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How dengue mosquitoes outsmart even scientists

How dengue mosquitoes outsmart even scientists

Time of India3 hours ago

How dengue mosquitoes outsmart even scientists - their secret hunting techniques revealed
Chethan Kumar
TNN
Updated: Jun 23, 2025, 18:12 IST IST
While the dengue mosquito is a smarter predator than previously thought — it can detect you with its legs, too — Indian scientists have detected that a stealthy group of immune cells could be the unsung heroes in fighting the infection
It's tough to outsmart a mosquito out for your blood. Here's some consolation. The buzzing insect outsmarts even supersmart scientists. 'Aedes aegypti', the mosquito behind dengue , Zika, and yellow fever , hunts down its prey — humans — primarily by its sense of smell. So, when researchers from the Rockefeller University stripped Aedes aegypti of its primary olfactory gene, Orco — knocking out their sense of smell — they reckoned the female mosquito will lose her hunting instinct. But she was smarter than they were.
As a new study published in Science Advances details, when deprived of their olfactory power, Aedes use their ability to sense body heat. Typically, it's the mosquito's antennae that detects odours and heat. But Orco mutants deploy their forelegs to detect human skin temperature.

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Battle against salt must begin with school meals
Battle against salt must begin with school meals

Hindustan Times

time8 minutes ago

  • Hindustan Times

Battle against salt must begin with school meals

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8 Desi Fruit Drinks for Faster Weight Loss
8 Desi Fruit Drinks for Faster Weight Loss

Time of India

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  • Time of India

8 Desi Fruit Drinks for Faster Weight Loss

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Sadanira: A cinematic masterpiece where rivers become India's eternal storytellers
Sadanira: A cinematic masterpiece where rivers become India's eternal storytellers

First Post

time30 minutes ago

  • First Post

Sadanira: A cinematic masterpiece where rivers become India's eternal storytellers

At the heart of this visual odyssey is Devrishi, formerly known in the film industry as music composer Rishikesh Pandey, now reborn as a spiritual storyteller and creative visionar read more What if rivers could speak? What if the ancient waters that bore witness to empires, epics, and evolution could narrate their own tale? That poetic question finds its answer in Sadanira — a pathbreaking new documentary series that blends cinematic brilliance with cultural philosophy, science, and soul. Officially launched on June 20th at Bhopal's prestigious Bharat Bhavan during the Jal-Ganga Samvardhan Abhiyan, the series was unveiled by Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister Dr. Mohan Yadav in the presence of artists, thinkers, and conservationists. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD At the heart of this visual odyssey is Devrishi, formerly known in the film industry as music composer Rishikesh Pandey, now reborn as a spiritual storyteller and creative visionary. It was Devrishi who handed over the series' first poster to the Chief Minister in a symbolic gesture — marking the beginning of a cinematic and cultural movement. Produced under the banner of Veer Bharat Nyas and Sanatan Wisdom Foundation, Sadanira is far more than a documentary. It's a weekly cinematic pilgrimage — one that reimagines India's rivers not as backdrops, but as the central characters in the country's epic. The opening episode is already generating buzz for its ambitious fusion of Vedic cosmology and astrophysics — tracing the origins of the universe from the primordial sound of Om to the scientific mechanics of cosmic dust, hydrogen fusion, and comet-borne water. In doing so, Sadanira creates what Devrishi calls 'mytho-science' — a seamless blend of myth and modernity. Each river — be it the sacred Ganga, the mysterious Saraswati, or the ancient Drishadvati — is treated not just as geography but as a sentient storyteller. Shot in ultra-high definition, the series captures the soul of Indian rivers with unmatched emotional and spiritual depth. According to the creators, this is only Phase 1. Over 100 rivers, including endangered ones like Tamraparni and Drishadvati, are set to be featured in future seasons. 'This is not just a series,' says Devrishi. 'It's a cultural renaissance. A call to remember who we are, through the rivers that shaped us.' STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD

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