Nicholls, "Swarm Troopers"; Specter, "The Mosquito Solution"; Andrew Pollack, "Concerns Are Raised About Genetically Engineered Mosquitoes," New York Times, October 31, 2011.

611 spread their adaptation to the rest of the mosquito population

Nicholls, "Swarm Troopers"; Specter, "The Mosquito Solution."

612 "may have profound impacts on the ecology of certain infectious diseases"

Tim Sandle, "Link between Dengue Fever and Climate Change in the US," Digital Journal, July 7, 2012, Dengue, which now afflicts up to 100 million people each year

World Health Organization, Dengue and Severe Dengue Fact Sheet, January 2012, causes thousands of fatalities

Yenni Kwok, "Across Asia, Dengue Fever Cases Reach Record Highs," Time, September 24, 2010.

615 "breakbone fever"

Gardiner Harris, "As Dengue Fever Sweeps India, a Slow Response Stirs Experts" Fears," New York Times, November 6, 2012.

616 the extreme joint pain that is one of its worst symptoms

Margie Mason, "Dengue Fever Outbreak Hits Parts of Asia," a.s.sociated Press, October 26, 2007.

617 Simultaneous outbreaks emerged in Asia, the Americas, and Africa

Suzanne Moore Shepherd, "Dengue," Medscape Reference, the disease was largely contained until World War II

Ibid.

619 inadvertently spread by people during and after the war

Ibid.; Thomas Fuller, "The War on Dengue Fever," New York Times, November 3, 2008.

620 In 2012, there were an estimated 37 million cases in India alone

Harris, "As Dengue Fever Sweeps India, a Slow Response Stirs Experts" Fears."

621 dengue"s range was still limited to tropical and subtropical regions

Jennifer Kyle and Eva Harris, "Global Spread and Persistence of Dengue," Annual Review of Microbiology 62 (2008): 7192.

622 dengue is likely to spread throughout the Southern United States

Sandle, "Link between Dengue Fever and Climate Change in the US."

623 including HIV/AIDS

Jim Robbins, "The Ecology of Disease," New York Times, July 15, 2012. The expansion of livestock farming into areas where wild animals are in close proximity has been implicated in the spreading of diseases from wildlife to domesticated animals and from there to people. The bird flu, for example, evolves in domesticated animals when it spreads from wild animals. HIV/AIDS spread to humans ninety years ago when African hunters killed chimpanzees and sold the meat for human consumption. The extremely deadly Ebola virus, first identified in the border regions of western South Sudan and northeastern Democratic Republic of the Congo in 1976, originated in chimpanzees, gorillas, monkeys, forest antelope, and fruit bats.

624 brought into close proximity with livestock

Ibid.

625 60 percent of the new infectious diseases

Sonia Shah, "The Spread of New Diseases: The Climate Connection," Yale Environment 360, October 15, 2009.

626 that outnumber the cells of our bodies

Robert Stein, "Finally, a Map of All the Microbes on Your Body," NPR, June 13, 2012,

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