RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) - Brazilian Carnival could be called a hungry mosquito's dream - five days of non-stop street parties that bring together millions of revelers in an inviting mass of bare ankles, uncovered legs and denuded torsos.
So the mosquito-borne Zika virus might be expected to dampen this year's debauchery.
But despite warnings to cover up and slather on repellent, many insist the show will go on as it always has, in just a sprinkling of sequins and a few puffs of feather. Pants, long-sleeve shirts and bug spray, they say, are antithetical to the hedonistic, out-of-control spirit of Carnival.
"We need joy," said Angela Pessanha, a self-described "Carnival nut" and owner of a home furnishings store. "And Carnival is the easiest way of doling out a stiff dose of joy to everyone."
Young revelers - http://search.Huffingtonpost.com/search?q=revelers&s_it=header_form_v1 joke with each other as they lay on the shade during the "Burial of the Mosquito" carnival block parade in Olinda, Pernambuco state, Brazil, Friday, Feb. 5, 2016. The parade that happens every year during carnival informs residents and tourists about the dangers of the Aedes aegypti and teaches them how to combat the mosquito.
(AP Photo/Felipe Dana)
This year's celebrations, which begin Friday, come at a time when Brazil has little to celebrate. Latin America's largest country is mired in its worst recession in generations, impeachment proceedings against President Dilma Rousseff are looming, a snowballing corruption investigation of the state oil company has taken down key political figures and rising unemployment and inflation are hurting the pocketbooks of average people.
And then there is Zika, a virus that researchers here have linked to a birth defect that can affect the development of fetuses' brains, leaving newborns with long-lasting health and developmental problems.
But, many Brazilians say they are inured to the vagaries of a boom-and-bust economy, unfazed by the near constant stream of corruption scandals and have long lived amid outbreaks of dengue, another virus transmitted by the Aedes aegypti mosquito that spreads Zika.
"I've put it all out of my mind," said college student Pedro Maciel, as he filled up a shopping cart with 12-packs of beer and bottle after bottle of the cheapest domestic vodka - "fuel" he hoped would see his group of 16 friends, visiting Rio de Janeiro from southern Brazil, through at least the first day of the festivities.
"Of course these are all important issues that as a Brazilian I care about, but I won't give them a second thought till the day Carnival ends."
The world's Carnival capital, Rio, has been less hard-hit by the Zika outbreak than the country's poor northeastern region, where most cases both of the virus and the birth defect microcephaly have been concentrated. Still, epidemiologists have called Carnival an "explosive cocktail" for the spread of Zika due to the potent combination of heat, crowds and exposed skin.
This has prompted Rio authorities to step up their efforts against the mosquito. Fumigators have been plying the Sambadrome, where thousands of dancers in ensembles consisting of platform heels, a few strategically placed spandex triangles and sparkly body paint will mesmerize during this weekend's samba school parades.
Health workers will be deployed to many of the city's more than 500 street parties, or "blocos," where thousands of revelers defy the Southern Hemisphere midsummer sun to drink, dance, sweat and rub shoulders - and other body parts.
They're also urging revelers to cover up, but those admonitions appear to be falling on deaf ears, judging by the amount of bare skin on display at the pre-Carnival "blocos" that have flooded the streets in recent days.
Tuesday's announcement by health officials that a person in Texas has become infected with Zika through sex may put another kink into Carnival, where promiscuity is held as a core value. Competitions to see who can rack up the most make-out partners are common, and things often get more hot and heavy than simple snogging.
Worries grew stronger Friday with the announcement that scientists at Brazil's Fiocruz research institute had found live Zika virus in saliva samples. Institute chief Paulo Gadelha suggested pregnant women adopt the very un-Carnival-like practice of shunning kisses from anybody other than a regular partner.
The party won't be happening everywhere. The 50,000-strong municipality of Capivari in Sao Paulo state has cancelled the City Hall-funded Carnival celebrations, saying it intends to invest the $25,000 in savings into efforts to stamp out Aedes. Official Carnival festivities have also been nixed in dozens of other cities nationwide due to budget constraints.
Even in places where Carnival is rolling on, apparently unscathed by the chaos afflicting the country, this year's festivities are shaping up to be leaner than usual.
Regina Rodrigues Alves, who hawks kitty-ear tiaras, pirate eye patches, made-in-China plastic crowns and other Carnival essentials at a stand in Rio's beachfront Ipanema neighborhood, says sales have been appreciably down from last year.
"You can tell people are trying to scrimp and save. They're now trying to bargain you down, or not even buying at all," said 58-year-old Alves, adding she's seen revelers dragging along their own portable coolers to save on alcohol.
The 2016 Carnival King Momo, Wilson Dias da Costa Neto, poses for the picture as he holds up the key of the city at a ceremony marking the official start of Carnival in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Friday, Feb. 5, 2016. This year's celebrations come at a time when Brazil has little to celebrate.
Latin America's largest country is mired in its worst recession in generations, impeachment proceedings against President Dilma Rousseff are looming, a snowballing corruption investigation of the state oil company has taken down key political figures and rising unemployment and inflation are hurting the pocketbooks of average people.
And then there is Zika, a virus that researchers here have linked to a birth defect that can affect the development of fetuses' brains, leaving newborns with long-lasting health and developmental problems. (AP Photo/Leo Correa)
The 2016 Carnival King Momo, Wilson Dias da Costa Neto, left, holds the key of the city with Rio de Janeiro's Mayor Eduardo Paes, center, and the Carnival Queen Clara Paixao, right, at a ceremony marking the official start of Carnival in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Friday, Feb.
5, 2016. (AP Photo/Leo Correa)
FILE - In this Saturday, Jan. 23, 2016 file photo, a reveler strikes a pose during the Banda de Ipanema carnival block party in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Rio's over-the-top Carnival is the highlight of the year for many local residents. Hundreds of thousands of merrymakers will take to Rio's streets in hundreds of open-air "bloco" parties.
(AP Photo/Felipe Dana)
Girls chat as they sit next to a coffin containing an Aedes aegypti mosquito puppet before the start of the "Burial of the Mosquito" carnival block parade in Olinda, Pernambuco state, Brazil, Friday, Feb. 5, 2016. The parade that happens every year during carnival informs residents and tourists about the dangers of the Aedes aegypti and teaches them how to combat the mosquitoes.
(AP Photo/Felipe Dana)
Young revelers dance frevo during the "Burial of the Mosquito" carnival block parade in Olinda, Pernambuco state, Brazil, Friday, Feb. 5, 2016. The parade that happens every year during carnival informs residents and tourists about the dangers of the Aedes aegypti and teaches them how to combat the mosquitoes.
(AP Photo/Felipe Dana)
Public health workers wear Aedes aegypti mosquito costumes playfully descend on a reveler during a street carnival block party as part of a campaign to warn people about the spread of the Zika virus, in Sao Paulo, Brazil, Thursday, Feb. 4, 2016. With no hope for a vaccine to prevent Zika in the near future, authorities are focusing on the most effective way to combat the virus: killing the mosquito that carries it.
(AP Photo/Andre Penner)
A patient from the Nise de Silveira mental health institute dances in costume during the institute's carnival parade, called in Portuguese: "Loucura Suburbana," or Suburban Madness, in the streets of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Thursday, Feb. 4, 2016. Patients, their relatives and workers from the institute held their parade one day before the official start of Carnival.
(AP Photo/Silvia Izquierdo)
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