
Why Mosquito Season Peaks in July in Tulsa (And How to Stop It)

Why July Is Tulsa's Worst Month for Mosquitoes
Mosquito activity in the Tulsa metro consistently peaks in July. The combination of high heat, humidity, and storm runoff from summer rain creates near-perfect breeding conditions across residential yards.
A single female mosquito can lay up to 300 eggs in one batch, and in Oklahoma's July heat, those eggs can hatch into biting adults in as little as 24 to 48 hours. That means a yard with even minor standing water can go from a minor nuisance to a full population in under a week.
Where Mosquitoes Are Actually Breeding on Your Property
Most homeowners look for the obvious sources and miss the ones that matter most.
Clogged gutters that hold water after rain
Bird baths and unused planters
Low spots in the yard that pool after storms
Tarps, pool covers, and stored outdoor toys
French drains and low-flow areas near the foundation
Why Spraying Alone Doesn't Solve It
One-time fogging or spray treatments kill adult mosquitoes present at the moment of application, but they do nothing to stop the next breeding cycle, and in Oklahoma's July rain pattern, a new cycle can start within days.
Mosquito stations work differently. They target mosquitoes at the breeding source, using a larvicide that female mosquitoes carry back to nearby breeding sites, disrupting the population at its source rather than just treating symptoms.
What Kingdom Group Offers
Kingdom Group provides two mosquito station options for Tulsa-area properties:
Purchase outright - a one-time installation for homeowners who want a long-term solution without ongoing service
Monitored program - Kingdom Group installs, inspects, refills, and services the station on a recurring schedule
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