A doctor in Denver8+ adult movies - watch free full movies and download Colorado recently called tick biologist Nathan Nieto to say that he found a lone star tick feeding on a patient.
The problem is, lone star ticks aren't supposed to be found anywhere near Denver. These ticks are supposed to live in the eastern United States, said Nieto, a biologist at Northern Arizona University, in an interview.
But ticks, along with mosquitos and other biting insects, are now spreading disease throughout the United States. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) released a report Tuesday showing that diseases from biting insects, ticks, and mosquitos in the U.S. have tripled since 2004.
SEE ALSO: How did what could be the largest human organ elude us until 2018?As advances in gene-therapy, alternative antibiotic treatments, and many aspects of public health progress in the United States, it appears we have little sway (without blanketing the land with toxic chemicals) over the innumerable disease-carrying insects that inhabit our neighborhoods, homes, and backyards.
Although the CDC points out that many illnesses from insects still go unreported, the agency report found that between 2004 and 2016 over 640,000 cases of disease -- notably Lyme disease from ticks and viruses from mosquitos -- were documented in the U.S.
There's no sign of the insect-borne onslaught abating.
"Mosquitos and ticks and infections are moving into new areas nationwide," CDC Director Robert Redfield said in a call with reporters.
"There appears to be an accelerating trend," added Lyle Petersen, the director of the CDC's Division of Vector-Borne Diseases.
Although the CDC isn't able to document all such cases in the U.S. (Peterson said the number of Lyme disease cases that occur each year are ten times higher than are actually reported), he said the trend is nearly unquestionable.
"From a rainstorm, you don’t have to count every different drop to know how much rain there is," he said.
There are a few important factors at play, but a prominent influence is increasing average temperatures in the U.S.
"We know temperature is very important," said Peterson. "If you increase temperature, in general tick populations can move further north and extend their range."
During the call, the CDC's Peterson declined to answer whether or not human-caused global warming was responsible for these temperature increases, as he said that's a task better left "for meteorologists."
Federal science reports have tied increasing average temperatures in the U.S. and worldwide directly to human emissions of greenhouse gases, and one consistent prediction from climate scientists and public health experts has been that vector-borne illnesses, that is, diseases spread by mosquitos, ticks, and other species, would increase over time and move into new areas.
Warming is having a considerable effect on both mosquito and tick populations. Mosquito-borne diseases tend to get worse during heat waves, and increasing temperatures make the bloodsuckers more infectious by allowing them to carry more viruses, such as Zika or West Nile, Peterson said.
Scientists, meanwhile, are watching ticks expand to new frontiers.
"We're seeing populations moving through Ohio and the upper Midwest," said Nieto. "Thirty or 40 years ago they didn’t have a tick problem -- but now they do."
Warmer temperatures allow ticks to emerge earlier in the season, Nieto said, allowing for more opportunities to infect hosts, like deer and people.
And once they arrive in new places, our infrastructure -- like water around our homes -- can sustain these disease-carrying bugs, year round.
"There used to be a quick pulse in the spring and then everything would die off," said Nieto. "Now they’re showing up in new areas, then establishing populations in these places."
"All these diseases are basically a plane flight away," said the CDC's Peterson.
Many bugs arrive likely arrive in the U.S. by plane. The West Nile virus likely arrived by plane in 1999, and Zika in 2015, Peterson said. For insects already here, car and air travel can easily transport pests like ticks around the country.
"We hypothesize that people are moving ticks around like crazy, and they live for days," said Nieto.
There is also evidence evidence that birds transport disease-carrying tropical ticks into the country.
The solution for limiting the spread of ticks and insects is simple, though somewhat limited: increasing public awareness about the expanding problem and ensuring local health departments are equipped to track these insects and control them, with effective pesticides, when necessary.
But the CDC acknowledges that it can't do the job alone. State and local health departments need to both educate people about how to protect themselves, and how to try and control the abundance of the disease-harboring bugs in their communities, said the CDC's Redfield.
Catch nearly 100 Prime Day deals that are still liveFran Drescher warns of of humans 'replaced by machines' in SAG strike announcementI Found My Thrill by Ross Kenneth UrkenObituary of Edgar Allan Poe by Sadie SteinLogan Paul, now an intellectual, says he's done with HollywoodMusk admits Twitter cash flow is still negative, lost 50% of ad revenueHappy Birthday, Ursula Le Guin by Sadie SteinStevie Nicks Writes GoT Fan Poetry, and Other News by Sadie SteinCongresswoman drops social media report on Republicans who tried to overturn the election for Trump'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for July 14Tesla finally lets you fully control windshield wipers from the steering wheelNo One? How Does No One Work for You? by Sadie SteinSee You There: The Paris Review in Philadelphia by Sadie SteinGab's failed attempt at cleverness becomes the most hilarious selfObituary of Edgar Allan Poe by Sadie SteinSex and Sensibility by Diane MehtaAll the FDACatch nearly 100 Prime Day deals that are still liveRecapping Dante: Canto 2 by Alexander AcimanDeath of a Salesman by Sam Sweet 12 TikTok creators to follow for easy recipe inspiration How to remove your ex from your digital life The most essential fitness tech of 2021 (so far) The Morning News Roundup for May 18, 2014 The Morning News Roundup for May 14, 2014 Prince of Darkness Subscribe Now, Get a Vintage Issue from 1959 Disney Plus, Hulu increase their prices again What We’re Loving: Antrim, Glynn, a Massive Sugar OpenAI expands ChatGPT 'custom instructions' to free users Virgin Galactic will blast a high An Interview with Joshua Ferris The Norwegian IKEA Canada made an ugly, judgemental bisexual couch The Birth (and Death) of Edward Lear How to delete your Twitter account. Bye bye, trolls and bots. “Biographies in Bronze” by Fredda Brilliant The Morning News Roundup for May 6, 2014 The Early Days of The Paris Review Degenerate Art
2.6589s , 10159.1953125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【18+ adult movies - watch free full movies and download】,Creation Information Network