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Mosquito Busters: The Next to Tackle Disease

July 1, 2017

Zika virus, meet your match.

A pair of Florida Polytechnic University students are researching a method for eliminating mosquitoes without the use of chemicals or hurting other insects.

Their weapon is an audible frequency that disturbs a fine-tuned sensory organ called scolopidia. Scolopidia are ordinarily used to detect predators like an incoming dragonfly, but a small scale test has shown a certain oscillating frequency can mimic this danger and incapacitate mosquitoes. More specifically, the Aedes aegypti mosquito, which carries the Zika virus.

The project came to Florida Poly through Skim Shield, of Largo, Fla. Dr. Melba Horton, a Florida Poly biology professor, passed it on to students Jonathan Detty and Chris Krenek to tackle. A small-scale test produced promising results, so the pair are working this summer with more than 1,000 mosquitos contained in a six-foot cube. The experiments will test different frequencies, distances and sound sources.

“The idea behind the sound is that it will send them to the ground and effectively back into the food chain without negatively impacting the environment,” Detty says.

Krenek says he’s excited to do a project with real-world impact.

“I had a vision of doing projects like this when I picked Florida Poly, working with real companies and being able to apply it back to our majors. This is teaching us how to work on a project, keep to a budget and meet deadlines,” Krenek says.

Session Details

This session will demonstrate that practical risk management is for everyone, regardless of a formal program. Attendees will learn actionable and simple strategies that are easy to implement, enabling them to start immediately by focusing on their top risks to build greater operational resilience and ensure the sustained success of their auxiliary enterprises.

Presenter Profile

Michelle Powell serves as the pioneering Risk Manager at Florida Polytechnic University, the state’s sole 100% STEM-dedicated institution. Having been with the university for nearly 11 years, Michelle transitioned from a leadership role in Admissions in October 2023 to establish and evolve the risk management function from the ground up. In this solo capacity, Michelle builds robust frameworks for our dynamic, young university, overseeing our insurance portfolio, consulting on third-party and event risks, and developing critical campus-wide training programs. Michelle has obtained the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations (COSO) Enterprise Risk Management certificate and the Associate in Risk Management (ARM) and Construction Risk and Insurance Specialist (CRIS) designations. Her distinct background in mathematics and engineering, combined with extensive higher education leadership, brings an analytical and strategic approach enhancing the institution’s resilience.