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Auggie

(31,802 posts)
Wed Mar 16, 2022, 11:13 AM Mar 2022

California's first lab-grown mosquitoes may take flight--stirring controversy

A biotech firm is seeking permission to release genetically modified mosquitoes into the open air of California for the first time later this year, aiming to reduce the expanding populations of invasive mosquitoes and prevent deadly disease.

The controversial research project—planned for the Tulare County community of Visalia, with potential expansion into Fresno, San Bernadino and Stanislaus counties—will over time introduce 2 million male mosquitoes with a "kill switch" built into their DNA. When they mate with wild insects, their offspring die, causing an eventual collapse of the population.

Their target: Swarms of the mosquito, first detected in Los Angeles County in 2011, which have since spread northward into 20 California counties. While California's native mosquito emerges at dusk, these black-and-white-striped invaders hunt for blood during the day, when people are outside. Elsewhere, they transmit potentially fatal Zika, dengue, yellow fever, chikungunya and other viruses.

The lab-bred insects—trademarked under the name "Friendly" by British company Oxitec—are male, so they don't bite or spread disease. Modified they only mate with others of their species, not California's native mosquitoes. Only the female offspring die; the males live and become carriers of the deadly gene, passing it on to shrinking future generations.

MORE: https://phys.org/news/2022-03-california-lab-grown-mosquitoes-flightstirring-controversy.html

Critics site a lack of community outreach, transparency, risk assessment, and no public data that supports claims the introduced mosquitoes will reduce mosquito-borne diseases, and claiming it's "the largest release of any genetically engineered insect in the United States" is irresponsible.

Basically, the male mosquitoes carry two introduced genes.

Personally, I'd make damn sure this is safe.

Thoughts, anyone?

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California's first lab-grown mosquitoes may take flight--stirring controversy (Original Post) Auggie Mar 2022 OP
Birdies eat bugs. Also fish. Safety tests? cbabe Mar 2022 #1
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