Author Archives: ma darryl

What If We Killed All the Mosquitoes?

We all hate those little pests that only come out in the summer just to bite you and give you the little bump that itches for, what feels like, all eternity. More than 3,500 different species of mosquitoes exist, but only a small percentage of those species actually bite humans. For example, the Anopheles gambiae species carries malaria and the Aedes aegypti species spreads Zika fever. Furthermore, only the female mosquitoes are equipped with the appropriate stylet to pierce your skin.

Anopheles gambiae sucking blood
Credit: Wikipedia

So that begs the question, what would happen if we killed all the mosquitoes on Earth?

How It Affects the Food Chain

Animals that have mosquitoes as their primary food source, like bats, birds, frogs, fish and dragonflies, would likely have to change up their diet. This could potentially lead to their predators changing up their diet in some form as well, since their mosquito-loving prey would be hunting in other areas. So there would be some ecological impact.

Red-eyed tree frog
Credit: Wikipedia

However, it likely wouldn’t be all that detrimental to the food chain. Eventually other insects/animals would fill the void in the food chain left by mosquitoes and possibly be less annoying to humans and other animals.

How Would we benefit?

Hundreds of thousands of people would be saved. Malaria is a disease that still runs rampant in Africa. 95% of all cases and 96% of all deaths originated in the region, with children under the age of 5 making up 80% of the deaths in Africa. So eliminating the mosquitoes would increase the quality of life in many areas around the world and save a countless number of lives each year.

So why don’t we just do it?

Simply eradicating an insect species that lives all across the globe just isn’t feasible. Locating and killing every single mosquito is just not possible. However, it has been tested on smaller scales. 

Aedes aegypti on a leaf
Credit: Wikipedia

Scientists have genetically modified some male Aedes aegypti. The male carries a gene to stop their offspring from developing properly resulting in death before being able to reproduce. This has proven to be successful. However, it is still not feasible for total removal of mosquitoes across the globe since it would require genetically modifying millions of mosquitoes.

-Darryl Ma

From Wolves to Dogs. From Foxes to … Dogs? A Study About domesticated Foxes

As a kid, have you ever thought it might be awesome to have a monkey, dog or maybe even a fox as a pet? Or maybe you considered a more fearsome animal, like a lion or tiger, but realized it might be too difficult to domesticate.

In a famous 60 year long (1959-2017) experiment, Russian researchers Lyudmila Trut and Dmitry Belyayev selectively bred silver foxes to view the evolution that occurred to transform wolves into dogs. In essence, the two researchers were trying to selectively breed for tameness in the foxes.

Romeo the wolf with a labrador
Credit: Reddit

how is it possible?

Up until the study, the silver fox had never been domesticated before. To maximize the possibility that tameness was from genetic selection, the foxes were untrained, given minimal exposure to humans and were kept in cages. This tameness trait was evaluated once the pup reached the age of one month. The researcher would approach the fox in its cage while wearing a two-inch-thick glove and place a stick inside its cage.

Reactions were graded on the scale such that the highest score would be given to the calmest subjects. Criteria for some low-scoring foxes included extreme aggression or shrinking at the back of their cages. Those foxes who did not react would receive highscores and go on to breed for the next generation.

An aggressive silver fox pup
Credit: Darya Shepeleva

wait you’re happy to see me?

In the first few generations, the foxes were fairly hostile towards the researchers. Even the calmer foxes in these cohorts were notably not social towards humans. However, around the sixth generation of foxes, some fox pups seemed to seek human contact ‘not only [tail] wagging [but] also whining’. This behaviour was coined to be part of the ‘elites’.

In the sixth generation, only about 2% of the domesticated foxes exhibited this behaviour. Over the generations, the proportion of domesticated silver foxes that were deemed to be part of the ‘elites’ continuously expanded. By the 20th generation, the proportion reached 35%. In 2017, the elites made up 70% of the domesticated foxes.

Lyudmila Trut with a domesticated silver fox
Credit: Wikipedia

Can i have my own pet fox?

Yes, domesticated foxes are still obtainable from Russia. Although the experiment is no longer running, the foxes themselves are still being bred. Assuming you can pay the hefty price (approximately $8000) and it’s legal to own one in your country, it is still possible to have a pet fox.

The researchers were able to mostly domesticate the silver fox given that they had never been domesticated before. Being able to do so only by grading the calmness of the foxes as well makes the experiment even more fascinating. Despite being a very slow process, it creates the question of what other kinds of animals could we possibly domesticate purely based on their ‘tameness’?

-Darryl Ma