Ecuador to release sterile mosquitoes on Galapagos Islands


Researchers in Ecuador plan to release 100,000 sterile Aedes aegypti mosquitoes on the Galapagos Islands to curb infectious diseases such as dengue. – EPA pic, March 11, 2023.

ECUADOR will release 100,000 sterile Aedes aegypti mosquitoes on its Galapagos Islands to curb dengue, Zika and chikungunya transmission, authorities said yesterday.

The first such effort with sterile mosquitoes there, it should help lower local residents’ and tourists’ rates of infection from those diseases, the National Institute for Health Research (Inspi) said.

The plan should “improve health conditions of the population, avoiding the transmission of diseases to tourists…  and reducing the use of chemical products used in fumigation,” an Inspi statement said.

The Galapagos – a World Heritage Site with a fragile ecosystem that is home to unique flora and fauna species – were made famous by British geologist and naturalist Charles Darwin’s observations on evolution.

The islands are close to 1,000km off the mainland coast.

Inspi researchers have worked for six years on the project that includes the mass rearing of Aedes aegypti in the laboratory and their sterilisation by radiation.

The release of mosquitoes unable to fertilise the females impacts the population of the species, reducing it and thus the transmission of diseases. – AFP, March 11, 2023.


Sign up or sign in here to comment.


Comments