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New Laser System Targets Mosquitoes

An anonymous reader writes "In the Cold War the so-called 'Star Wars defense system' proposed using lasers to destroy incoming Soviet missiles. In a 2007 brainstorming session aimed at combating malaria, Dr. Lowell Wood, the architect of that system, proposed modifying his original idea to kill mosquitoes. The cover of today's Wall Street Journal contains an article that highlights this initiative as well as a few others, like using a giant flashlight to disrupt mosquitoes' vision and using the insects to vaccinate, in the war against malaria. The system is intelligent enough to avoid noncombatants like humans and butterflies and can even tell the difference between females, the blood-drinkers, and males. My favorite quote: 'We'd be delighted if we destabilize the human-mosquito balance of power.'"

4 of 354 comments (clear)

  1. Re:And then? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Although bats and Purple Martins can be prodigious consumers of insects, many of which are pests, less than 1% of their diet typically consists of mosquitoes. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mosquito

    There are no known mosquito predators that eat only mosquitoes.

  2. Re:And then? by John+Hasler · · Score: 4, Informative

    > Am I the only one who thinks that humans need to stop fucking around the with the order
    > of things and deal with it?

    Unfortunately, no.

    > Finding a cure for malaria (in our own bodies, which we're at liberty to fuck with)

    But then we won't be able to transmit it to mosquitos, which are also negatively affected by it. More mosquitos... but then pressure on other prey. Suddenly other species go extinct or apex predators populations explode because that of the oversupply of mosquitos.

    The same argument can be applied to many diseases. Obviously, we must stop trying to control disease and just learn to deal with it.

    Get this through your head: there is no "order of things." God/Gaia/Mother Nature does not exist and never did. Eden never happened.

    --
    Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
  3. they're next to worthless by SuperBanana · · Score: 5, Informative

    I wonder how the performance of this system compares to one of the numerous CO2+odor attractant trapping systems already in use.

    My folks have two- and despite that, they still have tons of mosquitoes and the traps take weeks to fill up.

    They have $$$ odor cartridges that last barely a week or two, the traps are really gross to empty (and usually full of really angry, hungry mosquitoes), you have to go to the hardware store often to fill the tanks, people steal the machines (they're expensive), the traps are ridiculously unreliable (they don't like getting wet...the idiots used exposed circuit boards and freakin' PC COMPUTER FANS). Nevermind they're burning LNG/propane 24x7 and use at least 30W-40W of electricity; not exactly enlightened from a climate/environmental perspective these days.

    If you don't like mosquitoes, build/buy some bird and bat shelters and put 'em up.

  4. I'm the Shark by pablos · · Score: 5, Informative

    I work at the Intellectual Ventures Lab where this system is being created. Just wanted to respond to a few points in the comments:

    DDT is non-discriminatory. It does kill mosquitoes, but it harms lots of other life forms as well. Because of its abuse, there are bans and economic sanctions that prevent its use. Changing that is a political problem.

    Using lasers, we don't expect to eradicate mosquitoes entirely, but they can be a way to help reduce their populations enough that malaria can't survive. In particular, the laser system can help create a perimeter to keep people safe.

    As far as we know, there aren't any species that rely solely on mosquitoes as a food source.

    Thanks, I will try to respond if there are further questions here.