Being born in Fresno California I have been following this project for
several years. Google has bought the small start up that was pioneering
the approach, the use of Wolbachia, a common bacterium, to infect males
so that females lay sterile eggs. The project involves a mosquito
that recently invaded California's central valley and makes this an
ideal test site since there is no symbiotic relationship with other parts of
the local ecosystem. As well, there is strong evidence that mosquitoes
are simply pure predators, and are not an integral part of other
biosphere processes, so their eradication, or near eradication, in
malaria zones, should have zero side effect consequences.
Why [and how] Google Is Killing Off Fresno California’s Mosquitoes
https://www.bnnbloomberg.ca/why-google-is-killing-off-fresno-s-mosquitoes-1.1174742
Kristen V Brown, Bloomberg News
Mature mosquitos are seen inside a protected container in the mosquito
factory at the Verily Life Sciences LLC lab in South San Francisco,
California, U.S., on Thursday, Oct. 18, 2018. Photographer: David Paul
Morris/Bloomberg
Mature mosquitos are seen inside a protected container in the mosquito
factory at the Verily Life Sciences LLC lab
in South San Francisco, California, U.S., on Thursday, Oct. 18, 2018.
Photographer: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg ,
(Bloomberg) -- Silicon Valley researchers are attacking flying
bloodsuckers in California's Fresno County. It's the first salvo in an
unlikely war for Google parent Alphabet Inc.: eradicating mosquito-borne
diseases around the world.
A white high-top Mercedes van winds its way through the suburban sprawl
and strip malls as a swarm of male Aedes aegypti mosquitoes shoot out of
a black plastic tube on the passenger-side window. These pests are tiny
and, with a wingspan of just a few millimeters, all but invisible.
“You hear that little beating sound?” says Kathleen Parkes, a
spokesperson for Verily Life Sciences, a unit of Alphabet. She’s
trailing the van in her car, the windows down. “Like a duh-duh-duh?
That’s the release of the mosquitoes.”
Jacob Crawford, a Verily senior scientist riding with Parkes, begins
describing a mosquito-control technique with dazzling potential. These
particular vermin, he explains, were bred in the ultra-high-tech
surroundings of Verily’s automated mosquito rearing system, 200 miles
away in South San Francisco. They were infected with Wolbachia, a common
bacterium. When those 80,000 lab-bred Wolbachia-infected, male
mosquitoes mate with their counterpart females in the wild, the result
is stealth annihilation: the offspring never hatch.Better make that
79,999. “One just hit the windshield,” says Crawford.
For the rest of the article go to:
https://www.bnnbloomberg.ca/why-google-is-killing-off-fresno-s-mosquitoes-1.1174742
Posted by Sam Lanfranco <[log in to unmask]>
Access CANCHID archives at: https://listserv.yorku.ca/archives/canchid.html . CANCHID is a constituency service to the Global Health Community and is managed by Prof. Emeritus Sam Lanfranco <[log in to unmask]>
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