Killer mosquitoes.Its buzz in your ear can make your skin crawl. Its bite can make you scratch for days. And for growing millions of people around the world, the mosquito can be deadly. Simon Osoro lives in Kisumu, a large city in western Kenya, like teens everywhere, the 16-year-old African loves to go to the movies, play hockey, spend time with friends, and read novels. But Simon had to put his life on hold last November, when he became sick with a disease that will attack a shocking 500 million people around the world this year: malaria The disease is caused by a single-celled parasite (an organism that lives in or on other organisms), transmitted by a single bite of the mosquito, that tiny winged insect everyone loves to hate. Usually mosquito bites are a harmless nuisance. But when the insect carries parasites that cause malaria, or viruses that cause yellow fever, encephalitis, and dengue dengue or breakbone fever or dandy fever Infectious, disabling mosquito-borne fever. Other symptoms include extreme joint pain and stiffness, intense pain behind the eyes, a return of fever after brief pause, and a characteristic rash. (DEN-gee) fever, one bite spells trouble. Malaria is rampant where Simon lives, and in other regions of Africa The continent of Africa can be conceptually subdivided into a number of regions or subregions. Directional approach One common approach categorises Africa directionally, e.g. , Asia, the Caribbean, and South America. "I suspect I got the bite in the dormitory in school," Simon told Science World. "After the El Nino rains, the grassy area around our dormitory was full of stagnant water. Mosquitoes breed there. Other boys were also sick with malaria. I think the mosquito that bit me bit other sick boys first. Then I got sick, too." In the 1950s and '60s, insecticide programs seemed to squelch squelch v. squelched, squelch·ing, squelch·es v.tr. 1. To crush by or as if by trampling; squash. 2. the disease. Now malaria is back in frightening force. The number of new cases (90 percent of them in Africa) has quadrupled in the last five years. The disease kills nearly 3 million people globally every year, claims the World Health Organization. In the U.S., about 80 cases of locally acquired malaria have been reported in the last 20 years. In these cases, mosquitoes may have first bitten someone already infected with malaria from abroad. Scientists are desperately trying to fight back. They're developing strategies to decimate dec·i·mate tr.v. dec·i·mat·ed, dec·i·mat·ing, dec·i·mates 1. To destroy or kill a large part of (a group). 2. Usage Problem a. the world's 3,000 species of mosquitoes. Why are mosquitoes--and the diseases they spread--so tough to beat? BLOOD SPORT To begin with, it's the female mosquito who's after blood. She needs the protein that animal and human blood provides to produce her eggs. Males feed only on plant juices. They're not equipped with the delicate hardware--piercing mouthparts--that females have evolved to do their dirty work. To locate a host, a human to prey on To take prey from; to despoil; to pillage; to rob To seize as prey; to take for food by violence; to seize and devour. - Shak. To wear away gradually; to cause to waste or pine away; as, the trouble preyed upon his mind s>. - Shak. See also: Prey Prey Prey , the female mosquito employs receptor cells on her antennae. She can whiff the carbon dioxide a potential blood donor exhales as far away as 60 meters (200 ft). As she flies closer, body heat, sweat, lactic acid, and about 40 other chemical compounds emitted by skin lure her to her prey. If a female mosquito lands on your skin, she uses her proboscis proboscis elongated, flexible feeding apparatus, formed of the fused mouthparts, in some insects. (pruh-BAW-sis), a strong, needlelike sucking tube, to puncture flesh and probe for a blood vessel. That's not as easy as it sounds. Less than 5 percent of the dermis dermis: see skin. , skin's middle layer, contains blood vessels, so the mosquito prods around until she pinpoints a blood vessel to pierce. Once she scores, she injects you with her saliva, which contains anti-coagulants, agents that stop blood from clotting and keep it flowing while the mosquito gorges herself. It's the allergic reaction to mosquito drool that results in swelling and itching. And if the mosquito is infected with a parasite such as malaria, her saliva can transmit the infection to her victim. One blood meal supplies the nutritional boost a female mosquito needs to produce as many as 250 eggs! She lays eggs in water anywhere, from buckets to marshlands. Her eggs hatch in two days to a few months, but some species' eggs can lay dormant for years until water conditions are right for hatching. How do mosquitoes go from water babies to flying insects? The larvae Larvae, in Roman religion Larvae: see lemures. , wormlike forms that hatch from insect eggs, feed on microorganisms from water, and breathe air through a siphon that pierces the water's surface. After four to 10 days a larva larva, in zoology larva, independent, immature animal that undergoes a profound change, or metamorphosis, to assume the typical adult form. Larvae occur in almost all of the animal phyla; because most are tiny or microscopic, they are rarely seen. curls into a pupa pupa (py `pə), name for the third stage in the life of an insect that undergoes complete metamorphosis, i.e., develops from the egg through the larva and the pupa stages to the adult. , a non-feeding stage, during which the mosquito metamorphoses This article is about the poem. For other uses, see Metamorphoses (disambiguation).The Metamorphoses by the Roman poet Ovid is a narrative poem in fifteen books that describes the creation and history of the world, drawing from Greek and Roman mythological (changes life form) into a flying adult. The pupa rises to the water surface, and the adult mosquito Pulls itself out of the pupal pu·pa n. pl. pu·pae or pu·pas The nonfeeding stage between the larva and adult in the metamorphosis of holometabolous insects, during which the larva typically undergoes complete transformation within a protective cocoon or husk and whizzes into the air. MALARIA WARS Anopheles gambiae is the main mosquito species that carries malaria in Africa. How did Simon know he was infected? "First I felt unusually tired," he says. "Then I got chills, a headache, and a high temperature." Where Simon lives, those symptoms often indicate malaria. Simon's bloodstream circulated the parasite into the liver, where the parasite invades cells and multiplies. After a week or two, parasites recirculate in the blood, penetrate red blood cells Red blood cells Cells that carry hemoglobin (the molecule that transports oxygen) and help remove wastes from tissues throughout the body. Mentioned in: Bone Marrow Transplantation red blood cells , and reproduce thousands of times. The disease leads to bouts of fever and anemia (depleted red blood cells), clogged blood vessels, and damaged vital organs, all of which can cause death if not treated quickly. Simon's early symptoms were followed by vomiting, diarrhea, and joint pains. His skin became scaly scal·y adj. 1. Covered or partially covered with scales. 2. Shedding scales or flakes; flaking. scaly skin condition characterized by scales; scalelike. and he lost a lot of weight. At first the medications he took didn't work; malaria parasites have become increasingly resistant to drugs. Finally, Simon was given quinine quinine (kwī`nīn', kwĭnēn`), white crystalline alkaloid with a bitter taste. Before the development of more effective synthetic drugs such as quinacrine, chloroquine, and primaquine, quinine was the specific agent in the treatment of , a drug used since the 1600s to relieve severe malaria symptoms. "This made me feel better, and finally I got well," he says. Malaria is treatable, but since millions of people in Africa are chronically infected with malaria, Simon will have to take anti-malarial drugs for the rest of his life. FIGHTING BACK Despite decades of efforts, scientists haven't yet developed a malaria vaccine. But Dov Borovsky, professor of insect biochemistry at the University of Florida University of Florida is the third-largest university in the United States, with 50,912 students (as of Fall 2006) and has the eighth-largest budget (nearly $1.9 billion per year). UF is home to 16 colleges and more than 150 research centers and institutes. , may have discovered a new tactic to combat the disease--a "diet pill" that starves mosquitoes to death. Borovsky found a hormone, or chemical substance, in mosquito ovaries that keeps mosquitoes from digesting food. His strategy is to place the hormone gene in chlorella chlorella Any green algae of the genus Chlorella, found in fresh or salt water and in soil. They have a cup-shaped chloroplast. Chlorellas are used often in studies of photosynthesis, in mass cultivation experiments, and for purifying sewage wastes. , the algae algae (ăl`jē) [plural of Lat. alga=seaweed], a large and diverse group of primarily aquatic plantlike organisms. These organisms were previously classified as a primitive subkingdom of the plant kingdom, the thallophytes (plants that larvae feast on. Chlorella cells then produce the hormone. "The hormone is like the chocolate chip in a chlorella cookie," Borovsky explains. When applied to mosquito-infested waters, the deadly cookie can starve millions of larvae in days. Borovsky thinks his "diet pill" could slash malaria rates by at least 30 percent, and could be available in two years. But studies conducted by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control (CDC See Control Data, century date change and Back Orifice. CDC - Control Data Corporation ) in Africa show the best immediate prevention of malaria is a mosquito net treated with insecticide. These nets can save millions of children's lives, says Bill Hawley, a CDC research biologist in Kenya. Simon Osoro is a malaria survivor. But the disease has changed his life. "I've missed a lot of school," he says. "I've been sick on and off." Still, Simon is optimistic about his future. He plans to finish high school and become a computer technician. "I dream of a bright future," he says. But, most of all, "I dream of living in a healthy nation with no more malaria." RELATED ARTICLE: Fight the Bite Most mosquitoes prefer to dine at night. So if you're outdoors after Sunset this summer, you might want to reach for mosquito repellent. Repellent sprays and lotions confuse mosquitoes. They interfere with the receptor cells on mosquito antennae. So the chemical smells that your skin normally emits never reach the mosquito's brain. Maybe the mosquito will think you're a tree! The active ingredient in most insect repellents is diethyltoluamide (die-EH-thil-tuh-LOO-ah-mide), commonly known as DEET While considered the most effective repellent, DEET may cause irritation or rashes on sensitive skin. A safer, though not as effective, option is a repellent made of natural ingredients like citronella oil citronella oil a volatile oil obtained from the grass Cymbopogon nardus or C. winterianus. Used as an insect repellent. . Other fight-the-bite tips: * Mosquitoes are drawn to warn skin and sweat. Stay cool! Loose clothing makes it harder for mosquitoes to bite, and some evidence suggests they're less attracted to light colors. * If you're traveling abroad to, any malaria-infested region, be sure to check with your doctor to protect yourself against malaria parasites. * To help destroy mosquito breeding habitats around the house, get rid of standing water in pails and bird baths. After it rains, throw away empty plant saucers soda cans, bottles, and other containers full of water. |
|
||||||||||||||||||||

`pə)
Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion