It breeds in clean water
Dengue mosquitoes lay eggs in still, clean water — plant trays, coolers and buckets, not dirty drains.
The mosquito that bites you was born in your own house.
Dengue mosquitoes lay eggs in still, clean water — plant trays, coolers and buckets, not dirty drains.
Drain trays, coolers and buckets weekly. Removing breeding sources beats any spray for long-term control.
Adults hide in dark corners, under furniture and behind curtains — a targeted indoor treatment knocks them down.
Outdoor fogging clears flying adults for a day, but new ones hatch unless breeding water is removed.
Clear breeding spots and treat resting areas before the rains, so numbers never spike in dengue season.
CIB&RC-approved mosquito treatment — same-day slots before the rains hit.