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The president of Colombia said Saturday that more than 3,100 pregnant women in the country are infected with the mosquito-borne virus which has been linked to birth defects and has no vaccine or treatment.
Reuters reported that President Jaun Manuel Santos pointed out, however, that there has been no recorded cases of Zika-linked microcephaly, the birth defect that involves the fetus’ brain.
Meanwhile, Brazilian officials will soon decide whether to amend the South American nation's rigid procedures for sharing Zika samples, the Cabinet chief's spokeswoman said Friday, as officials announced that they were sending a set of samples to U.S. researchers amid complaints of hoarding.
The developments came on the heels of an Associated Press report earlier this week that revealed that international health officials were frustrated at Brazil's refusal to share enough viral samples and other information to answer the most worrying question about the outbreak: Whether the disease is truly causing a spike in babies born with abnormally small heads?
originally posted by: Sillyolme
It's time to wage a global war on the mosquito. The little vampires have no necessary position in the food chain or any other aspect of life . Wipe out the diseases they carry along with them. Malaria, dengue fever, possibly Ebola.
I sure hope there are no mosquito rights advocates on here.
The scientists introduced the genetically modified mosquitoes to five caged wild-type mosquito populations. In four of the five cages, this eliminated the entire population within six generations, because of the lack of females. The hope is that if this could be replicated in the wild, this would ultimately cause the malaria-carrying mosquito population to crash.
originally posted by: ReadLeader
a reply to: BelowLowAnnouncement
That is a very interesting article. Thanks for sharing - who would have known? The X cromisome seems to becoming more and more important as we evolve.
Thanks for posting!
Various scientists and scientific journals, including Nature and National Geographic, have theorized that malaria may have killed around or above half of all humans who have ever lived.
originally posted by: BelowLowAnnouncement
originally posted by: Sillyolme
It's time to wage a global war on the mosquito. The little vampires have no necessary position in the food chain or any other aspect of life . Wipe out the diseases they carry along with them. Malaria, dengue fever, possibly Ebola.
I sure hope there are no mosquito rights advocates on here.
They're working on it, they're trying to modify some mosquitos to make them only able to progenate male mosquitos, apparently it can cause a population crash in 6 generations because of lack of females.
The scientists introduced the genetically modified mosquitoes to five caged wild-type mosquito populations. In four of the five cages, this eliminated the entire population within six generations, because of the lack of females. The hope is that if this could be replicated in the wild, this would ultimately cause the malaria-carrying mosquito population to crash.
www3.imperial.ac.uk...
originally posted by: CharlesT
originally posted by: BelowLowAnnouncement
originally posted by: Sillyolme
It's time to wage a global war on the mosquito. The little vampires have no necessary position in the food chain or any other aspect of life . Wipe out the diseases they carry along with them. Malaria, dengue fever, possibly Ebola.
I sure hope there are no mosquito rights advocates on here.
They're working on it, they're trying to modify some mosquitos to make them only able to progenate male mosquitos, apparently it can cause a population crash in 6 generations because of lack of females.
The scientists introduced the genetically modified mosquitoes to five caged wild-type mosquito populations. In four of the five cages, this eliminated the entire population within six generations, because of the lack of females. The hope is that if this could be replicated in the wild, this would ultimately cause the malaria-carrying mosquito population to crash.
www3.imperial.ac.uk...
Unfortunately, this is incorrect. I'm sure there are other species that consume mosquitoes but some variants of bats feed exclusively on mosquitoes. I relate the insect as basically the same as all the various types of microscopic organisms in the oceans that are the bottom of the food chain but are no less important in sustaining the entire ecosystem throughout, including us.
www.scidev.net...
Scientists in Brazil say an experiment to reduce populations of the dengue-carrying Aedes aegypti mosquito, by releasing millions of genetically modified (GM) insects into the wild, is working.
More than ten million modified male mosquitoes were released in the city of Juazeiro, a city of 288,000 people, over a period of time starting a year ago.