Monday, December 10, 2012

Hundreds Of Thousands Of Genetically Modified Mosquitoes Set To Be Released Into The Florida Keys, In Experiment

dengue fever
  • The non-biting male mosquitoes genetically modified would pass along a birth defect killing their progeny before reaching maturity.
  • After a few generations officials say Key West?s Aedes aegypti population would die off reducing risk of dengue fever.
  • FL Keys Mosquito Control District:?Modified genes will disappear after mosquitoes carrying it die making no permanent change to wild population.

Hundreds of thousands of genetically modified mosquitoes are awaiting federal approval for release into the Florida Keys as part of an experiment aimed at reducing the risk of dengue fever.

Mosquito control officials have requested the Food and Drug Administration?s sign off on the experiment that would be the first of its kind in the U.S.

Some residents of the tourist town of Key West worry though on how much research has been done to determine the risks of releasing genetically modified mosquitoes on the Keys? fragile ecosystem.

Let us go! An entomological technician with the Florida Keys Mosquito Control District, sorts and counts dead mosquitoes in Key West, where officials are hoping to release genetically modified mosquitoes into the wild

Officials are targeting the Aedes aegypti mosquitoes because they can spread dengue fever, a disease health officials thought had been eradicated in the U.S. until 93 cases originated in the Keys in 2009 and 2010.

The trial planned by mosquito control officials and the British company Oxitec would release non-biting male mosquitoes that have been genetically modified to pass along a birth defect that kill their progeny before reaching maturity.?

The idea is that they will mate with wild females and their children will die before reproducing. After a few generations, Key West?s Aedes aegypti population would die off, reducing the dengue fever risk without using pesticides and at relatively a low cost, the proponents say. There is no vaccine for dengue fever.

?The science of it, I think, looks fine. It?s straight from setting up experiments and collecting data,? said Michael Doyle, pointing to research Oxitec has had published in peer-reviewed scientific journals. He inherited the project when he took the lead at the Florida Keys Mosquito Control District in mid-2011.

Hundreds Of Thousands Of Genetically Modified Mosquitoes Set To Be Released Into The Florida Keys, In Experiment [continued]

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/BreakTheMatrix/~3/ryggCU5OxkU/

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