Bromeliads emerging dengue risk factor in Baguio: What to do?
Water-storing plants like fortune plants and bromeliads are one of the emerging risk factors for dengue fever in the city.
Sanitation Division Chief Engr. Charles Bryan Carame whose teams spearhead the search and destroy and fogging operations of the various district health centers in the barangays said the presence of these plants is one of the common factors in households and places that had clustering of dengue cases in the city.
The others are uncovered drums, bottles and used tires.
Wikipedia said bromeliads “are tropical plants which include the pineapple and several colorful houseplants (and many of them) are able to store water in a structure formed by their tightly overlapping leaf bases.”
The stagnant water that collects in the leaf cups lure insects including dengue-carrying species Aedes Aegypti and Aedes Albopictus which thrive in clean and stagnant water.
Carame suggested ways to prevent water from stagnating in said plants without having to dispose them:
*Daily remove the pools of water from the leaf cups;
*Transfer the plants in shaded places to protect them from the rain
*When watering the plants, make sure that water is poured on the base and not on the leaves
*For fortune plants outside of homes, cutting or trimming is recommended. – Aileen P. Refuerzo