Tuesday, January 15, 2019

New way to fight mosquitoes

New way to fight mosquitoes.
Researchers have cultured more about how mosquitoes spot skin odor, and they say their findings could first to better repellants and traps. Mosquitoes are attracted to our lamina odor and to the carbon dioxide we exhale. Previous research found that mosquitoes have certain neurons that enable them to detect carbon dioxide source. Until now, however, scientists had not pinpointed the neurons that mosquitoes use to discern fleece odor.

The new study found that the neurons in use to detect carbon dioxide are also used to identify skin odor. This means it should be easier to obtain ways to block mosquitoes' power to zero in on people, according to the study's authors. The findings appeared in the Dec 5, 2013 children of the journal Cell.

And "These findings receptive up very realistic possibilities of developing ways to use simple, natural, affordable and appropriate odors to obviate mosquitoes from finding humans," senior author Anandasankar Ray, of the University of California, Riverside, said in a tabloid scandal release. Mosquitoes can carry dangerous diseases such as malaria, dengue fever and West Nile virus.

So "The telling hypothetical approaches we have developed will help us find potential solutions that we could use not only here in the United States but also in Africa, Asia and South America, where affordability is essential in the fighting against these diseases. The insect olfactory arrangement is an excellent target to manipulate their attraction to humans and other prey. We into that this study will be the foundation for the discovery of a new inception of mosquito-behavior-modifying approaches" click for source. More information The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has more about mosquito-borne diseases.

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