NEW BUZZ

Millions of genetically modified mosquitoes could be released across United States

THE US could soon be swarming with genetically altered mosquitoes after the Environmental Protection Agency approved a plan to test the insects.

It is hoped the new altered mosquitoes will ward off their natural, disease-causing counterparts.

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It's hoped the genetically modified mosquitoes will ward off the disease-carrying variant (file photo)Credit: Getty - Contributor

Biotechnology company Oxitec has developed altered Aedes aegypti mosquitoes which have been genetically modified so that males, which do not bite, are released into the wild and mate with females, which do bite.

Their offspring, either male or female, never survive to reach maturity, according to the company.

Last year millions of mosquitoes were released in the Florida Keys in a pilot project last year and the EPA on Monday gave the green light to extending the project in Florida as well as expanding it into four counties in California, pending approval from the states' regulators.

Oxitec head of global public affairs Meredith Fensom said while the EPA approval covers one Florida county and four in California and the release of more than 2billion genetically altered male mosquitoes across the states, the launch is planned to be much more limited - covering only the Florida Keys and expanding to Visalia in Tulare County, California.

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Oxitec said the aim was to reduce the transmission of harmful diseases, such as dengue, Zika, yellow fever and chikungunya.

Although the Aedes aegypti, which is an invasive species, make up just a small fraction of the total mosquito population in Florida, they account for a large number of the cases of human diseases, Fensom said.

Florida has seen a dengue outbreak as recently as 2020.

The species is growing in California but so far there have not been confirmed cases of dengue, chikungunya, Zika or yellow fever spread through the insect, according to the state’s health officials.

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The goal of the new trial is to study the genetically altered mosquitoes in two different environments, Fensom said.

The genetically modified mosquitoes the company produces are males with a "self-limiting gene," she said.

While the difference can’t be detected by the naked eye, the modified insects produce male offspring and female offspring that cannot survive, Fensom said.

It’s hoped that over time, as the female population decreases, so will the overall population.

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