Current Affairs1 min ago
Midges
Why does it seem impossible to kill midges? For years they have plaqued the Scottish countryside and now they are decimating our livestock with the arrival from the continent. There was a scheme recently where locusts were infected with a killer gene which passed it on to other locusts. Surely there must be a solution?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The virus killing our livestock is the blue tongued virus. This may explain it
http://www.addl.purdue.edu/newsletters/2002/sp ring/bluetongue.shtml
http://www.addl.purdue.edu/newsletters/2002/sp ring/bluetongue.shtml
I don't think you really know what has happened here, first you state that midges have been in the Scottish countryside for years then somehow try to blame them for a disease that was brought over from the continent last month.
Midges carry the infection, they didn't invent it nor was it their poor farming practices or effect on the climate that caused the first case of bluetongue on British soil ever.
A google search for "locusts killer gene" (without the quotes) returns nothing.
Seeing as you asked, the solution is to vaccinate the cattle, lets hope they can do it quickly.
Midges carry the infection, they didn't invent it nor was it their poor farming practices or effect on the climate that caused the first case of bluetongue on British soil ever.
A google search for "locusts killer gene" (without the quotes) returns nothing.
Seeing as you asked, the solution is to vaccinate the cattle, lets hope they can do it quickly.
Thats right midges are carriers of the blue tongue virus. Whether they are of the Scottish variety or from abroad is irrelevent. If the disease passes to Scotland from Eastern England as it will surely do the Scottish farmers will suffer greatly. To immunise the livestock will probably mean exports will be banned as the antibodies of the virus will be in the animal.. No the midges must be exterminated! I recall from memory about the novel way of reducing locusts by self infection, it is probably still on the drawing board.
Might I suggest that everyone here who is pro-midgie has luckily so far avoided the swarming clouds of the bu&&ers that get everywhere, bite you to bits and ruin your day/walk/holiday. Sometimes, obviously depending on where you are, you literally can not breathe for getting mouthfulls of them!!! I am certainly not a farmer and avidly vote for extermination. How is it that midgies "clean the land and soil" exactly? I'm sure we could do without them and I'd gladly take on the environmental changes caused by their absence.