Irish Independent

Flies laden with more germs than suspected

- Sarah Knapton

MOST picnickers would brush away flies from food, thinking nothing of bugs briefly landing on their sandwiches.

But a new study suggests the insects carry far more dangerous bacteria than previously thought, meaning sandwiches are best avoided if they have been contaminat­ed by flies.

Researcher­s at Penn State Eberly College of Science, in the United States, found that common houseflies carry salmonella, e-coli and even bacteria which can lead to stomach ulcers and deadly sepsis.

The researcher­s say flies may have been overlooked by public health officials as a source of disease outbreaks.

Flies in urban areas were found to carry more bacteria than in the countrysid­e, leading scientists to suggest avoiding city parks for a picnic, and eating food in more rural locations.

“People had some notion that there were pathogens that were carried by flies, but had no idea of the extent to which this is true, and the extent to which they are transferre­d,” said Dr Donald Bryant, professor of biotechnol­ogy, at Penn State University.

Overlooked

“We believe that this may show a mechanism for pathogen transmissi­on that has been overlooked by public health officials.

“It will really make you think twice about eating that potato salad that’s been sitting out at your next picnic.

“It might be better to have that picnic in the woods, far away from urban environmen­ts, not a central park.”

DNA sequencing techniques were used to study the collection of microbes found in and on the bodies of the house fly (Musca domestica) and the blowfly (Chrysomya megacephal­a).

The house fly, which is ubiquitous around the world, was found to harbour 351 types of bacteria. The blowfly, which is found in warmer climates, carried 316. A large number of these bacteria were carried by both types of fly.

The team even investigat­ed the microbes on individual fly body parts, including legs and wings.

Flies probably pick up the bacteria from faeces and decaying organic matter, which they use to nurture their young, the study indicated.

Scientists found 15 instances of the human pathogen Helicobact­er pylori – which causes ulcers in the human gut – on Brazilian blowflies.

The research was published in the journal ‘Scientific Reports’. (© Daily Telegraph London)

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