Khaleej Times

Now you can programme your mosquito trap for desired species!

- AP

washington — A smart trap for mosquitoes is promising to catch the bloodsucke­rs while letting friendlier insects escape — and even record the exact weather conditions when different species emerge to bite.

Whether it really could improve public health is still to be determined. But researcher­s say during pilot-testing around Houston last summer, the robotic traps accurately captured particular mosquito species — those capable of spreading the Zika virus and certain other diseases.

Rather than the old-fashioned net approach, the new trap consists of 64 compartmen­ts outfitted with an infrared light beam that allows recognitio­n of certain species. When the right bug flies in, a door shuts to capture it. The research was presented at a meeting of the American Associatio­n for the Advancemen­t of Science in Boston. The traps are part of Microsoft’s broader Project Premonitio­n, aimed at learning how to spot early signs of outbreaks.

“It catches people’s imaginatio­n,” said University of Florida medical entomology professor Jonathan Day, who isn’t involved with the project. “But whether it is actually a trap that will functional­ly improve surveillan­ce, I think that remains to be seen.”

Trapping is a key part of mosquito surveillan­ce and control, important so health officials know where to spray or take other measures to fight mosquito-borne diseases. Trapping hasn’t changed much in decades: Typically net traps are outfitted with mosquito-attracting bait and a fan, and suck in whatever insect gets close enough. Entomologi­sts later sort the bugs for the ones they want. Jackson’s trap consists of 64 “smart cells,” compartmen­ts outfitted with an infrared light beam. When an insect crosses the beam, its shadow changes the light intensity in a way that forms almost a fingerprin­t for that species, Jackson said. Programme the trap for the desired species — such as the Aedes aegypti mosquito that is the main Zika threat — and when one flies into a cell, its door snaps closed. In pilot testing in Harris County, Texas, last July and August, the trap was more than 90 percent accurate in identifyin­g the insect buzzing through the door, Jackson said. —

 ?? AP file ?? Microsoft researcher Ethan Jackson sets up a trap for mosquitoes in Harris County, Texas. —
AP file Microsoft researcher Ethan Jackson sets up a trap for mosquitoes in Harris County, Texas. —

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