Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Smart traps seek to put bite on pesky mosquitoes

- By LAURAN NEERGAARD

WASHINGTON — A smart trap for mosquitoes? A new high-tech version 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 when the robotic traps were pilot tested around Houston last summer, they accurately captured particular mosquito species — those capable of spreading the Zika virus and certain other diseases — that health officials wanted to track, researcher­s said Thursday.

The traps act like “a field biologist in real time that’s making choices about the insects it wants to capture,” said Microsoft lead researcher Ethan Jackson, who displayed a prototype trap 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.

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 bait, and a fan sucks in whatever insect gets close enough. Entomologi­sts later sort the bugs for the ones they want.

Jackson’s trap has 64 “smart cells,” compartmen­ts outfitted with infrared light. 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.

Program 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 insects, Jackson said.

Harris County already is wellknown in public health for strong mosquito surveillan­ce and had been keeping a sharp eye out for Zika — fortunatel­y finding none. But mosquito control director Mustapha Debboun called the high-tech trap promising, and is looking forward to larger scale testing this summer.

“If we are trying to collect the Zika virus mosquito, you can teach this trap to collect just that mosquito,” he said.

When each mosquito is captured, sensors record the time, temperatur­e, humidity and other factors, to show what environmen­tal conditions have different species buzzing. That’s informatio­n officials might use to schedule pesticide spraying.

The next step: Rapid genetic scans of the mosquitoes’ blood check for harmful pathogens — and can tell what animal the mosquito had been biting, Jackson said. If that work pans out, he said the data may help predict emerging diseases.

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