Mosquitoes Are Our Friends, Stop Killing Them – University Don

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A DON at the University of Ilorin has advised Nigerians should stop killing mosquitoes as they are friends that deserved to be managed properly. Adeolu Ande, a professor of Entomology at the University of Ilorin, who made the call said that mosquitoes had proven over the years that they are our friends and allies, adding that if we like them or not, they would exist and continue to source blood from humans.
He also said that zoologists were expected to be the foster parents of animals in the Zoo, adding that they should be familiar with their needs and their health status. Ande made the statement on Monday, June 5, in Ilorin in a paper he presented at a public seminar organised by the university. In his paper with the title “Consider the ways of Ants and be Wise,” the entomologist described insects as the “most successful and influential group’’ of organisms in the biosphere.
He said that humans had a lot to learn from insects in order to be wise. He said of the mosquito: “Human life is beset with inevitable associations with insects that have over the years influenced human destiny positively and negatively.
“Negative influences, such as disease transmission, crop losses, food spoilage, economic losses and nuisance value caused by less than five percent of insect species have been exaggerated by man,” he said.
Nevertheless, the don said that positive influences of insects were not unappreciated and downplayed. He listed some of them to include, pollination of flowers; waste recycling and sustenance of the ecosystem. Others, he said, included source of silk, shellac, cochineal, therapeutic agents, aesthetics, biological control agents and food source. He don said that man deliberately misunderstood the role of mosquitoes and frequently described them as causing the diseases they transmit. He said: “in the actual sense, mosquitoes are equally sick but inadvertently and unwillingly convey pathogens that are the real causal agents of these diseases.
“The female mosquito could be described as an example of a true mother who is forced to undertake suicide mission in its bid to provide for its unborn children.
“The adult female mosquitoes have exceptional value for child raising hence the level of commitment and risk they take on the mission that entails decision between life and death. “The after effect of this commitment is a well thought out plan that forestalls most of the factors that may stand in the way of raising good children.
“I am sure most human females will not take comparable decision in the face of similar attendant risks.
“It is, however, certain that children born after well thought-out and risky conditions are better posited for quality living than those produced carelessly.” The professor, therefore, called for improvement in Zoology curriculum to ensure better focus on organisms that feature prominently around man.
 
 
 
 

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