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Help Stop Mosquito-borne Diseases with this App by Autumn Burdick for GSFC News Greenbelt MD (SPX) Apr 19, 2018
Citizen scientists can play a role in eliminating Zika and other mosquito-transmitted diseases by downloading a free GLOBE Observer app from Google Play or the App Store. Use the Mosquito Habitat Mapper module to report the location of mosquitoes that potentially transmit disease. The app will show you how to find mosquito larvae, photograph the breeding site and then eliminate sites near people. Mosquitoes breed in still, stagnant water in puddles, plants, trash, water storage containers and any other place where water pools. Using the app, you will document where you find still water and mosquito larvae. Then, using a cup, syringe, or other container, you can sample the water and count the number of larvae. In the optional second half of the app, you can photograph the larvae with a magnifying lens then answer a series of questions to find out if the mosquitoes breeding at the site are among the species that typically transmit disease. In the final step, you will eliminate the breeding site by dumping out or treating the water. The information you provide will help scientists and public health officials map the range and population density of mosquitoes in your neighborhood. To celebrate Earth Day 2018, NASA is highlighting a variety of innovative technologies and encouraging the public to use several online tools and the hashtag #NASA4Earth.
New model links yellow fever in Africa to climate, environment Washington DC (SPX) Mar 19, 2018 The burden of yellow fever in any given area is known to be heavily dependent on climate, particularly rainfall and temperature which can impact both mosquito life cycle and viral replication. Now, researchers from Imperial College London and the World Health Organization (WHO) have developed a new model to quantify yellow fever dynamics across Africa using not only annual averages of these climatic measures, but seasonal dynamics. Their work is described in PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases. ... read more
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