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posted by Woods on Wednesday April 30 2014, @12:33AM   Printer-friendly
from the as-long-as-they-cannot-play-futebol dept.

The Brazilian government have decided in a 2-year trial to test genetically modified variant of the male mosquito Aedes aegypti that's common in the northeastern Brazil to combat the spread of dengue fever. Dengue is endemic in three of the host cities for this summer's World Cup. "We need to provide the government alternatives because the system we are using now in Brazil doesn't work," says Aldo Malavasi, president of Moscamed, the Brazilian company that's running the trial from a lab just outside of Jacobina.

The mosquitoes in the lab have their genes modified in the lab such that their offspring dies. Only the female mosquitoes bite, so only male mosquitoes are released which mate with wild females and produce offspring that die before they can reproduce. The technique is developed by the British company Oxitec with roots in Syngenta and GeneWatch points out that Oxitec are not totally transparent about the potential risks (like spontaneous DNA alterations).

 
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  • (Score: 2) by SlimmPickens on Wednesday April 30 2014, @12:58AM

    by SlimmPickens (1056) on Wednesday April 30 2014, @12:58AM (#37938)

    Although it does sound better thought out than cane toads.

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  • (Score: 1) by gmby on Wednesday April 30 2014, @01:54AM

    by gmby (83) on Wednesday April 30 2014, @01:54AM (#37950)

    All the Mosquitoes die. Then bugs/birds/---> upthe food chain start to starve. How much is the little Maquito needed for food? What about pest control of rats and mice. The parasites carried are needed to keep things in balance. It's all intertwined in weird ways. I hate the little blood sucking beast; but I'd be worried about our world without them. And for a finale thought; what will replace them?

    --
    Bye /. and thanks for all the fish.
    • (Score: 2) by SlimmPickens on Wednesday April 30 2014, @02:04AM

      by SlimmPickens (1056) on Wednesday April 30 2014, @02:04AM (#37951)

      From what I understand, many or most species are not disease carrying or simply do not bite humans. We don't need to kill them all.

      • (Score: 2) by urza9814 on Wednesday April 30 2014, @02:40AM

        by urza9814 (3954) on Wednesday April 30 2014, @02:40AM (#37956) Journal

        Yeah, but the ones that do bite are often food for the ones that don't...

        That said...the intention here seems to be for it to be used as a short-term solution in a very small area. You're never going to kill off a significant portion of all mosquitoes in a large area with something like this -- you'd have to release billions of these modified mosquitoes fairly evenly distributed across the total area. Not all that feasible.

        But drop a few million in the middle of a major city, and the mosquito population in that city plummets after a single generation. BUT, since the offspring can't reproduce, they can't pass on this trait. So the survivors find no competition and tons of food and breed like mad. And mosquitoes nearby flood into the area in search of easy food as well. With how short the mosquito lifespan is, you're probably back up to normal populations within a week or so of using this.

        Assuming it all goes according to plan....with the short lifespans, genetic mutations happen quicker as well.

    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday April 30 2014, @02:58AM

      by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday April 30 2014, @02:58AM (#37961)

      All the Mosquitoes die

      It sounds like you think every one of those dudes is another Wilt Chamberlain. [google.com]

      ...and this is not a new idea.
      I remember something very similar being used over 2 decades ago. [google.com]

      -- gewg_

  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday April 30 2014, @04:09PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday April 30 2014, @04:09PM (#38162)

    Ahh, "What could go wrong" indeed.

    This project brought to us by the same nation that created and released "Killer" Africanized bees and exported fire ants to the US.