Brazil Set to Unleash Genetically Modified Mosquitoes
Oxitec continues "dangerously misguided" plan to combat dengue fever
Brazil is readying a plan to unleash large numbers of
genetically modified (GM) mosquitoes in an effort to combat dengue
fever, a plan that environmentalists have previously called "dangerously
misguided."
In a factory inaugurated Saturday, Moscamed will continue its two-year long project which already saw gm mosquitoes released in Bahia state last year.
The plan uses Sterile Insect Technique (SIT), which renders the
modified insects sterile, thereby theoretically reducing the number of
mosquitoes in the wild when they're released.
The GM mosquito plan may have met with little resistance, as Oxitec
says in a statement that Brazil has "a long history of open releases of
genetically modified plants in agriculture."
Brazil is not the only place to receive Oxitec's transgenic bugs. Bloomberg reports that they've also been released in Malaysia, the Cayman Islands and Brazil.
When the Florida Keys announced a possible plan to release Oxitec's genetically modified mosquitoes in order to control the population of Aedes aegypti
in March, it was met with resistance from community members.
Environmentalists called the the plan "dangerously misguided" and said
that the company has hidden the fact that the genetically modified
mosquitoes could have high survival rate in wild and is not, as Oxitec
claims, environmentally friendly.
“We cannot stress strongly enough how dangerously misguided this
application is. Oxitec hopes to use the neighborhoods and precious
ecosystem of the Keys as their private, for-profit laboratory. The shame
of it is, the company has no evidence the [genetically modified]
mosquitoes will even work in their stated aim of controlling Dengue
fever," said Wenonah Hauter, Executive Director of Food & Water
Watch of the Florida Keys plan.
Source: http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2012/07/10-1
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