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Volume 7, Number 5—October 2001
Dispatch

Wind-Blown Mosquitoes and Introduction of Japanese Encephalitis into Australia

Scott A. Ritchie*Comments to Author  and Wayne Rochester†
Author affiliations: *Tropical Public Health Unit, Queensland Health, Cairns, Queensland, Australia; †University of Queensland, St. Lucia, Queensland, Australia

Main Article

Figure 2

The estimated flight trajectories at 100 m (A) and backtrack simulations (B) of mosquitoes from the Mitchell River for December 27, 1997. Shading represents the number of back trajectory endpoints per km2 per million simulated mosquito trajectories, with white = 0, light = <10, medium 10 to 20, and dark >20.

Figure 2. . The estimated flight trajectories at 100 m (A) and backtrack simulations (B) of mosquitoes from the Mitchell River for December 27, 1997. Shading represents the number of back trajectory endpoints per km2 per million simulated mosquito trajectories, with white = 0, light = <10, medium 10 to 20, and dark >20.

Main Article

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