Carnivorous Plant Inspires Sustainable Mosquito-Control Device
Carnivorous Plant Inspires Sustainable Mosquito-Control Device
By Stephen D'Angelo
Summary
Nature-inspired mosquito-control device from Cornell team is finalist in the Biomimicry Global Design Challenge.
Wednesday, July 18, 2018 - 10:30am
Cornell researchers are biting back at deadly mosquito-borne illnesses, using nature’s own tricks.
A team in the College of Human Ecology is a winner in a global competition that asked innovators to create radically sustainable environmental solutions inspired by the natural world. The Cornell team created a mosquito-control device that functions like a carnivorous plant.
The device, dubbed the UPod, was inspired by the carnivorous Utricularia vulgarisor common bladderwort plant, which creates a water vacuum through its trap bladders by pumping water out and sucking in small insect prey in the blink of an eye.
Read the full story in the Cornell Chronicle.
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CATEGORY: Environment


