Sarajevo
hit by massive swarm of flies
Likened to blizzards and leaving surfaces covered with a thick layer of crawling insects, the swarms have already struck a number of towns across the Balkans.
The death and hospitalization were confirmed by the Epidemiology Director from the city of Rosario.
The Junin virus is found in some species of camp mice that contaminate with their saliva, urine and excrement, and tend to proliferate in crop time. When harvesters chop up the four to six centimetres long brownish rodents, their blood is also potentially contaminating.
Human infection to occur through: skin contact (with abrasions, for example); in mucous or inhalation of particles carrying the virus. It is found mainly in people who reside in, or visit, or work in rural areas, 80% of those infected are men between 15 and 60.
The FHA is a serious acute illness like a common starting flu sends progressing to death in 1-2 weeks or recovery if treated early with blood plasma of ex-patients.
The virus incubation period is between 10-12 days after the first symptoms appear which confuses the unprepared practitioner in the differential diagnosis (biochemical analysis of platelets): fever, headache, weakness, reluctance, joint and eye pain and loss of appetite.
Unlike common flu where the patient improves to fifth day, with FHA symptoms intensify less than a week later forcing the infected patient to bed, producing increasingly strong symptoms of altered vascular, renal, haematological and neurological. This stage does not last more than 20 days If not treated anti-virally, FHA mortality reaches 30%.
Sarajevo's
fire brigade has been inundated with calls after a massive swarm of
flies struck the Bosnian capital
2
May, 2013
Some people reportedly fled the city to escape the aerial invasion, according to local media.
Bosnian fire brigade officials said that could do little to combat the flies but advised people to shut doors and windows in order to keep the swarming insects at bay.
Likened to blizzards and leaving surfaces covered with a thick layer of crawling insects, the swarms have already struck a number of towns across the Balkans.
Serbian
press said that the insects cleared streets and squares of people in
just a few minutes after they descended on the central town of
Kraljevo on Monday night.
Outbreak
of mice-vector hemorrhagic fever in Argentina; attacks in rural areas
A
31-yeaar old farm hand died and a 12-year old adolescent has been
hospitalized in the province of Santa Fe following an outbreak of
Argentine hemorrhagic fever (FHA) caused by the viral agent Junin and
transmitted by camp mice.
9
May, 2013
The
contagion potential of the disease covers a wide area of central
Argentina: the provinces of Buenos Aires, Cordoba, La Pampa and Santa
Fe, with other strains of the disease in Paraguay and Bolivia.
The death and hospitalization were confirmed by the Epidemiology Director from the city of Rosario.
The Junin virus is found in some species of camp mice that contaminate with their saliva, urine and excrement, and tend to proliferate in crop time. When harvesters chop up the four to six centimetres long brownish rodents, their blood is also potentially contaminating.
Human infection to occur through: skin contact (with abrasions, for example); in mucous or inhalation of particles carrying the virus. It is found mainly in people who reside in, or visit, or work in rural areas, 80% of those infected are men between 15 and 60.
The FHA is a serious acute illness like a common starting flu sends progressing to death in 1-2 weeks or recovery if treated early with blood plasma of ex-patients.
The virus incubation period is between 10-12 days after the first symptoms appear which confuses the unprepared practitioner in the differential diagnosis (biochemical analysis of platelets): fever, headache, weakness, reluctance, joint and eye pain and loss of appetite.
Unlike common flu where the patient improves to fifth day, with FHA symptoms intensify less than a week later forcing the infected patient to bed, producing increasingly strong symptoms of altered vascular, renal, haematological and neurological. This stage does not last more than 20 days If not treated anti-virally, FHA mortality reaches 30%.
Giant
swamp rats are literally eating Louisiana – ‘I just don’t know
how these people who love their home so much are going to go on
living here’
7
May, 2013
On
the southern edge of Louisiana, there is almost as much water
as land. You can't drive to anyone's house, you have to travel by
boat, and sometimes there are hours of water between neighbors. It
takes a special breed to make a home here, in
the swamp,
amongst the mosquitos and almost
annual hurricanes.
But those who do call it home, love it. They see a magical space of
strange stillness and subtle rippling greens and grays where time
worries no one and the freedom of the water is at your doorstep.
But
this Huck Finn way of life is being attacked on multiple
fronts. Climate change's stronger storms are beating away at the
fragile coastline, and the oil and gas industries are scarring the
skyline while luring younger generations away from the local farming
and fishing way of life. As if that weren't enough, 20-pound,
semi-aquatic rodents, called nutria, which are native to Argentina,
are taking over the marshes, devouring the native plants that hold
the soil in place, and causing massive coastal erosion. Chris
Metzier, an independent documentary filmmaker, has spent months in
these swamps on the front lines of this battle, filming his upcoming
documentary Rodents
of Unusual Size.
He sat down with me recently to talk about nutria and the interesting
people who are fighting them to save their way of life.
TakePart: How
would you describe nutria, and how did they end up in Louisiana?
Chris
Metzier: Nutria
are something like a cross between a beaver and a New York sewer rat.
They were first brought to Louisiana in the 1930s in order to be
farmed for their fur, which was growing in popularity. No one knows
exactly how they escaped into the wild. Maybe someone let them go
when the fur industry was failing, or perhaps it was the
work of a hurricane that tore apart a barn they were being kept in.
One way or another, they escaped into the swamps and have just gone
crazy. This part of Louisiana is just like a big playground for them.
And they can breed within months of being born and have multiple
litters a year. There are now about five million nutria in this part
of Louisiana. There are nutria in other parts of the country, as
well, but nowhere have they made themselves quite so much at home as
in Louisiana. That's great for nutria, I guess, but they eat
everything that grows, and without plants holding the soil in place,
it is eroding away at record speeds—about 40 square miles per year,
for several decades now.
What
kind of steps have been taken to try and control nutria?
Well,
a campaign was started a while back to try and get people to eat
them. They had celebrity chefs come up with gourmet nutria dishes and
everything. And they really don't taste bad; I've had nutria slim
jims and jambalaya, and it's quite tasty. I think people would like
it if they didn't know it was a swamp rat. But tell them that, and
there's no way they are going to finish their dinner. So that program
failed, and now in the last six years or so, there has been a program
in place that offers trappers five dollars for every nutria tail they
bring in. It's decent money for farmers or fishermen, who only have
seasonal income and, for now at least, it is keeping the population
somewhat in check.
The
nutria fur industry has stuck around over the years, specifically for
exporting to other countries. It's very small compared to what it was
before. But a group of young people have now come together, saying
they know that people haven't liked fur recently, because they see it
as cruel to animals or just don't think it's fashionable. So they are
trying to reframe the debate in terms of nutria fur. This is a
sustainable way to get fur; these animals are already being killed
because they are an invasive species. This fur was prized in the
past, so can we come up with desirable pieces of fashion and get
people to wear them? Some of the world's top-end designers have
embraced it. Nutria has been worn on the catwalks of Milan, Paris,
and New York. This group of artists and designers in Louisiana are
trying to get the message out that some fur can be environmentally
friendly and beneficial to the ecosystem it comes from. It's really
taken off in Brooklyn, where people want to wear fur but don't want
to feel guilty doing it. This is a way to reuse the rest of the
animal that is already being killed to save the wetlands.
Do
you have a favorite character from your time down in the swamps?
Absolutely.
The place is busting at the seams with interesting people, so it's
always hard to pick one. But, there's a gentleman named Thomas we
spent hours talking to. He is someone who has lived such a strange
and interesting life, and so thoughtful and warm that he leaps off
the screen at you. He has such a melodic way of talking, you just
want to hear the stories he tells. Whether it's surviving a hurricane
in the '50s that killed 18 of his friends and family or the pet
albino nutria he had for several years that he would walk around on a
leash. He is a guy that gets stir crazy inside and is all about being
outside; he is so intertwined as a person with the land around
him. People in this area are so aware of life and death, they know
that you just gotta seize it as much as possible and live a vibrant,
but respectful life.
Do
you address climate change as you tell the story?
Climate
change will definitely be discussed. Many people are very
conservative in this region, but also quite libertarian. People take
facts for facts and they see climate change around them. While they
might not be activists in protests, they understand it better than
most. The two things that southernLouisiana depends on are
farming and fishing, and the petroleum industry. A lot of young
people leave communities to go work on the rigs because it provides
so much more money than conventional careers in the area. But it is
the fossil fuel industry that exacerbates the local environmental
issues. Maybe this part of Louisiana could have made it even with all
the nutria if not for climate change. The two together…I just don't
know how these people who love their home so much are going to go on
living here.
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