To the
informal spectator, it will look like a collection of adult men and women
playing with reproduction aero planes. But in a cautiously planned task next
week, a small air show in the Florida Keys will mark a theatrical rise in
the war on the state's army of mosquitoes.
Officials accountable for curtailing the swamp-heavy island chain's
disease-carrying insects will deploy their first unmanned drone
on a test flight. If the flight is victorious, the Florida Keys Mosquito
District will deem purchasing the $65,000 aircraft from Condor Aerial, a North
Florida-based corporation that holds a contract to provide the Canadian
military with drones for reconnaissance missions in
Afghanistan.
The aim, according to Michael Doyle,
the agency's manager, is to speed up the uncovering of shallow areas of water
where mosquitoes lay their eggs, and thus permit a swifter spraying of
larvicide.
"If we can find the water, we can kill the mosquitoes. The actual
challenge is finding the water fast enough," he told keysnet.com. "What we're
looking to see is if this technology can actually see shallow water also out in
the open or under mangroves, and how much land can it cover rapidly so the
inspectors can get out that day."
Doyle, however, admits the project has
a minor object: saving money. The agency employs 40 inspectors, some of whom
might be growing nervous that they are about to be replaced by a automatic eye
in the sky. "As our budget is getting smaller we're trying to discover
ways to cover the same area with fewer people," he said, though he
stressed there were no plans to decrease the number of staff.
Workers from Condor Aerial will
demonstrate the two-and-a-half foot Maveric drone from the agency's offices in
Marathon on 26 August. According to Condor, the Maveric can fly for 90 minutes
at an altitude of 200ft, giving it the potential to considerably get better the
watch across the 100-mile chain of islands from Key Largo to Key West. "If
you try to get crossways the small islands its back-country, its jungle,"
In theory, if a drone were to spot a probable
breeding site, using its shortwave infrared camera, an inspector would test the
larvae, and then, if essential, call for a bacterial scatter from one of the
agency's four helicopters. The most prolific mosquito in the Keys is the Salt
March diversity, but a bigger danger is the Aedes aegypti mosquito, which can take
lethal Yellow and Dengue fevers.
Added that the drone test was one of a amount of initiatives with which
the agency was experimenting, including the setting up of more cameras and
water sensors. Officials are awaiting federal approval to send in
hundreds of thousands of genetically modified male mosquitoes, which
would efficiently render the females sterilized.
The drone scheme is headline grabbing
but eventually an luxurious way of seeking to accomplish something that could
be achieved more inexpensively by conservative means.
"It makes it seem as though we're launching an army of
search-and-destroy bots with the only reason of annihilating the blood-suckers.
I desire it to be true. But it now isn't," said a science blogger, Jason
Bittel, on slate.com. "No matter what the
next round of headlines say about slaying mosquitoes by slingshot, dependency
or Sharknado, there are 3.3 billion people approximately the world who lives
with the daily threat of malaria. And they don't need drones; they need $10 of
mosquito netting."
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