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The loathsome, lethal mosquito - Rose Eveleth

2m 26s446 words62 segmentsEnglish

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0:06

What's the worst bug on the planet?

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You might vote for the horsefly or perhaps the wasp,

0:12

but for many people,

0:13

the worst offender is by far the mosquito.

0:16

The buzzing, the biting,

0:17

the itching,

0:18

the mosquito is one of the most commonly detested pests in the world.

0:22

In Alaska, swarms of mosquitos can get so thick

0:25

that they actually asphyxiate caribou.

0:27

And mosquito-borne diseases kill millions of people every year.

0:31

The scourge that is the mosquito isn't new.

0:33

Mosquitoes have been around for over a hundred million years

0:36

and over that time have coevolved with all sorts of species,

0:39

including our own.

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There are actually thousands of species of mosquitos in the world,

0:44

but they all share one insidious quality:

0:46

they suck blood,

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and they're really, really good at sucking blood.

0:50

Here's how they do it.

0:52

After landing, a mosquito will slather

0:53

some saliva onto the victim's skin, which works like an antiseptic,

0:57

numbing the spot so we don't notice their attack.

0:59

This is what causes the itchy, red bumps, by the way.

1:02

Then the bug will use its serrated mandibles

1:04

to carve a little hole in your skin,

1:05

allowing it to probe around with its proboscis,

1:08

searching for a blood vessel.

1:09

When it hits one, the lucky parasite can suck

1:11

two to three times its weight in blood.

1:13

Turns out we don't really like that too much.

1:15

In fact, humans hate mosquitos so much

1:17

that we spend billions of dollars worldwide

1:19

to keep them away from us --

1:21

from citronella candles

1:22

to bug sprays to heavy-duty agricultural pesticides.

1:25

But it's not just that mosquitos are annoying,

1:27

they're also deadly.

1:28

Mosquitos can transmit everything from malaria to yellow fever

1:31

to West Nile virus to dengue.

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Over a million people worldwide

1:35

die every year from mosquito-borne diseases,

1:37

and that's just people.

1:39

Horses, dogs, cats,

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they can all get diseases from mosquitoes too.

1:43

So, if these bugs are so dastardly, why don't we just get rid of them?

1:47

We are humans after all,

1:48

and we're pretty good at getting rid of species.

1:51

Well, it's not quite so simple.

1:53

Getting rid of the mosquito removes a food source

1:55

for lots of organisms, like frogs and fish and birds.

1:57

Without them, plants would lose a pollinator.

2:00

But some scientists say

2:01

that mosquitos aren't actually all that important.

2:04

If we got rid of them, they argue,

2:05

another species would simply take their place

2:07

and we'd probably have far fewer deaths from malaria.

2:11

The problem is that nobody knows what would happen

2:13

if we killed off all the mosquitos.

2:15

Something better might take their spot

2:17

or perhaps something even worse.

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The question is, are we willing to take that risk?

2:23

(Buzzing)

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