China's
'mosquito factory' aims to wipe out Zika, other diseases
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[August 02, 2016]
GUANGZHOU, China (Reuters) - Every
week, scientists in southern China release 3 million bacteria-infected
mosquitoes on a 3 km (two-mile) long island in a bid to wipe out
diseases such as dengue, yellow fever and Zika.
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The scientists inject mosquito eggs with wolbachia bacteria in a
laboratory, then release infected male mosquitoes on the island on
the outskirts of the city of Guangzhou.
The bacteria, which occurs naturally in about 28 percent of wild
mosquitoes, causes infected males to sterilize the females they mate
with.
"The aim is trying to suppress the mosquito density below the
threshold which can cause disease transmission," said Zhiyong Xi,
who is director of the Sun Yat-sen University Centre of Vector
Control for Tropical Diseases and pioneered the idea.
"There are hot spots," Xi said. "This technology can be used at the
beginning to target the hot spots ... it will dramatically reduce
disease transmission."
Mosquito-borne diseases are responsible for more than one million
deaths worldwide every year and Zika has become a concern for
athletes at this year's Olympic Games, which open in Rio de Janeiro
on Friday.
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Some athletes, including the top four ranked male golfers, have
declined to take part.
An outbreak of the Zika virus in Brazil last year has spread through
the Americas and beyond, with China confirming its first case in
February.
U.S. health officials have concluded that Zika infections in
pregnant women can cause microcephaly, a birth defect marked by
small head size that can lead to severe developmental problems in
babies.
The World Health Organization has said there is strong scientific
consensus that Zika can also cause Guillain-Barre, a rare
neurological syndrome that causes temporary paralysis in adults.
Sun Yat-sen's Xi said that several countries had expressed interest
in his experiments, especially Brazil and Mexico.
In the laboratory, mosquito eggs are collected from breeding cages
containing 5,000 females and 1,600 males and injected with the
wolbachia bacteria. Xi's facility has the capacity to breed up to
five million mosquitoes a week.
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While a female mosquito that acquires wolbachia by mating is
sterile, one that is infected by injection will produce wolbachia-infected
offspring. Dengue, yellow fever and Zika are also suppressed in
wolbachia-injected females, making it harder for the diseases to be
transmitted to humans.
Xi set up his 3,500 square meter (38,000 sq ft) "mosquito factory"
in 2012 and releases the males into two residential areas on the
outskirts of Guangzhou.
Xi said the mosquito population on the island has been reduced by
more than 90 percent.
One villager on the island, 66 year-old Liang Jintian, who has lived
there for six decades, said the study was so effective he didn't
have to sleep with a mosquito net any longer.
"We used to have a lot of mosquitoes in the past. Back then some
people were worried that if mosquitoes were released here, we would
get even more mosquitoes," he said. "We have a lot less mosquitoes
now compared to the past."
(Reporting by Reuters TV; Writing by Clare Baldwin; Editing by
Robert Birsel)
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