Repulsed? She definitely was. I don’t think I was ever allowed to swim in the pool again.
I hope you never have to experience crawling into a pool with a bunch of wriggling mosquito larvae, but they don’t even need that much water to breed.
The artificial pools created when you water your plants are more than enough for female mosquitoes to lay their eggs. These aquatic larvae then become adult mosquitoes, and the females need your blood (they can’t make enough protein on their own) in order to lay their eggs and continue the life cycle.
For dengue especially, there is neither a vaccine nor a cure, and it affects more than 100 million people per year. The mortality rate for this disease is relatively low (20,000 deaths per 100 million infections per year worldwide), and its usually very mild in children, but in adults its symptoms can be debilitating for over than a month. These infections cost countries thousands of dollars a year.
But blood isn’t the only thing that gets exchanged between humans and mosquitoes. Many species transmit human diseases, which reside in the mosquito’s saliva and get injected into a human when the mosquito bites him. Mosquitoes then become the vector for many human diseases, such as dengue, West Nile Virus, yellow fever, and malaria. For many of these neglected tropical diseases (excluding malaria), there are neither vaccines nor cures, and millions of people become infected every year.
The following video does a nice job of highlighting the consequences of dengue and the work Australian researchers have accomplished in restraining dengue. Although it’s two years old, it explains in plain terms the ways in which they use Wolbachia, a bacteria that lives in 60% of the worlds insect species, to stop the spread of dengue fever. To do this they infected Aedes aegypti, the mosquito that transmits the disease, with the bacteria.
The Wolbachia cleared dengue from the mosquitoes’ saliva. When a mosquito bites us, it injects some of its own saliva into our blood, transmitting diseases in the mosquito’s saliva. If the disease, in this case dengue virus, is not present in the saliva, it is not able to jump to the human.
I just can’t imagine having to be the human volunteer that feeds the mosquitoes every day.
A more recent study by the same Australian group found that the mosquitoes infected with Wolbachia were able to successfully establish themselves in a wild population (suburbs in Northeastern Australia).
Effective disease control, and cost efficient too. Let’s hope the dengue-resistant mosquitoes are able to keep their population numbers high so that this technology can be spread to more countries in need.
Photo Credits: www.knowabouthealth.com

