/ 4 July 2006

Cramped living creates ‘super mosquitoes’ in Athens

Cramped housing conditions and air pollution in Athens have given rise to a “super breed” of mosquito that is larger, faster and more adept at locating human prey, a Greek daily reported on Tuesday.

Athens-based mosquitoes can detect humans at a distance of 25m to 30m and also distinguish colours, unlike their colour-blind counterparts elsewhere in the country that only smell blood at 15m to 20m, Ta Nea daily reported.

The “super mosquitoes” of the Greek capital also beat their wings up to 500 times a second — compared with 350 beats for other variations — and are larger by 0,3 micrograms on average, the paper said, citing a study conducted by Aristotelio University in the northern city of Salonika.

According to the study, the mosquitoes of Athens have adapted to deal with air pollution and insect repellents, and overpopulation in the Greek capital of over four million has provided them with a healthy food supply.

“Mosquitoes can lay their eggs even inside the trays placed beneath thousands of balcony flowerpots,” Athens University professor of zoology Anastassios Legakis told the daily. — AFP