Don't MoveTo Florida

Fat Point Jack

Super Anarchist
2,595
477
We were in the Tiki Bar at the Riv last night and asked how their thatched roof held up in Ian. She said there were a few holes but they patched them up pretty quickly.

My next door neighbor finished building their house about a year before Ian. Their roof is still covered with tarp and sand bags.

We need more thatched roofs.
The Seminoles do not need a permit to build a Chickee Hut.

The folks across the alley have one. It was shabby before Ian, but they just got it rethatched.

A lawyer friend represented Miller's Marina out in Boca Grande. They put one up and then had to pull it down. You don't need the building permit but you do need to follow the boundary and set back rules.
 

Bump-n-Grind

Get off my lawn.
15,368
4,247
Chesapeake Bay/Vail
336783817_810888470472858_6177243237458642187_n.jpg
 

Jules

Sparky Femstrodinaire
9,438
4,041
Distopia SE, USA

Knock, knock, who’s there? Alligator bites Florida man after he opens door​

Scot Hollingsworth of Daytona Beach said he heard a noise and after opening door was bitten by 9ft alligator on the thigh

 

Jules

Sparky Femstrodinaire
9,438
4,041
Distopia SE, USA
Now that there's a teacher shortage in Florida and counties are recruiting teachers from Puerto Rico, what will become the primary language in Florida?
 

Jules

Sparky Femstrodinaire
9,438
4,041
Distopia SE, USA

Florida's Burmese python population explodes, and USGS says it's 'likely impossible' to eradicate them​


Paper calls Burmese pythons in southern Florida 'one of the most intractable' management issues in the world when it comes to invasive species.​


 

Steam Flyer

Sophisticated Yet Humble
48,227
11,820
Eastern NC
Well, that's how they knew there was so much fraud... they were doing it themselves.
Still, it looks like this guy probably won't do it again. Or at least, not for 35 years or so.
 

Talchotali

Capt. Marvel's Wise Friend
903
571
Vancouverium BC
MARCH 22, 2023

New mosquito species reported in Florida​

by University of Florida

New mosquito species reported in Florida
A mosquito known only by its scientific name, Culex lactator, is the latest to establish in the Sunshine State. Credit: UF/IFAS

Another new mosquito species has made its way across the tropics into Florida, making a permanent home in at least three counties. Scientists are concerned because of the rate of new mosquitoes arriving in Florida and the potential for them to transmit mosquito-borne diseases.

A mosquito known only by its scientific name, Culex lactator, is the latest to establish in the Sunshine State, according to a new study published in the Journal of Medical Entomology by faculty at the UF/IFAS Florida Medical Entomology Laboratory (UF/IFAS FMEL).

This species was first discovered in Miami-Dade County in 2018 by UF/IFAS faculty while they hunted for other nonnative mosquitoes. Since then, thriving populations have been recorded in Miami-Dade, Collier and Lee counties. Scientists are concerned there hasn't been enough research on the species and their potential disease risk.

"There are about 90 mosquito species living in Florida, and that list is growing as new mosquito species are introduced to the state from elsewhere in the world," said Lawrence Reeves, lead author of the study and an assistant professor and mosquito biologist at the UF/IFAS research center in Vero Beach.

Mosquitoes are among the most studied insects because they can transmit diseases. However, there are large gaps of knowledge, said Reeves.

"That's particularly true for species from the tropical forests, where mosquitoes are diverse and understudied," he said. "Introductions of new mosquito species like this are concerning because many of our greatest mosquito-related challenges are the result of nonnative mosquitoes, and in a case like this, it's difficult to anticipate what to expect when we know so little about a mosquito species."

Globally, there are more than 3,600 types of mosquitoes. When a new mosquito is found in Florida, it could be any of these species. Reeves and his team used DNA analysis and other tools to not only discover they had found a new mosquito species, but to identify it as Culex lactator.

Culex lactator is found in Central America and northern South America and is a member of the Culex group of mosquitoes. This group includes important species that transmit the West Nile and St. Louis encephalitis viruses, but it is unclear whether Culex lactator will contribute to the transmission of these viruses in Florida.

Every year, Florida faces challenges from mosquito-transmitted diseases like West Nile virus, eastern equine encephalitis virus, dengue virus, chikungunya virus and others, explained Reeves.
"It's too early to know whether Culex lactator will exacerbate these challenges, but the implications are often difficult to predict because not all mosquito species are equally capable of transmitting a particular virus or other pathogen," said Reeves.

Each mosquito-borne virus is transmitted by only certain mosquito species, said Reeves.
"We need to be vigilant for introductions of new mosquito species because each introduction comes with the possibility that the introduced species will facilitate the transmission of a mosquito-transmitted disease," he said.

The initial specimens of Culex lactator were collected in 2018 from rural sites in southern Miami-Dade County, south of Florida City, followed by additional adult and immature specimens collected through 2022 in the same locations. Each set of mosquitoes were collected from traps set by associate professor Nathan Burkett-Cadena, doctoral student Kristin Sloyer and Reeves while looking for other recently introduced mosquitoes.

In 2022, scientists with the Collier Mosquito Control District and Lee County Mosquito Control District found Culex lactator in their counties, indicating that Culex lactator has likely spread from its initial point of introduction.

Currently, Culex lactator is known to live in Collier County—south and west of Naples—Lee County, west of Fort Myers, and in the Homestead area of Miami-Dade County, though it may have also spread elsewhere in the state, said Reeves.

"Culex lactator is physically similar to mosquito species already known from Florida. It looks like other more common mosquito species," said Reeves. "Because of that similarity, the presence of Culex lactator in an area can be easy to miss."

Reeves and his team stress it's important to monitor for Culex lactator as it is likely to spread within the state into areas that are environmentally suitable.
Florida's proximity to the tropics and climate conditions make it ideal for nonnative mosquito species. Scientists are concerned about the rate and frequency of new species establishing in Florida. As many as 17 nonnative mosquito species are established in the state. Researchers stress that the detections of nonnative mosquito species are increasingly frequent, with 11 of 17 nonnative species first reported in the past two decades, and six of these 17 detected in only the past five years, said Reeves.

The mosquitoes Aedes aegypti, Aedes albopictus, and Culex quinquefasciatus—among the most important disease vectors in the United States—like Culex lactator, are nonnative species, introduced from the tropics.

"Climate change may improve the chances of tropical mosquito species becoming established once they make it to Florida if the state becomes warmer," adds Reeves. "Increasing storm frequency and intensity could also blow in more mosquitoes and other species from the Caribbean, Central America and elsewhere."
 


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