Business Standard

20 million mosquitoes to hit Fresno; that’s a good thing, really

- CAROLINE CHEN 15 July

A giant technology company will release up to 20 million bacteria-filled, buzzing mosquitoes this summer in Fresno, California. That’s supposed to be a good thing. The bug campaign, which starts Friday, is part of a plan by Alphabet’s Verily Life Sciences unit. Reared by machines, the male mosquitoes are infected with a bacteria that, while harmless to humans, creates nonhatchin­g dead eggs when they mate with wild females — hopefully cutting the mosquito population and the transmissi­on of the diseases they carry.

The swarm’s target is Aedes aegypti, a mosquito breed that carries viruses like zika, dengue and chikunguny­a. They’re an invasive species in California’s Central Valley, first arriving in Fresno in 2013.

After becoming a standalone Alphabet division in 2015, Verily has grown rapidly, taking on numerous health technology projects, partnering with the drug industry and raising significan­t funds including $800 million from Singapore investment firm Temasek Holdings. While the mosquito project, called Debug, won’t generate revenue in the near-term, it’s a chance for Verily to show off its technical prowess in the health-care field.

“If we can show that this technique can work, I’m confident we can make it a sustainabl­e business because the burden of these mosquitoes is enormous,” said Verily engineerin­g chief Linus Upson, who helped create Google’s Chrome web browser and now leads Debug.

Verily’s mosquitoes aren’t geneticall­y modified. They’re infected with a naturally occurring bacteria called Wolbachia. When infected male mosquitoes mate with wild females, they create nonviable eggs, resulting in population decline over time. A bonus: male mosquitoes don’t bite, so Fresno residents won’t be spending the summer itching more than normal.

Verily isn’t the first to use Wolbachia mosquitoes for disease control. Organisati­ons like the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation have been working on the bugs for more than a decade, running pilot projects in countries including Indonesia and Brazil. Verily’s contributi­on has been to create machines that automatica­lly rear, count and sort the mosquitoes by sex, making it possible to create vast quantities for large-scale projects. The Fresno project will be the biggest US release of sterile mosquitoes to date, Verily says.

A minimum ratio of seven Wolbachia mosquitoes to one wild male mosquito is needed to control the population, according to Steve Mulligan, district manager of the Consolidat­e Mosquito Abatement District, which includes the parts of Fresno in this project.

Verily is planning to release 1 million mosquitoes a week over a 20-week period across two 300-acre neighbourh­oods. The company’s bug-releasing van will start travelling the streets of Fancher Creek, a neighbourh­ood in Fresno County, on Friday.

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