What If We Killed Every Mosquito On Earth?
What would happen if mosquitoes went extinct? And could this new mosquito eradicate disease? Some brilliant scientists have made all of this possible.
Special thanks to Dr. Scott O'Neill and the World Mosquito Program for their help.
Written by: Mitchell Moffit
Edited by: Luka Šarlija
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Sources and Further Reading:
www.worldmosquitoprogram.org/
www.nature.com/articles/d4158...
www.nature.com/articles/d4158...
www.worldmosquitoprogram.org/...
www.nature.com/articles/466432a
Пікірлер: 1 700
I got hospitalized with dengue some years back, and I have a childhood friend who died of dengue. Personally, I wouldn't mind a mosquito eradication.
@GetFitEatRight
3 ай бұрын
Just those 200 types. Yes please. I'm so sick of getting destroyed every summer.
@dpmjmun
3 ай бұрын
I got so afraid when my mom got it. It's been 10 years already but i remember being so scared
@colorpg152
3 ай бұрын
so I'm supposed to get a thousand mosquito bites because of you?
@genericplantlife
3 ай бұрын
@@dpmjmun It was definitely scary. And so needless too because what niches do those types of mosquitoes even fill that no other insect can fill?
@starrybrowneyes
3 ай бұрын
Same story with me. My former schoolmate was younger than me and he passed away from dengue when I had it too. I've also had malaria in childhood so it's safe to say I hate mosquitoes with a passion.
Scientists: I used the disease to destroy the disease.
@soyanshumohapatra
3 ай бұрын
Yo
@Nate-.-
3 ай бұрын
Or bacterial infection to reduce the risk of virus transmission. Nice try, though 👏
@misspineapple553
3 ай бұрын
@@Nate-.-lol what a fun person you must be
@Nate-.-
3 ай бұрын
@misspineapple553 what? Hell no. You dont know me!
@someguy6152
3 ай бұрын
@@Nate-.-Point proven, both are intenet jokes, first is an End Game meme, Thanos:"I used the stones to destroy the stones". The second is a reference to being a "party pooper" by taking a joke too seriously, hence being not fun at parties.
My dad was killed by West Nile Virus he caught from a mosquito bite - would not be sad to see every single mosquito in the world eradicated
@MrHarshverdhan
Ай бұрын
Will FK up natural cycle
@thejoeman4774
Ай бұрын
@@MrHarshverdhandude in the video literally explained it wouldnt change much...
@Neven2468
Ай бұрын
Bullshit
@acordacorda
Ай бұрын
@@MrHarshverdhanidiot
@stephenc8596
Ай бұрын
@@Neven2468ya bro would just make up his dad dying
I’m currently laying here in a hospital bed. For the past 4 days I’ve getting over high feavers because I got dengue… your video is good timing on my feed
@phasein5413
3 ай бұрын
Good luck mate. Rooting for your recovery
@zure9295
Ай бұрын
Good luck mate, had it about 2-3 months ago and the headaches were horrible, it does get better after 1-2 weeks though
@clawinx
Ай бұрын
Me too! Hope you are better
Bro, a bug factory? I didn’t know we were allowed to be super villains now, Ight time to build a death Ray
@United_Wings
3 ай бұрын
😅
@russellzauner
3 ай бұрын
*styropyro has entered chat*
@Huachimingo97
3 ай бұрын
There's already a guy that built a solar death ray on his yard
@marisaelslove
3 ай бұрын
Dude fruit flies have beeeen bred to be infertile and mate with other fruit flies. It's nothing new to do something to insects in order to control their populations or negative effects on humans.
@sarasij1477
3 ай бұрын
The UK already has that
"Primarily by spreading disease" - I'm scared to learn what their secondary method is
@mobilemcsmarty1466
3 ай бұрын
since you asked, forgive me if it's scary.. it's blood loss. in some parts of the world mosquitoes swarm and come at you in thick clouds. animals young, weak, or can't escape are literally sucked dry ☠
@justsomenightowl7220
3 ай бұрын
@@mobilemcsmarty1466wtf 😰😰😰
@leonardsalt
3 ай бұрын
@mobilemcsmarty1466 I said I was scared man :(
@rr.studios
3 ай бұрын
@@mobilemcsmarty1466 What the f*ck???
@beelunder8433
3 ай бұрын
I already knew that due to watching a documentary on caribou and it mentioned how some of the calves are literally bled dry. Nature's horrifying sometimes.
I was diagnosed with Chikungunya in 2015 and I've never been the same since, I develop a rare case of osteocondritis in my right ankle and left me unable to use my foot for two weeks and after the virus was gone the condition remained, making my ankle to swell and hurt really bad to the point where I couldn't firm my foot to the floor. Bare In mind I was 15 back then so my body still was developing and body cells are healthier. In the end after many MRI and many orthopedic doctor opinions, I got surgeries in 2021, 6 years later and the condition has disappeared ever since. The virus truly changed my everyday life. From doing sports everyday for hours to barely an hour before I had to take a rest because of my ankle. I'm grateful this matter is being tackled because I wouldn't want anyone to go through what I did almost 10 years ago.
@manuelaguirre1062
3 ай бұрын
Doctor yourself website
@vlotty9
Ай бұрын
Really sorry that you are experiencing this. We’re now learning that it’s possible that these kinds of post-acute sequelae are common for any viral illness- COVID has brought this to the forefront. There is some possibility that the research into long COVID might help find treatments for a range of post viral illnesses. But until then, the only way to prevent these issues is to prevent getting infected by COVID or other viruses as much as possible. (Clean air, N95 masks, ventilation, anti-mosquito clothing/lotions, mosquito nets)
@amodmishra3030
Ай бұрын
Take care bud
@graciegj63
Ай бұрын
I've heard that bee venom is being used as a medicinal to reduce things like swelling and arthritis.
I had hemorrhagic dengue in 2016, spent a full week hospitalized. If this program achieve success it'll be an awesome thing
I'm a senior in high-school, when I first heard about this story I was in 7th grade doing a research project on mosquitoes. I'm really glad the plan is actually starting to take shape, hopefully it can go global and these pests can be a thing of the past. Literally just flying used needles, goodbye measles!
@Sam_on_YouTube
3 ай бұрын
There's a reason they've been going VERY slowly. There's a giant risk of there's something we fail to foresee. But they've spent years checking everything they possibly can and it seems shockingly safe.
@xter7856
3 ай бұрын
Not literally.
@Sam_on_YouTube
3 ай бұрын
@@xter7856 Check the dictionary. The word "literally" has been used wrong so much, the definition has literally (by the old definition) changed.
@xter7856
3 ай бұрын
@@Sam_on_KZread I didn't want to believe it, but you're right. They did add and acknowledge the informal definition of literally to the dictionary. I'm going to need some time to cope.
@me-df9re
3 ай бұрын
Not "LITERALLY" 🤦♂, stop using that word in "LITERALLY" every sentence.
Bro, i was watching from Brazil and when you said that mosquitos are the deadliest animal on earth i just heared one in mu ear, my soul left oit pf my body
@ChineduOpara
3 ай бұрын
Well go get it back, bro... you need it in order to get into heaven!
@MasonOBrien-lc5mq
3 ай бұрын
😂😂
@callyral
Ай бұрын
Passa repelente
I hope that this can continue to help people. I had a relative that was brought to the ICU because of a severe dengue and I would say it was one of the lowest point in my life because of stress, on top of that I was also hospitalized at the same time because of mild dengue fever as well.
Glad you put this video out, I’m not sure when I ever would have heard of this project otherwise. This is an incredibly cool thing they’re doing
As someone who caught dengue fever in pandemic. Hearing this is very relieving. In my family, only my mom that has not caught dengue fever. Hope it stays that way
@newperve
3 ай бұрын
Good news! It's not COVID, bad news....
@charlesbrill5355
3 ай бұрын
Mosquitos are pollinators, and part of the food chain for fishes, birds and some animals. They probably wouldn't haver evolved if they didn't do more good than harm.
@Cra3ier
3 ай бұрын
Good news, you get immunity after getting dengue; bad news, you are prone to 3 more mosquitoes dengue 😅
@Aynshtaynn
2 ай бұрын
"In my family, only my mom has not caught Dengue fever. Hope it stays that way." So you wish your children and grandchildren catches it, therefore your mother will stay the only one that hasn't? That's terrible.
@alpha0090
2 ай бұрын
@@Cra3ier and believe me your 2nd -4th gets exponentially worse. If you ever reach that 4th strain you'd be lucky if you don't get any organ failures, that's if you live ofcoarse.
This is Nobel prize stuff, THIS IS A HUGE DEAL
@greenmeancoolmachine
3 ай бұрын
Lol
@DzzO
3 ай бұрын
It sure is. The amount of deaths it will prevent. This could be game changing for the global south.
@natalieharoldsen3494
3 ай бұрын
I just wished it helped combat the real mosquito transmitted killer- Malaria.
@bedobabado3824
3 ай бұрын
Naive
@weltschmerzistofthaufig2440
3 ай бұрын
@@bedobabado3824 Why is that?
As someone prone to mosquito bites living in a malaria infected country, ive been waiting for the mosquito-pocalypse my whole life.
This is amazing, one of the most interesting videos ever produced by ASAP Science.
Metal Gear Solid 5 explored the idea of Modified Wolbachia spreading through vocal chords. Good to hear that in the real world it's being used for good
@RE3254
3 ай бұрын
All of Brazil is about to pick up learning 1 or 2 extra languages, just in case
@Fraunzi
3 ай бұрын
If you remove the soldiers that speak kikongo you don’t get an outbreak on mother base (that’s as the infected language)
@St0RM33
3 ай бұрын
A WEAPON TO SURPASS METAL GEAR
@masterbertgamma
3 ай бұрын
Also in MGS V, there is an attack by a rival PMC led by a soldier with call-sign "Mosquito". Coincidence?!
@mozermzr3186
3 ай бұрын
Came here for that comment. Bring out old talker !
They did that in New Caledonia in 2019 (on a way smaller scale, probably when it was still an experiment) and it totally work, going from 3000-4000 case of dengue each year to 2 in 2022 (which were imported by tourist who came back from Bali). The bad side is that for people around the mosquitos drop, you got more mosquitos around you, they can still bite you (whitout anymore risk though) and it's advised to not kill them as they are suposed to overtake the regular mosquitos population. But it's just a little bad moment that can avoid worst moment after that :)
I have been following this for years and it is literally so incredibly fascinating. Highly recommend looking into this if you are even the slightest bit curious!
I was diagnosed with dengue/fever when I was around 10 years old (around 2009), in Medellin, Colombia (Aburra Valley) the same place where this video talked about. I have been able to see first hand the declines of dengue related sickness and deaths. The mosquito program has been an incredible and clever way to stop the spread of this virus, often affecting low income families.
I live in brazil and i hope demgue rates go down but also, i dont wanna have billions of extra mosquitos in my country
@veritush
3 ай бұрын
i live in a neighbouring country to yours and are as conflicted as you are with this news 😅
@blusafe1
3 ай бұрын
The mosquito population would quickly stabilize downwards. They are not a species that can persistently maintain high numbers.
@20031bibi
3 ай бұрын
@@blusafe1u sure? the mosquitoes in my city say otherwise kkkkk
@bartmannn6717
3 ай бұрын
I imagine, those billions are just a very tiny amount in the general mosquito population. After a few days, they die anyway and a typical mosquito doesn't travel much farther than 200m from where it was bred. Those genetically modified ones would just replace the other ones in a very short time and I'm sure no one would notice it during that period.
@TragoudistrosMPH
3 ай бұрын
Also remember, males do not bite. Only females preparing to lay eggs. Some places tried only releasing modified males.
These people are real life superheroes. I hope more people will dedicate their time to being this helpful
@gintoki_sakata__
3 ай бұрын
Are you?
@Thawhid
3 ай бұрын
@gintoki_sakata__ no I don't like looking at mosquitoes
@megarayquaza9054
3 ай бұрын
@@gintoki_sakata__not everyone's dreams involve them spending their life tinkering with mosquitoes and viruses, funny how you ask that with that profile picture
Interesting study. Next, you should do a video on what would happen if we killed every mosquito on Earth.
you're unnaturally animated, facial-expressions-intense & jolly. topic is the only thing that keeps me watching
Can they do this with Lyme and alpha-gal infected ticks? Please?
@Chris.in.taiwan
2 ай бұрын
Ticks, mosquitos and leeches are a curse on human kind.
Hello from Brazil! Glad to see people talking about what our scientists are developing. They deserve more recognition (over here, mainly)!
please do a full podcast on this!
Hello Colombian here that lives very close to Medellin (Aburra Valley). I didn't know we had that project, but it makes sense because there are no longer as many campaigns to prevent Dengue outbreaks. What is really amazing is that last year I had dengue and had to go to the hospital because of it, good to know im one of the 4%🤦♀️
Singapore has been employing this technique as early as October 2016! To great success too, though they only release male Wolbachia infected mosquitoes in order to reduce the mosquito population.
How about we make mosquitoes not bite us
@GojosBackHand
3 ай бұрын
That would be way to easy😂
@JesseJames_37
3 ай бұрын
... how?
@GoeTeeks
3 ай бұрын
@@JesseJames_37 Either you kill the species of mosquitoes that bite humans, or you genetically engineer those species in a way that makes them not want to bite us and introduce them to the population to breed with other mosquitoes. Eventually the human=ick gene spreads to all of those mosquito populations and we eliminate mosquito bites from humans without killing any mosquito species.
@JesseJames_37
3 ай бұрын
@@GoeTeeks yeah obviously. But how do you do that? The actual mechanism I mean. We don't have a method of doing that, but we do have a method of greatly reducing the mosquito population (the video above). So, in an effort to conserve human life, we are going forward with it.
@Sam_on_YouTube
3 ай бұрын
There is also an effort to do that. There's only about 6 species that bite humans out of a whole lot of species. If they all died, the others would fill all the other functions mosquitos do. The gene drive is a similar experiment that would kill entire species in the area where it is launched. It has been under study for a very long time because it is kind of scary if it goes wrong.
Watching this while recovering from dengue. I hope these solutions help with this problem here in brazil, we are currently having a dengue epidemic and it is not fun at all
Learned a lot, brilliant 😊❤
Fascinating experiment in Brazil! It's refreshing to see a potentially effective and ecologically responsible solution to address the deadly disease-spreading mosquitoes. Kudos to the scientists for thinking outside the box and betting on this unconventional approach. Looking forward to seeing how this pans out in the long run.
I like Metal Gear Solid V, hearing Wolbachia brings back memories.
@Yehoyoshi
3 ай бұрын
I was looking for this comment literally just finished mgsv
@St0RM33
3 ай бұрын
A WEAPON TO SURPASS METAL GEAR
@Ozzie143
3 ай бұрын
Burgers of kazuhira
I remember hearing something like that 5-7 years ago, happy to hear about it again!
Great video! Btw, your graphic has a typo at 3:57. It reads dengea instead of dengue.
Will this create a selective pressure for resistance to the bacterium? Or, as infected mosquitoes can still reproduce (infected female, infected male and female), will there be no selective pressure for resistance?
@TragoudistrosMPH
3 ай бұрын
Infertility is a modification to males. The wollochia bacteria are separate and prevent dengue and malaria infection. The bacteria doesn't hurt the mosquitoes, so no need to resist. Females avoiding sterile males would be potential selective pressure, *if* there are existing genes that can avoid those males.
@pedrolmlkzk
2 ай бұрын
Yes it 100% will
@Teh_Duck
Ай бұрын
Mosquitos don't benefit from carrying deadly diseases so there is no reason that they would breed out wolbachia. If anything deadly diseases are bad for mosquitoes because it kills their food sources but haven't due the abundance of animals to feed on id presume.
@davidaugustofc2574
Ай бұрын
There's is no pressure for the mosquitoes, there might be for the bacteria to mutate because it's now sterile
@pedrolmlkzk
11 күн бұрын
@@davidaugustofc2574 it only takes 1 of them being immune then
What If We Killed Every Mosquito On Earth? A full video on why they are adding more mosiquitos and nothing to do with killing any mosquitors.
@ChineduOpara
3 ай бұрын
Right??? Best and most creative ckickbait ever.
@Quinton_ovo_
3 ай бұрын
Didnt they say: Nothing bad would happen to us directly but we cant be sure because it's too big a magnitude to assess
@bongqueen
3 ай бұрын
Dumb ppl be like wait why dont they wipe out a whole species nothing bad could possibly happen
@DemonGlacier
Ай бұрын
@@Quinton_ovo_ They still filled half the video with technically irrelevant content, leaving viewers to keep watching and hope that they see what they actually clicked for...
Here in Argentina we are experiencing a kind of mosquito epidemic. The number of cases has increased by x10 since the last year, so this progress seems brilliant and necessary here.
Singapore released them here and I believe the pilot program worked (although I got infected with dengue in my estate) thank you for your work male mosquitoes
Wolbachia sounds like Wallechia. Given the tendency of mosquitoes to suck blood, I find this name similarity amusing. 🧛🏼
@AmaraJordanMusic
3 ай бұрын
Same! What a fun coincidence. 😅
I had malaria as a child and it was a terrible time, fifteen years later and I still remember the feeling.
@jameshoward2738
3 ай бұрын
I noticed that as soon as they started talking about the wolbachia program, they didn't mention malaria again though, but just kept talking about dengue...
First time here😁...really good video keep it going
I have known about the Wolbachia experiment like 8 years ago and its great to finally see some results.
Thank you for answering one of the random questions that's been stuck in my consciousness for 13 years.
You didn’t even tell us whether or not it was feasible like you mentioned early in the video! It was one of your research questions, I NEED TO KNOW 😭
@raeperonneau4941
3 ай бұрын
In reading the comments, it seems to not only be feasible but has been used since 2016 in different countries.
@CannedCoochie
3 ай бұрын
Im gonna present to you a very interesting concept. Its called "Finish watching the entire video before posting a comment"
Great sharing, thanks
The plot of MGSV thickens
I used to do dengue research, about 10 years ago, and Wolbachia was the talk of the town!
wolbachia just waiting for the right moment, they waited for us to take the bait.
@figo5862
3 ай бұрын
5:06
@amonynous9041
3 ай бұрын
@@figo5862 dude, it's a joke, u know, funny, ha ha?
@Deferxs74
3 ай бұрын
Covid part 3
@FadlySansan
3 ай бұрын
☠️💀
@brandonhoffman4712
3 ай бұрын
Attack of the killer zwolbachia! I added a z to denote it's zombification. The movie posters will do a better job!
I heard about that back in 2019, when I used to work at health department fromcmy city and thought that's really a cool idea to stop dengue from spreading
I've had this question in my head for years, living along the equator
this is a tremendous moment for humanity and it's making me emotional to think about it
@brandonhoffman4712
3 ай бұрын
Glad I showed up! You want me to celebrate with you, or do you need a hanky? I can be available for either. (Pops a party popper in the pants) [wink] I think ima need this hanky to clean up tho...
If I remember right, I think they did this here where I live in Florida too. I remember something that releasing modified mosquitoes to combat zika
@kasavaman007
3 ай бұрын
And you believe them?
@toxxickillerzz5114
3 ай бұрын
@@kasavaman007noo... they just release 5 billion mosquitos for shits and giggles.
@kasavaman007
3 ай бұрын
@@toxxickillerzz5114you dont get it. what i mean is what they said is not what they do. where'd you think zika came from? naturaly?
@francestod.tandocjr4092
9 күн бұрын
@@kasavaman007Are you saying the disease is man-made? That ain't exactly feasible considering it existed that for centuries.
Wolbachia mosquito are everywhere right now in Malaysia and Singapore
Great video, hope they can pull it at a massive scale and reduce those infections.
0:02 cool to know that now French Guiana is part of Brazil 🤣
"You cant blow up earth! Its a protected habitat for mosquitoes!" Lilo & Stitch
I like the idea, nice work 🥳
My city recently had a sudden rise on dengue cases, so seeing this makes me hope that it won't be happening too much again
I was screaming this got me so hyped up. Go science
@brandonhoffman4712
3 ай бұрын
Tell that to lake karachay... Feel free to take a swim, I dare you! Okay I take it back, 1 toe dip and the doctors will watch you perish with no way to help but ease the pain.
Terrifying and fascinating..😅
Could wolbachia be used with tics? Since lime desease and the meat allergy stuff.
Why is this not a world wide headline?! This is incredible
What could ho wrong with modified mosquitoes ⁉️
@soyanshumohapatra
3 ай бұрын
Everything
*Everyone gangsta untill the virus mutates*
@peepeepoopoo115
3 ай бұрын
you’re exposed to the bacteria used in these mosquitos every single day.. It doesn’t simply mutate like a virus and it’s not harmful to humans
@blusafe1
3 ай бұрын
Thus the elegance of the solution. Wolbachia will naturally evolve alongside their pathogenic competitors.
Sound like another good plot for Zomebie Apocalypse Movie.
We need to research this for ticks as well
Releasing 5 billion insects sounds like a story out of a 2000 year old fiction book
@mypiebecamepizza9503
3 ай бұрын
Seconding that in the reshaped area for 1400 years because of the same book collection 😊 , hi there
Wouldn’t this just push dengue to evolve into a more effective competitor of wolbachia, outcompetes wolbachia aaaand in turn perhaps be deadlier to humans
What if the viruses mutates to survive with Wolbachia? Viruses are the smallest living systems so they are the first ones to mutate and evolve.
This is insane. It really makes me think about the complexity of the unknown. Science and the universe is just unbelievable.
I think this isn't reducing the mosquito population very much- although Wolbachia isn't good for them it doesn't kill them off. But making sure it is endemic in the wild population reduces the viruses a lot. If both M and F have W, the eggs do hatch and bear W, so the intervention doesn't have to be sustained. Elsewhere I've seen it claimed that just a small set of species (six or so?) are responsible for almost all human infection, so selectively wiping out those might be worthwhile.
@S_Miclemie
3 ай бұрын
Yeah well its not trying to reduce the mosquito population, it's trying to reduce the number of mosquitoes that can spread diseases. Lets say there are a 10 million mosquitoes right now, out of which 3 million are mosquitoes that can spread deadly diseases like malaria and dengue, after infection them with wolbachia there still will be 10 million mosquitoes, its just that instead of 3 million on them carrying diseases there will now only be 100,000 that carry diseases
Juergen Klopp a scientist???
@radinaatanasova
3 ай бұрын
lmao, now i can't unsee it
@sethbirungi6178
3 ай бұрын
😂
What an incredible bit of ingenuity
I thought of this solution long ago. Crazy what thoughts come into mind during shower or waiting to fall asleep...
Light: Human's ingenious plan, Pacifist mosquito plague Dark: Human's ingenious plan, Disguised mosquito plague
What about Malaria? Doea Wolbachia affect the malaria parasite the same way it affects dengue virus?
00:01 Literally the plot of Resident Evil: Death Island lmao
Imagine having a device that exterminates all mosquitoes in your proximity
They just forgot one thing: life finds a way
@ballisticalrift
3 ай бұрын
What a very scientific approach
1:06 then kill only those mosquitoes who bite
@KaidenPvP15
3 ай бұрын
logic
amazing video! hell yeah! science!
alright, this video was the hypothesis time for the practical test
We’re looking at this problem all wrong! Not all mosquitoes bite! Only females from some species bite because their ovaries don’t fully develop during their adolescent stages, whereas the species that don’t bite have fully developed ovaries when they become adults. This disparity between the biting and non-biting species is why the biting species need to bite: they need the protein and nutrients from a blood meal in order to stay competive with the non-biting species. The solution? Genetically modify the biting species, helping them, so that their ovaries develop sooner negating the need to bite at all. Which solves the disease vector issues.
@blusafe1
3 ай бұрын
Implementation would be the same: mass produce millions of breeders to spread the trait in wild populations. Genetic modification would be insanely more expensive, require more research and development, carry much higher risks, and be more prone to failure.
@spongebobislyfe5906
3 ай бұрын
That could also change their birth rates, which may have a negative impact on the environment and quality of life
@vincevvn
3 ай бұрын
I’m about 1000% positive if you know this information, actual researchers and scientists have already looked into this. Way to try to sound smart tho.
@realBeltalowda
3 ай бұрын
@@blusafe1 the risks are the same. By intentionally spreading wolbachia into all mosquito populations there is just as much room for natural evolution of those wolbachia to evolve and mutate into something that could be harmful to us, potentially even more harmful at some point. Modifying the mosquitoes is more expensive in the short term and people are afraid of it because “something could go wrong” and we haven’t done it yet, but modifying them so that they are helped and don’t bite us means no more potential disease vectors at all from mosquitoes.
Mosquitoes form an important source of biomass in the food chain-serving as food for fish as larvae and for birds, bats and frogs as adult flies-and some species are important pollinators. Geckos also need them for food . Without mosquitoes, thousands of plant species would lose a group of pollinators. Adults depend on nectar for energy (only females of some species need a meal of blood to get the proteins necessary to lay eggs that may lead to the death of many a plant species.
@ayejay8862
3 ай бұрын
Thank you! Yeah, I don't buy the whole idea that wiping out an entire 'nuisance' species is good for the world; having no significant ramifications on the ecosystem. Everything in nature has its place, its value, even 'natural' diseases affect the progression of immunity and evolution. The immediate benefits-seeking nature of modern society tends to make us quite nearsighted, imo.
@brandonhoffman4712
3 ай бұрын
100% agree. Midges/mosquitos serve as up to 50% of a trouts diet. There are plenty of delicate trout ecosystems that would perish alongside the mosquito. One of my favorite places to fish is a place like this. I don't like the bites, but I respect their place in the circle of life. I was happy to find we aren't eradicating them, just eradicating thier ability to cause infection with a reverse infection.
@lm-pw9ul
3 ай бұрын
Mosquitoes in Western countries are nowhere near as bad as the ones in Asia/South East Asia and maybe other tropical places. Trouts can eat other things and I don't even eat trout. I prefer seafood/fishes from the sea that have less parasites.
@noodleconsumer
3 ай бұрын
That is a sacrifice I am willing to make
@brandonhoffman4712
3 ай бұрын
@lm-pw9ul I don't think you know what your talking about. All I'm hearing is prejudice, self-elevation, and a desire to murder things to suit you.
Sounds like the start of any sci-fi horror 😂
Bro, I love science. Scientists are so important. I wish we valued them more!
Great video despite having a bait/switch title.
Brasil mentioned!!!!! 🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷
@jake9854
8 күн бұрын
but g1rls hated brazil tho
I live in the Aburrá Valley and had no idea we had that, so that's something good going on for my region
Plot twist, there’s a giant mosquito behind the camera pointing a gun at him, forcing him to make this video.
@viennakrakatoaleipzignumbers
3 ай бұрын
-ito in spanish means little. Which implies that there is a giant mosquito named El Mosco doing just this.
Idk about this. When humans start to mess with things too much shit always turns sideways. I hope that this keeps helping but fingers crossed causeeeeee
Dengue's very popular nowadays in our country😂😂😂
Mosquitoes: "I will infect you!" Scientist: *uno reverse card*
I came for the results for a loss of mosquito, stayed for mosquito upgrade
except mosquito larva are a keystone food source for so many ecosystems. especially in wetlands and swamps
@phasein5413
3 ай бұрын
Yeah, it's a nice thought...but thankfully this is not eradicating mosquitoes, just the viral loads. Mosquitoes can replicate with this disease when the female has it.
When I was little I would always tell myself if I ever get 3 wishes one of them would be to get rid of all mosquitoes……. guess it’s coming true!! 😂😊
I suffered from dengue back in 2017. Worst feeling you can imagine. Took me about a month to fully recover. My weight dropped from 70 kg to 55kg. There are a lot of mosquitoes here in Karachi, Pakistan. The government should consider deploying these mosquitoes here too.
Nice topic video