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Είναι σχεδόν απίστευτο αυτό που συνέβη σήμερα με τον καιρό στον Εύδηλο. Μια θάλασσα πραγματικά γυαλί, με θερμοκρασίες που επιβεβαιώνουν πως το καλοκαίρι είναι …ακόμα εδώ! Ο φίλος της Ικαριακής Ραδιοφωνίας, Γιάννης Κούβαρης μας έστειλε μερικές λήψεις για να στολίσουμε την ηλεκτρονική μας σελίδα και το προφίλ μας στο facebook!
…και μη ξεχνάτε…όσοι είσαστε ακόμα στην Ικαρία, σήμερα μια βουτιά στη θάλασσα είναι ότι καλύτερο!



2006
Prof. Frank Hadley Collins, Dir., Cntr. for Global Health and Infectious Diseases, Univ. of Notre Dame
This 2006 photograph depicted a female Aedes aegypti mosquito while she was in the process of acquiring a blood meal from her human host, who in this instance, was actually the biomedical photographer, James Gathany, here at the Centers for Disease Control. You’ll note the feeding apparatus consisting of a sharp, “fascicle”, which while not feeding, is covered in a soft, pliant sheath called the "labellum”, which is seen here retracted, as the sharp “stylets” contained within pierced the host's skin surface, as the insect obtained its blood meal. The fascicle is composed of a pair of needle-sharp stylets. The larger of the two stylets, known as the "labrum", when viewed in cross-section takes on the shape of an inverted "V", and acts as a gutter, which directs the ingested host blood towards the insect's mouth. This female’s abdomen had become distended due to the blood meal she was ingesting, imparting the red coloration to her translucent abdominal exoskeleton.
The first reported epidemics of Dengue (DF) and dengue hemorrhagic fever (DHF) occurred in 1779-1780 in Asia, Africa, and North America. The near simultaneous occurrence of outbreaks on three continents indicates that these viruses and their mosquito vector have had a worldwide distribution in the tropics for more than 200 years. During most of this time, DF was considered a mild, nonfatal disease of visitors to the tropics. Generally, there were long intervals (10-40 years) between major epidemics, mainly because the introduction of a new serotype in a susceptible population occurred only if viruses and their mosquito vector, primarily the Aedes aegypti mosquito, could survive the slow transport between population centers by sailing vessels.


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