'Gallinipper'
Mosquito To Descend On Florida; Giant Insect 'Goes After People,'
Hurts When It Bites
Break out the DEET; this is not your garden-variety skeeter.
13
March, 2013
Break out the DEET; this is not your garden-variety skeeter.
As
Florida braces for mosquito season this year, experts warn that some
Sunshine State residents may soon have to deal with an increase in an
unusually large, unusually aggressive and unusually
painful "supermosquito" native to the eastern half of the
United States, the
Orlando Sentinel reports.
Psorophora
ciliata, known colloquially as "gallinippers,"
are notorious bloodsuckersthat
thrive in heavily flooded areas, according to University of Florida
researchers.
Last
year, Floridians in wet locales experienced a "bumper crop"
of the inch-long species, and UF entomologist Phil Kaufman said that
this rainy season, gallinippers may again descend on the region.
"It's
about 20 times bigger than the sort of typical, Florida
mosquito that you find,"
Anthony Pelaez of the Museum of Science and Industry in Tampa, told
WOFL.
"And it's mean, and it goes after people, and it bites,
and it hurts."
While
the insect's arguably fearsome reputation clearly proceeds it,
experts agree the gallinipper is a force to be reckoned with.
Doug
Carlson, mosquito control director for Indian River County, told WPTV
that the
insects are so big, "it can feel like a small bird has landed on
you." Meanwhile,
Gary Goode of Palm Beach County Mosquito Control told WPBF the
mosquito "practically breaks your arm" when it feeds on
you.
Even
the gallinpper's name sounds like the product of an American tall
tale. Indian River County's Carlson explained that the insects
allegedly got their moniker "because they're so big they can nip
a gallon of blood with a single bite.
There
is one sliver of good news, however. Gallinipers eat the larvae of
their smaller cousins (as well as tadpoles), and they are not known
to spread diseases, such as the West Nile virus, according to WOFL.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.