Naked Science Forum
Life Sciences => Plant Sciences, Zoology & Evolution => Topic started by: Maya on 20/04/2009 22:30:02
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Maya asked the Naked Scientists:
Dear Naked Scientists,
I am listening to your programme (http://www.thenakedscientists.com/HTML/podcasts/) via Secondlife..
I would like to ask a question.. can you tell us why mosquitoes and other insects often swirl and swarm in circles beneath trees during the summer?
What do you think?
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I think it might be because mosquitoes don't like to fly far from their breeding area. Are you sure they are mosquitoes?
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I think mostly its because there is more moisture under the trees due to te shading from the brances so the undergrowth stays wetter and is a better inviroment for the little stinkers to live in damp dark areas....
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Its likely to be a result of the process of selection. Those that fly out of the swarm have a higher likelihood of being predated and there are therefore fewer of them.
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This doesn't only happen under trees. Drive through a marsh area on a summer evening (as I do sometimes on the A13 out of London through Rainham Marshes in Essex) and you can see columns of mozzies from a mile off or more.
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and you can see columns of mozzies from a mile off or more.
Gosh, Don! What big eyes you must have!
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and you can see columns of mozzies from a mile off or more.
Gosh, Don! What big eyes you must have!
Now don't start that again! Or have you been reading Little Red Riding Hood again?
Seriously, these columns must contain millions of the blood sucking little gits. I would estimate the columns to be around 1 - 2m wide and maybe 8 - 10m high.
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[;)]
This phenomenon can also be seen on a much larger scale above Lake Victoria, where the columns grow to several hundred metres high. The locals catch them and bake them into a biscuit. Nice, eh?
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I never did like Garibaldi's
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Thank you fellow forum participants for the responses to the question so far ;-)
Don_1 is right in saying it actually doesn't only restrict to trees, although one often sees the phenomena there.
They do so even above people's heads...or right in the open...
Could it be some kind of an energy build up.. or means of communication...?
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Means of communication, I like that thought! [:)]
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Thank you fellow forum participants for the responses to the question so far ;-)
Don_1 is right in saying it actually doesn't only restrict to trees, although one often sees the phenomena there.
They do so even above people's heads...or right in the open...
Could it be some kind of an energy build up.. or means of communication...?
Mosquitoes are attracted to CO2 that is exhaled in your breath and so it is natural that there should be a swarm above you.
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This doesn't only happen under trees. Drive through a marsh area on a summer evening (as I do sometimes on the A13 out of London through Rainham Marshes in Essex) and you can see columns of mozzies from a mile off or more.
Thats because the swamp is moist and mozzies LOVE moist areas and a swamp to them i imagine would be like heaven on earth... except i wounder what they eat, mozzies i mean.
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Mosquito diets vary according to sex and time of year. Only female mosquitoes drink blood, which they do during the breeding season because they use it as a source of protein to sustain egg-laying. Later in the year, pre-winter, they switch to consuming sugary liquids from fruits, which is what the males eat the rest of the time. This diet switch is called diapause and is in anticipation of the onset of winter. The sugar intake enables the insects to lay down fat reserves which can sustain certain species through winter.
Chris