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[deleted] t1_j1q1mjx wrote
[removed]
Phosphorus44 t1_j1qba4g wrote
Why not just kill the mosquitoes? No one will miss the bugs.
willie_caine t1_j1qglbs wrote
Plenty of creatures eat mosquitos, I thought...
hindumafia t1_j1qc9fu wrote
Have you tried doing so ? It's not easy.
Phosphorus44 t1_j1qchor wrote
I have a solution, but it involves pig blood and old nuclear weapons.
If could I find some pig blood I can start.
computer_salad t1_j1rocnl wrote
This would be terrible for the ecosystem! Many species of fish, birds, bats, insects, salamanders, lizards, and frogs feed on mosquitoes! So it would run the risk of disrupting the ecosystem and threatening biodiversity. In addition, it may leave us without pollinators who feed on mosquitoes.
neril_7 t1_j1qdbuk wrote
You might not have catch it but lately, news about a super mosquitos evolving to be resistant to insecticide did it's rounds on Reddit.
grab-n-g0 OP t1_j1paw70 wrote
No animal on Earth is more lethal to humans, killing over 600,000 people a year from malaria alone and up to a million when including other diseases like dengue fever and yellow fever: https://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-35408835
From article:
>The effort is one of several focused on addressing the mosquito-borne disease that kills over 600,000 each year, most of them children in Africa. The complicated structure and lifecycle of the malaria parasite has long stymied efforts to develop vaccines.
>
>After decades of work, the only approved malaria vaccine, Mosquirix, made by British drugmaker GSK (GSK.L), was this year endorsed by the World Health Organization (WHO), but a lack of funding and commercial potential has thwarted GSK's capacity to produce as many doses as needed.