this post was submitted on 28 Jun 2023
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Have saved the video for later but my gut says they probably play a crucial role in how the ecosystem is balanced despite how annoying they are and deleting them completely will disrupt it with cascading effects.
Not really in full honesty, in fact they are invasive in a large amount of ecosystems. Case in point the Asian Tiger Mosquito that is so aggressive that it is driving native mosquitos extinct.
That implies though that there are native mosquito species that are not invasive
There are? There are 10’s of thousands of mosquito species all native to their own environments and niches.
The top 10 or so are just the most aggressive, territorial, and well adapted to causing havoc and spreading.
What's your point then? I said that removing all mosquitoes regardless of whether they are invasive or not could disrupt the ecosystems they are in. What does the competitive advantage of invasive species has to do with that?
Becuase they are not trying to eradicate every single mosquito. They are targeting the worst of the worst species such as the Anopheles, Aedea, and Culex.
Those species are driving native species extinct and causing tenfold ecological and transmission damage due to their aggressive invasive nature. That’s why they’ve been marked for extermination.
I also assure you that the disruption to their ecological niches will be minimal. They fill no niche that isn’t fulfilled by other species, and they play little to no role in the food chain.
Got it. Thanks.
I am not completely sold on this but I also don't have any arguments against this tbh
It is a tricky game, and I won't say that I have all the answers, so I'm just repeating what current research has found. That's also the point of carefully researching and planning out each step, and why this process is not being done in a gung ho, breakneck manner. Though from what we currently know, mosquitoes are shockingly small contributors to their environments compared to their impacts.