Arctic’s Mosquito Problem Is Worsening (‘National Geographic’)

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“It is the talk of the town when the Arctic mosquitoes are out,” says ڰ’s Lauren Culler, who studies insects in Greenland, in a National Geographic story about the effect of climate change on mosquitoes in the Arctic. “There aren’t a lot of animals for them to eat in the Arctic, so when they finally find one, they are ferocious. They are relentless. They do not stop. They just keep going after you.”

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“Climate change, it turns out, may make that even worse,” writes the magazine. “Large blood-sucking mosquitoes already are the bane of people, caribou, reindeer, and other mammals eking out a living in the frozen north. But as temperatures warm, mosquitoes above the Arctic Circle emerge earlier, grow faster, and survive as winged pests even longer, according to Culler’s new research,” which was published Tuesday in Proceedings of the Royal Society B.

, published 9/15/15 by National Geographic.

This story has been featured in many other media outlets, including , , and .

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