• @verstra
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    4030 days ago

    Bees, wasps, ok, got it.

    But mosquitoes? I’be yet to find a biologist that would advocate for preservation of mosquitos. Kill them with fire.

        • @[email protected]
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          29 days ago

          There’s a backstory that’s revealed throughout the first Lilo and Stitch movie that Agent Bubbles was in the CIA in Roswell NM in the 60s and was able to smooth over an intergalactic incident by convincing the intergalactic government that earth is a critical ecosystem for protecting the endangered mosquito and to classify Earth as a wildlife preserve.

          So there’s jokes peppered throughout the film as Pleakley joins the escaped prisoner capture mission on Earth to ensure minimal disruption to the mosquito food chain.

          In case its not obvious, I recently rewatched that movie with my kids

          • @[email protected]
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            29 days ago

            never watched it but the movie poster never suggested to me such a story! I thought stitch was just an ugly koala like animal

            • @[email protected]
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              529 days ago

              The first film is actually very worth watching. The TV series is worth paying attention to with your kids, at least for the first episode or two

      • @[email protected]
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        229 days ago

        Curious how the non-humans will look in the live-action version coming out. They got Stitch right, at least.

    • JackbyDev
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      1030 days ago

      That thing we do where we dump genetically modified mosquitoes into an area to make sterile mosquitoes and kill them off is awesome because the gene dies out after a few years. It’d essentially a temporary and mild extinction we can do. It’s amazing because we don’t even need to decide if it’s correct to kill off a species.

      • @[email protected]
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        629 days ago

        It’s also worth noting that this technique has been used primarily in urban areas with introduced species of mosquitoes. It would have different effects if done in wild ecosystems on native species.

    • @[email protected]
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      729 days ago

      Mosquitos are one of the most prolific pollinators, I think you’d find most biologists would tell you this.

      • @[email protected]
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        629 days ago

        really, they are that relevant in pollination too? I thought it was some nutrient feedback link from large fauna to lake environments.

      • @[email protected]
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        229 days ago

        Damn, can’t even hate on mosquitos. Where will this ever end?

        BTW I recently learned the itchiness is just allergies. Some people aren’t allergic to mosquito bites and donate their blood to them without consequences. Other than the odd transmitted disease, of course.

      • @verstra
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        128 days ago

        I would like to believe that say amphibians would adapt eating flies or other insects if mosquitoes are lacking.

    • @[email protected]
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      129 days ago

      Nah that’s just female mosquitoes. Male mosquitoes are pollinators. Unfortunately, male mosquitoes need female mosquitoes.