Peering into scientific research is a mixed bag – every so often your knees come together involuntarily and you find yourself siding with PETA or their insect equivalent.
For fishermen all we need know is the next generation of mosquito repellants will be cruel and unusual – which is an appropriate punishment for something that has nothing to do at dusk then cause us grief – or keeps us awake all night as it hovers near the choice flesh at your ear.
Like all finely tuned aircraft there’s a max payload – although us donors never see it that way, and upsetting the delicate aerodynamic balance renders the mosquito easy to swat – or especially vulnerable to predators.
Scientists have concluded the best way to intercept our irritating friend is to prevent them from urinating, which is part of the feeding process at the pump.
… yet another indignity we’ve been suffering these many decades.
“they have to undergo rapid urination when feeding, or they can’t fly away”
– via Cornell Chronicle Online
Which is the vague leaden lining of the research. To my untrained ear it still sounds like something’s biting someone to get the payload delivered.
Tags: Mosquito research, next generation of insect repellants, blood sucking
I’m not sure which is the most scary part.
The depth of your investigation? The fact about mosquito biology that you found? Or, the advertisements to the right of your column today?
huh, i was always told not to eat in the bathroom, stupid mosquitoes!
KB, only female mosquitoes feed on blood, so where do we put the tiny rubberband?
… on whatever is sharpest, or whichever appendage produces the anticoagulant.
I was too busy shifting in my chair to observe anatomical niceties, but thanks for the correction.
Put a cork in it?
or pull more corks and don’t worry about it for a couple of days.
Monty