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Florida could release genetically modified mosquitos into the wild

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Sounds like an interesting approach but people are going to bitch about proactive attempts to stop disease and people are going to bitch you didn't do enough to stop a large outbreak. But I think a healthy amount of skepticism is warranted and necessary when dealing with these types of solutions.

I know I've seen aedes aegypti in a movie or TV show recently. Its bugging me I can't recall which one it was.

Millions of genetically modified mosquitoes could be released in the Florida Keys if British researchers win approval to use the bugs against two extremely painful viral diseases.

Never before have insects with modified DNA come so close to being set loose in a residential U.S. neighborhood.

"This is essentially using a mosquito as a drug to cure disease," said Michael Doyle, executive director of the Florida Keys Mosquito Control District, which is waiting to hear if the Food and Drug Administration will allow the experiment.

Dengue and chikungunya are growing threats in the U.S., but some people are more frightened at the thought of being bitten by a genetically modified organism. More than 130,000 people signed a Change.org petition against the experiment.

Even potential boosters say those responsible must do more to show that benefits outweigh the risks of breeding modified insects that could bite people.

"I think the science is fine, they definitely can kill mosquitoes, but the GMO issue still sticks as something of a thorny issue for the general public," said Phil Lounibos, who studies mosquito control at the Florida Medical Entomology Laboratory.

Mosquito controllers say they're running out of options. With climate change and globalization spreading tropical diseases farther from the equator, storm winds, cargo ships and humans carry these viruses to places like Key West, the southernmost U.S. city.

There are no vaccines or cures for dengue, known as "break-bone fever," or chikungunya, so painful it causes contortions. U.S. cases remain rare.

Insecticides are sprayed year-round in the Keys' charming and crowded neighborhoods. But Aedes aegypti, whose biting females spread these diseases, have evolved to resist four of the six insecticides used to kill them.

Enter Oxitec, a British biotech firm that patented a method of breeding Aedes aegypti with fragments of genes from the herpes simplex virus and E. coli bacteria as well as coral and cabbage. This synthetic DNA is commonly used in laboratory science and is thought to pose no significant risks to other animals, but it kills mosquito larvae.

Oxitec's lab workers manually remove modified females, aiming to release only males, which don't bite for blood like females do. The modified males then mate with wild females whose offspring die, reducing the population.

Oxitec has built a breeding lab in Marathon and hopes to release its mosquitoes in a Key West neighborhood this spring.

FDA spokeswoman Theresa Eisenman said no field tests will be allowed until the agency has "thoroughly reviewed all the necessary information."

Company spokeswoman Chris Creese said the test will be similar in size to Oxitec's 2012 experiment in the Cayman Islands, where 3.3 million modified mosquitoes were released over six months, suppressing 96 percent of the targeted bugs. Oxitec says a later test in Brazil also was successful, and both countries now want larger-scale projects.

But critics accused Oxitec of failing to obtain informed consent in the Caymans, saying residents weren't told they could be bitten by a few stray females overlooked in the lab.

Instead, Oxitec said only non-biting males would be released, and that even if humans were somehow bitten, no genetically modified DNA would enter their bloodstream.

Neither claim is entirely true, outside observers say.

"I'm on their side, in that consequences are highly unlikely. But to say that there's no genetically modified DNA that might get into a human, that's kind of a gray matter," said Lounibos.

Creese says Oxitec has now released 70 million of its mosquitoes in several countries and received no reports of human impacts caused by bites or from the synthetic DNA, despite regulatory oversight that encourages people to report any problems. "We are confident of the safety of our mosquito, as there's no mechanism for any adverse effect on human health. The proteins are non-toxic and non-allergenic," she said.

Oxitec should still do more to show that the synthetic DNA causes no harm when transferred into humans by its mosquitoes, said Guy Reeves, a molecular geneticist at Germany's Max Planck Institute.

Key West resident Marilyn Smith wasn't persuaded after Oxitec's presentation at a public meeting. She says neither disease has had a major outbreak yet in Florida, so "why are we being used as the experiment, the guinea pigs, just to see what happens?"
 

Stinkles

Clothed, sober, cooperative
If I understand the science correctly, and I do, these skeeters will give me cabbage herpes.
 

joe2187

Banned
tumblr_n8z4w3XFS21txw2z4o1_400.gif
 

VariantX

Member
ok, while i don't mind people finding ways to keep mosquitoes down, maybe we should find out what effect do they have on the ecosystem before doing such a thing? It might go a bit too far and suddenly we lose a bunch of other species because an important food source is gone.
 

Ecotic

Member
Mosquitos are the only animal that I'm totally okay with driving to extinction in the wild. I mean we can keep some in quarantined labs or something, like smallpox.

C'mon humanity, we've driven countless animals to extinction, why not one that'd we'd be happy to see gone?
 
Creese says Oxitec has now released 70 million of its mosquitoes in several countries and received no reports of human impacts caused by bites or from the synthetic DNA, despite regulatory oversight that encourages people to report any problems. "We are confident of the safety of our mosquito, as there's no mechanism for any adverse effect on human health. The proteins are non-toxic and non-allergenic," she said.
These guys added an extra 70 million mosquitoes to the world? >_<
 

Cerity

Member
I remember watching a documentary on these guys (or another group doing the same thing), they've trialed this in places where malaria is prevalent and enjoyed success. It seemed to be a much more controlled method of controlling malaria and mosquito populations.
 

PBY

Banned
...did any of you people read the article before kneejerking to the Florida memes?
I feel like its the kind of thing where my head tells me this makes sense, but my gut is like fuuuuuck no.

Usually go w my head in these cases, but that feeling is still there.
 

Stinkles

Clothed, sober, cooperative
Btw, captain cook, who was perhaps not coincidentally pummeled to death by Hawaiians, is believed to have introduced mosquitoes to the Hawaiian islands by dumping bilge water.

Fucker. Only thing wrong with Hawaii, period.
 

ItIsOkBro

Member
the males mosquitoes don't bite

they're genetically modifying male mosquitoes

people are afraid of getting bitten by genetically modified mosquitoes
 

Spinluck

Member
...did any of you people read the article before kneejerking to the Florida memes?

Of course not.

Then yet would know that British scientist are behind the experiment and are awaiting approval from the state to carry on to this next phase.
 

Suikoguy

I whinny my fervor lowly, for his length is not as great as those of the Hylian war stallions
the males mosquitoes don't bite

they're genetically modifying male mosquitoes

people are afraid of getting bitten by genetically modified mosquitoes

It is damn amusing that some people are more afraid of that then a disease that might kill you.
 

zeemumu

Member
As long as you're 100% sure they won't mutate beyond their purpose, you're free to keep it in Florida. We'll just nuke it if you screw up.

Can't have another Africanized killer bee incident.
 

pa22word

Member
Anti gmo people there proving the far left idiots can be just as bad as the far right if given the chance.

People acting like fools posting the "lolflorida" memes aren't helping, either.
 

Oppo

Member
I agree with this. fuck Mosquitos.

and before anyone accuses me of cavalierly fucking with the biome; there's a very good argument to be made that we really would be better off - "we" being everything on earth that isn't a mosquito - without them. they occupy a fairly unique intersection of being horrible disease carriers AND not an essential food or driver to any other part of the environment.

I am happy to be corrected by someone more knowledgeable in this point, but this is my understanding. if we can modify them, we should. for humanity's sake of nothing else.
 
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