforce, the already understaffed fields will continue to have decreased surveillance and increased response times for pathogens, putting human and animal health and food security at further risk.
Here, we present a potential solution to the above problems (long-term surveillance, health and science communication, and career awareness) and the health and community needs of Appalachia (Aedes surveillance for La Crosse virus). Herein are initial data on the first two years of an educator-targeted professional-development program. Known as the MEGA:BITESS academy, this year-long service-learning engagement program was designed to stimulate innovative classroom teaching and learning, facilitate a workforce interested in entomology, geospatial sciences and science/health communication, and foster a community aware of LACV in East Tennessee. MEGA:BITESS stands for Medical Entomology and Geospatial Analyses: Bringing Innovation to Teacher Education and Surveillance Studies. We trained educators in medical entomology, geospatial analysis, and science communication. The educators then used their skills to develop STEM projects for their middle and high school students that examined environmental factors related to mosquito surveillance. Lesson plans, data, and material presented within can be used as a template to develop a community-driven mosquito surveillance program that enhances community awareness of mosquito-borne diseases. The products of MEGA:BITESS include materials that can be used to inform students of a diverse set of career opportunities and informational materials for local health departments and school systems, and lesson plans for teachers to use in the classroom. Simultaneously, MEGA:BITESS produces spatial-temporal data on Aedes populations, fosters community awareness of risks related to mosquitoes and LACE, and promotes high-impact STEM learning for students.
2. Materials and Methods
The academy was designed to increase educators’ understanding of the very different disciplines and the material necessary to develop lesson plans and implement those lessons. All components were recorded and posted to our YouTube channel (
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UClFstQiji-s6XpZ1qOdvp2A) (accessed on 29 December 2021) and project website (
www.megabitess.org) (accessed on 29 December 2021) to provide access to those not participating in-person and for academy participants to use either in class or for curriculum/lesson plan development.
Recruiting was targeted at educators (grades 6–12) in East Tennessee, representing the 30 at-risk counties for LACE. We used an extensive professional network developed by the Tennessee Geographic Alliance to recruit educators with assistance from the Tennessee STEM Innovation Network (totaling 109 school districts working in every county in the state), Tennessee Science Teachers Association (representing teachers in all counties in the state), Tennessee Association of Independent Schools, East TN STEM Hub (serving Knox County and 12 surrounding counties), the UTK Center for Enhancing Education in Mathematics and Sciences, Oak Ridge Associated Universities, and other partners. To recruit, we actively participated in community learning events and created infographics and videos advertising our program.
The project team prioritized applications from sixth-grade science and high school biology educators because the project content aligns with state standards and also benefits those students. A short survey response to questions was a part of the application and included specific questions on how the educators will incorporate the content and mosquito collection project into their courses during the coming academic year. A letter of endorsement and support was required from the applicant’s principal to confirm commitment from and cooperation of the school administration.
To improve retention of participants, a stipend, Professional Continuing Education Units (CEUs), and all required materials were offered to all educators. Materials such as PowerPoints, curated videos, and physical specimens were provided to the educators to enhance and/or supplement classroom learning. For more conceptually difficult lessons, such as experimental design and hypothesis testing, we built how-to videos by editing them in Adobe Premiere Pro (Adobe Systems) and creating effects and transitions in After Effects (Adobe Systems), or by creating animated videos with VideoScribe (Sparkol Limited). These educational materials are also available on our website. Recognizing the difficulty of the 2020 academic year, we also printed and provided masks with our logo for each educator and printed removable stickers for students to place on their school-provided laptops; we hoped this would build a sense of pride and community during a difficult period. A $1000 stipend was provided to educators who completed specific tasks outside of the workshops, which consisted of $400 for completing the mosquito surveillance with their students and $200 per developed lesson plan (one per workshop). The UT Center for Professional Education provided CEUs to recognize and record satisfactory participation in this educator professional development program. One CEU was awarded for each 10 contact hours of workshop participation (a total of 5 CEUs were provided if requested).
Three in-service workshops were developed by the project team: a 5-day introduction workshop (that was held during National Mosquito Control Awareness Week around 24 June), a 1-day GIS/data analysis workshop in February, and a 1-day communication workshop held in April around World Malaria Day (25 April). Two of the workshops were held in-person during most of year one (communication workshop was online April 2020) and completely online in year two (2020–2021) with the same educators, but designed so educators could use the developed curriculum with their students upon return from extended breaks (summer, winter, and spring). STEM career opportunities were enhanced during each workshop by professionals in areas related to MEGA:BITESS topics. These experts spoke of how they became involved in their career specialties and presented emerging research and information on such careers.
The first 5-day training workshop was held during the summer and consisted of mosquito, GIS, and science communication lectures. In year one, surveillance-focused field trips and laboratory tours were also conducted; this did not happen in the second year due to COVID-19. The surveillance training included educator-initiated surveillance around the University of Tennessee agriculture campus, collecting data while georeferencing sites, and counting eggs.
The second in-service workshop focused on using analytical techniques, specifically geospatial analyses using ArcGIS Online (ESRI, Redlands, CA, USA) and analytical techniques using the Common Online Data Analysis Platform [
41]; educators could compare their own egg and adult mosquito data as well as data obtained by others. This one day of instruction guided educators and students through the phases of asking and answering geographic and analytical questions. The geo-inquiry process [
42,
43] and inquiry-driven learning process [
44] are similar in guiding educators and their students into thinking like a scientist to explore the world and emphasizing how educators who participate in this project will develop resource materials for their classrooms to guide their students in learning about LACV and how to collect data for the project.
The third in-service workshop was designed to build on the science communication lesson presented during the first 5-day workshop but focused on science and health messaging for specific audiences. Educators learned how to create effective digital and print communication material based on risk communication theories with a target audience in mind. Specifically, the workshop used informational graphics created in Canva (
www.canva.com) (accessed 29 December 2021) to disseminate information. Participants explored layout and design to help them understand how to create effective communication material. The workshop focused on message development concepts discussed in the first 5-day workshop to help participants further understand message development and show them how to incorporate their messages into communication material. This workshop was grounded using literature that has explored effective issues and visual communication [
45].
We evaluated the workshops in several ways. One primary way was through the use of self-report surveys carried out through the Qualtrics survey platform. We created three types of surveys: a pre- and post-summer workshop survey, very brief surveys (“exit tickets”) that followed each of the days of the summer workshop, and a survey on the effectiveness of the workshops. In this study, we report on the results from the use of the third of these three types of surveys, those on the effectiveness of the workshops. To use these surveys, we applied for and received Institutional Review Board approval to use educators’ responses for research.
Specifically, we administered four effectiveness surveys to participating educators, one each after each of the Spring 2020 data analysis/GIS workshops, the Summer 2020 workshop, the Spring 2021 data analysis/GIS workshop, and the Spring 2021 science communications workshop. Based on their importance to our aims of providing meaningful, relevant, and useful experiences to participating educators, we focused on three questions that were asked in all of the effectiveness surveys on educators’ evaluations of (a) their overall satisfaction with the workshop, (b) the workshop’s relevance to their teaching, and (c) the extent to which the workshop addressed a teaching-related need they experienced. Though these questions could tap teachers’ pedagogical or content knowledge, we did not specify in the questions whether we were interested in either the relevance of the workshop or the extent to which the workshop addressed a teaching-related need that was pedagogical or content-related in nature. Therefore, teachers may have thought of both of these elements of their work together, and future research may lend insights into whether the workshop was more beneficial in terms of bolstering pedagogical or content-related knowledge—or both.
During the summer workshop, each educator learned how to design an experiment around a single question focused on
Aedes oviposition and how to test that question using experimental design and hypotheses testing. At the beginning of their school year, educators worked with their students to ask and test a hypothesis-driven question concerning oviposition; in other words, each educator and their students identified a testable hypothesis based on habitat and then tested their hypothesis on their school property by placing an equal number of oviposition traps (ovitraps) at sites representing self-identified treatment types. Educators and their students placed ten ovitraps at each school (5 ovitraps per treatment) for 10 weeks (August–October 2019) in year one. In year two, more standardization tests were implemented based on feedback, and all educators set 6 ovitraps (3 ovitraps per treatment) at their campus from 2020 calendar weeks 35–40 (August–October 2020). One educator set 12 ovitraps (3 ovitraps per treatment) during the same period. Materials for ovitraps were provided and included 750 mL black plastic cups (Discount Mugs, Miami, FL, USA), a camping stake to keep the ovitrap in place, seed germination paper (10.2 cm in width; SD3815L, Anchor Paper, Plymouth, MN, USA), envelopes to store the egg papers, and bovine liver powder (#02900396 MP Biomedicals, Solon, OH, USA) to make the infusion (2.5 gallons of dechlorinated water mixed with a half teaspoon of bovine liver powder and stored with the lid on for 72 h) in a provided 5-gallon plastic bucket [
28]. All educators were given the same material to run their experiments, and the only known differences were the initial water source for the water infusion, trap placement based on the class’s study design, and random error caused by each educator/student. With their students, educators made infusion water, set and stored ovitraps and egg papers, and georeferenced their sites using Survey123 (ESRI, Redlands, CA, USA). Each educator–student team collected egg papers and replaced the egg paper and 500 mL of infusion.
Once the surveillance period was completed (10 weeks in year 1 and 6 weeks in year 2), egg papers were collected from educators. UT undergraduate and graduate students counted the oviposited eggs and recorded the eggs as hatched (head capsule noticeably open) or embryonating (egg was intact and head capsule was closed). Egg papers with eggs were then allowed to hatch in an environment-controlled biosafety laboratory [
28]. To hatch the eggs, a liver powder infusion (as described above, but with an additional 1.5 g of yeast) was created and egg papers were submerged with 500 mL of the infusion water in mosquito breeding chambers (BioQuip, Rancho Dominguez, CA, USA). Egg papers were submerged for 24 h and removed for 24 h, with that process being repeated for three submergence periods. On the final submergence, egg papers were left in the water for 48 h before removal. Upon the final removal of egg papers from the infusion, mosquito breeders with no larvae were removed and recorded as no egg hatching. Those with larvae were supplemented ad libitium with fish flakes, and the larvae were reared to adulthood. Mosquito breeders were checked daily for adults, and any eclosed adults were immediately stored in a −20 °C freezer. All adults were then counted and identified with regard to species and sex [
46]. If requested, educational material on rearing and diagnostics were provided to the educators and their students, and a virtual field trip to this rearing space was provided in year two. Mosquito results were provided to the educators at the February analytical workshop to help students answer their specific question(s).
These egg collections and recovered adults were the basis of the first community-driven mosquito surveillance program in East Tennessee. Descriptive and comparative statistics were calculated to describe the Aedes collections. To determine if Aedes surveillance improved over time, the surveillance results of the 15 educators that participated in both years of the program were compared. Oviposition (presence of eggs and number of eggs), hatch rates in the laboratory (presence of larvae), and adult eclosion (presence of an adult, number of species, abundance) were all measured and compared between the first two years of the program. For each educator’s surveillance program, the overall surveillance design, including percent of egg papers returned, mean distance between traps, mean egg-to-adult percentage, and successful use of Survey123 to collect data, were also compared.
The nonparametric paired Wilcoxon Signed Rank test was used to compare the average number of eggs collected each year by the educators. The paired Student’s t-test was used to compare the average number of adults that emerged from those same eggs by each educator from 2019–2020. To account for differences in seasonality between the two study years, only data from the calendar weeks of 35–40 was used for both years. Additionally, because of variations in trap placement due to classroom-driven inquiries, only the three cups that yielded the most eggs at each site were included in the statistical analyses. Data visualizations were also produced to test a subset of student-driven hypotheses to demonstrate how educators and students were able to design and test their own scientific inquiries through the mosquito surveillance project.
Products (e.g., infographics, posters, and videos) for educators and their students were developed by the project team and by the professional community. To showcase the diversity of careers and highlight the people in those professions, lunch-and-learns from each workshop were recorded and shared on a YouTube channel and project website. Presenters included professionals in academia, government jobs, and industry representatives with different degrees (Bachelors through Ph.D.) from each discipline. Special care was taken to include professionals with previous experience working with LACE to create a deeper understanding of the community’s needs and health problems.
For the classroom, professionals were surveyed using Twitter and professional networks to identify job titles from the disciplines of medical entomology, geospatial science, and science communication. Three distinct word clouds were then generated using identified job titles that use ‘entomology, ‘geospatial analyses’, and ‘science communication’. Those word clouds were then overlaid with the MEGA:BITESS logo to create a career awareness poster in Adobe InDesign and Adobe Illustrator (Adobe Systems, San Jose, CA, USA). This poster was provided to each educator to display in their physical classroom, which also served as a visual reminder to students about the project.
To enhance awareness of LACE, educators worked with their students to create informational graphics about mosquitoes and LACV and health prevention via hand-drawn illustrations or with Canva. Together, educators and their students worked through the process of developing their message, deciding what information must be shared and the graphics that will illustrate their message.
4. Discussion
The overall objectives of the MEGA:BITESS academy were to create an opportunity for educators and their students to engage in inquiry-driven learning, conduct a community-driven mosquito surveillance program, and enhance the awareness of LACV and career opportunities. Our central hypothesis was that the development of the academy would stimulate innovating classroom teaching and learning, facilitate a workforce interested in entomology and geospatial sciences, and foster a community aware of vector-borne diseases through science communication. Educators participating in the academy incorporated entomology and geospatial sciences in their classrooms throughout the academic year. Some educators wove the material into their lessons, while others developed after-school clubs with their students. Educators and students were able to complete all parts of the study, and educators mentioned that students preferred different parts of the project, suggesting most students were engaged in at least some of the project. Educators mentioned that students who would not normally take a lead role did so in this project; the students in general particularly enjoyed the mosquito surveillance. Other students used creative means of communication to inform their classmates and communities about LACE. Educators became more creative in teaching as they became more confident in the tools and theoretical perspectives employed in the academy. This, in turn, created a small grass-roots community dedicated to LACV and other vector-borne diseases. This community was likely strengthened because of the COVID-19 pandemic, which led to discussions on epidemiology, population curves, and individual and community protection.
During the project, we were met with the challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic as educators in the workshop had to not only learn and use new material but also convert their standard classrooms into flexible-hybrid classes (e.g., in-person and/or virtual). We became flexible and equipped educators with material and training, which also gave them the leadership and the confidence to develop and lead classroom instruction in both learning environments. For example, at a middle school, a Google Classroom (Alphabet/Google, Mountain View, CA, USA) and club were created so students at home and in-person could engage in active learning. Additionally, some of the educators developed lesson plans to be shared with a larger community via our website. We noticed some educators continued to communicate with lunch-and-learn speakers and started interacting with additional scientists in the community to highlight the diversity of careers and people. Another middle school educator developed posters of diverse scientists in a variety of fields for their hallways and then shared those posters with the group. Thus, with the educators, we developed an engaging and relevant in-service academy with a teacher-developed mosquito curriculum and incorporated career paths into the classroom. We are beginning to enhance awareness of agricultural and geospatial career paths, integrate complex concepts into the classroom, and forge mentorships between faculty.
Learning and adapting from year one, educators implemented a student-driven mosquito surveillance program and conducted six weeks of mosquito surveillance on school property with questions designed by students. Each educator worked with their students to design an experiment with testable hypotheses, and all educators returned their material. While mosquitoes were rearing in the BSL-2 room, virtual field trips to the laboratory were offered, and eight classrooms participated. The middle and high school students interacted with the University of Tennessee scientists and asked general questions on mosquito biology, ecology, and rearing while also asking general science/career questions from the students. Using mosquito data collected by the students, we learned that both mosquito vectors are active during the first several weeks of the school year at schools, indicating a mosquito management plan may be necessary at these schools. Collected phenological data corroborated with previously published literature indicating that both mosquito species are active well into October [
28,
47]. Thus, we enhanced
Aedes surveillance and began to understand the temporal and spatial models of
Aedes mosquitoes. More importantly, we developed the groundwork for a community-driven mosquito surveillance program for LACV.
Physical and digital material for educators was an unexpected priority in this project because educators indicated that they were overwhelmed and needed material that could be shared synchronously in the classroom and asynchronously in the virtual classroom. We specifically developed a group of videos for two different audiences. First, tutorials for educators were developed so they could be reminded how to access different material and use it. We also developed material for students so they could understand the experiment and see they were a part of the larger project (
https://www.megabitess.org/community-driven-experiment) (accessed 29 December 2021). While LACV-specific health/science communication material on a larger scale was not generated for the East Tennessee community as we had hoped, the material we developed for educators was transferable to the classroom during the pandemic. Educators could engage with their students about virus transmission, epidemiology, diagnostics, disease risk, pathogen prevalence, and the developed material that could transfer to other infectious diseases. We expect that within the next three years students and educators will develop material for their health departments and schools.
The educational component of this project has multiple dimensions. One was that educators and their students assisted with the collection of the aforementioned mosquito-related data that proved valuable from a scientific vantage. Another is that educators and students benefit from opportunities to participate in authentic research experiences. Such experiences are increasingly relevant to and important within K-12 science classrooms as recent reform documents call for all students to not only learn science but to learn to participate in the practices of science [
48,
49,
50]. Specific to scientific data, there are likely several benefits to students having opportunities to “work with”—collect, analyze, and interpret and make sense of—scientific data [
48,
51,
52]. Part of our future research will examine the specific benefits that students experience from participating in research experiences in their classroom as a part of the MEGA:BITESS academy or extensions of it.
Related to students’ experiences are those of educators. We take pride in the positive experiences that educators reported having during the workshops we carried out but also recognize areas that we could improve. Notably, educators’ evaluations of how relevant and useful the academy was (in terms of addressing a teaching-related need they experienced) were lower than their overall satisfaction with the workshops. These issues of relevance and usefulness are key—and are challenges for many professional learning experiences for educators within and beyond K-12 schools and school districts [
53]. This is something we plan to enhance in future offerings, including workshops and through the development of other professional learning experiences, such as online learning materials and resources.
This project reports on the first two years of the MEGA:BITESS academy, an in-service academy for educators that allows for community engagement. With educators, a community-driven mosquito and LACV surveillance program was initiated and developed, providing several communities with a system for yearly mosquito assessment and monitoring at schools. Importantly, the students conducting the surveillance were introduced to the scientific method as well as the larger disciplines of entomology, data analysis, epidemiology, geographic sciences, and health/science communications. Knowing mosquito surveillance is largely seasonal, high school graduates and educators could be employed by local health departments as seasonal employees to help with mosquito surveillance as they have already been introduced and trained in many of the techniques.
An exciting utility of the project is the use of these mosquitoes and surveillance data in larger scientific studies. Graduate students can use these mosquitoes to test larger ecological, spatial, temporal, environmental, and genetic questions on
Aedes mosquitoes and/or LACV. Citizen science projects (e.g., volunteer-based using protocols) and community-engaged science (e.g., participants are collaborators throughout a research process) projects not only provide increased awareness, but they have also generated data used in larger studies and by students in the classroom [
54,
55]. For example, a citizen science project based out of Texas accepted kissing bugs from the public to assess the distribution, phenology, and
Trypanosoma cruzi prevalence [
56] and similar methods and data on
Ixodes pacificus and
Ixodes scapularis and their associated pathogens was uncovered for the U.S. [
57,
58]. In the field of infectious disease, community-engaged science is strengthened with consistent and clear communication to build relationships, development of contextual knowledge, and adapting over time to improve the project [
59]. We fully anticipate that this community-engagement project that incorporates a community-driven mosquito surveillance program can be modified and used by others.
Like other educator and community engagement activities, sustainability for this project will be a continued obstacle [
60]. The project’s groundwork took relatively minimal investment (
$150,000) and could be maintained with an equal annual investment or significantly expanded with twice the initial investment. We believe this is largely due to the grass-roots and community-inspired project and that this program filled actual classroom and community health and educational needs. Programmatic funding was used for mosquito surveillance (collection, rearing, and LACV testing), to compensate educators for their activities, and to pay for the logistics of the academy. With only a slightly larger investment into community-based surveillance, we know that the program can be continued and expanded to include a more inclusive mosquito surveillance plan (e.g., offering the academy in additional locations outside of Knoxville so educators across the state can participate).
Continual surveillance is critical in understanding mosquito and virus ecology and epidemiology; unfortunately, due to many competing priorities, dedicated resources for this purpose have decreased across numerous states, potentially eroding their ability to quickly and accurately monitor both changes in vector populations and human/animal disease incidence. Nevertheless, based on the success of our passive community-engagement efforts, we believe an investment is worthwhile.