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Mosquitoes are Drawn to Flowers as much as People — and now Scientists Know Why

By James Urton | University of Washington on Jan 28, 2020   Featured, Science/Education  

Mosquitoes are Drawn to Flowers as much as People — and now Scientists Know Why

  Without their keen sense of smell, mosquitoes wouldn’t get very far. They rely on this sense to find a host to bite and spots to lay eggs. And without that sense of smell, mosquitoes could not locate their dominant source of food: nectar from flowers. “Nectar is an important source of food for all […]

Scientists Discover how the Mosquito Brain Integrates Diverse Sensory Cues to Locate a Host to Bite

By James Urton | University of Washington on Jul 19, 2019   Featured, Science/Education  

Scientists Discover how the Mosquito Brain Integrates Diverse Sensory Cues to Locate a Host to Bite

  For female mosquitoes, finding their next meal is all about smelling and seeing. Through behavioral experiments and real-time recording of the female mosquito brain, a team of scientists, led by researchers at the University of Washington, has discovered how the mosquito brain integrates signals from two of its sensory systems — visual and olfactory […]

Catching a Diversity of Fish Species — Instead of Specializing — Means More Stable Income for Fishers

By James Urton | University of Washington on Sep 19, 2017   At Sea, Featured, Science/Education  

Catching a Diversity of Fish Species — Instead of Specializing — Means More Stable Income for Fishers

For people who make a living by harvesting natural resources, income volatility is a persistent threat. Crops could fail. Fisheries could collapse. Forests could burn. These and other factors — including changing management regulations and practices — can lower harvests, which depresses income for farmers, fishers and timber harvesters. But the ways that these forces […]

Mosquito Smells, Before it Sees, a Bloody Feast

By James Urton | University of Washington on Jul 20, 2015   Featured, Science/Education  

Mosquito Smells, Before it Sees, a Bloody Feast

The itchy marks left by the punctured bite of a mosquito are more than pesky, unwelcomed mementos of a day at the lake. These aggravating bites can also be conduits for hitchhiking pathogens to worm their way into our bodies. Mosquitoes spread malaria, dengue, yellow fever and West Nile virus, among others. As the bloodsucking […]

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