Corona on Trial

Discover Yahoo! With Your Friends

Explore news, videos, and much more based on what your friends are reading and watching. Publish your own activity and retain full control.

To get started, first

YOUR FRIENDS' ACTIVITY

    Genetically modified mosquitoes to end dengue

    Manila (Philippine Daily Inquirer/ANN) - The Philippine Department of Science and Technology is considering unleashing genetically modified mosquitoes to combat the dengue fever epidemic.

    In a roundtable discussion attended by at least 60 Filipino scientists on Monday, scientists from the British-based Oxford Insect Technologies (Oxitec) and the National Academy of Sciences (NAS) proposed their newest technology aimed at eradicating the Aedes aegypti species of dengue-carrying mosquito.

    Dr. Luke Alphey, co-founder and chief scientist of Oxitec, Dr. Anthony James, a molecular biologist and a member of NAS, and Dr. David Brown-who are all part of a team working on the genetically engineered mosquitoes-are in the country on the invitation of the DOST.

    The scientists claim to have created genetically modified Aedes aegypti male mosquitoes which, if released in the wild and mated with the female of the species, can produce flightless female offspring.

    "Flightless mosquitoes cannot survive in the wild and are unable to mate even in the laboratory," Alphey said.

    The number of GM mosquitoes to be released should be 10 times the number of wild male mosquitoes in a certain area, he said.

    It is only the female mosquito that can transmit to humans the dengue fever, the severe flu-like illness that lasts for a week for most victims but can be lethal to others.

    The result of the mating would be a crash in the mosquito population and the subsequent eradication of the mosquitoes bearing the dengue virus.

    "This is the same thing we are trying to achieve when we are using insecticides," James said.

    James said eradicating the dengue-carrying mosquitoes will not disrupt the ecological balance.

    "In fact, there's a place in the world where there used to be no mosquitoes until the colonizers showed up, and that is Hawaii," he said.

    Mosquitoes are also insignificant in the food chain as their predators prefer to feed on larger prey, said James.

    We apologize. An error has occurred. Please try again.

    How do you feel about this article?

     

    159 comments

    • eliezer  •  8 months ago
      We can all make it cheaper to eradicate mosquito in our sorroundings. SOLUTION: A can of water mix with a powder soap to be distributed to our sorroundings. Female mosquito lays eggs in stagnant water and once layed egg on a water with powder soap it will never be hatched anymore, they die instantly. Try it.
    • ben  •  8 months ago
      REAL SOLUTION IS A CURE OR A VACCINE.
    • eleexer  •  8 months ago
      now the government think-tank is going sci-fi... a sign of intellectual bankruptcy or just an utter incompetency to rely on such supersonic fairy tales... :P
    • ben  •  8 months ago
      Sa Pasig, Mandaluyong, makati walang dengue, baket? kasi pinapanatili nilang malinis ang lugar nila. Kung nagagawa nila, bat hindi kaya ng ibang city?

      totoo ang sinasabi nila, katamaran ay isang sakit din pala.
      Mawala man ang dengue, kung madumi ang kapaligiran, may bagong disease ang lalabas
      • First L 8 months ago
        Well no, here in Pasig, there's alot of dengue cases.
      • Amy 8 months ago
        I don't think na katamaran is the only issue here. Lack of discipline is another one. And the fact that Filipinos find it very hard to adapt/deal with change. Tama nga yung sinasabi nila na pag natapos na yung dengue outbreak na to, balik na sa dating gawi mga Filipinos. Matatapos na yung frequent clean-ups sa mga barangay.
      • ben 8 months ago
        really? anong part ng Pasig yan?
    • ben  •  8 months ago
      Balikan lang natin ang mga natutunan natin nung bata pa tayo:

      Sa Homeroom class tinuruan tayo about CLEANLINESS.

      Sa Science (since Grade 1) they taught us about Ecosystem, about Food Chain, about Life Cycle.

      Sa Religion, we learned about the story of THE TOWER OF BABEL
      • ------ 8 months ago
        and yet we do nothing....
        tumawag ka ng media... theres a posibility baka magyari yan just for 1 day or as long na nakatutok sa kanila ang camera...
    • ben  •  8 months ago
      To forumlate a cure or vaccine is one thing, but to create another specie of animal is another.
      Lets not play God.
      Parang modem day tower of Babel lang yan. Man try to reach heaven, para makapantay ang Diyos. Now we try to be like God and make our own kind of animals. The intention maybe noble, but the solution is against nature ang against the balance of life.
      • Amy 8 months ago
        Sheesh. What's all this about trying to play God and the whole Tower of Babel thing?
        One difference is that, you said it yourself, this new scientific discovery is for a good purpose. Have you ever heard of the dozens being admitted to hospitals each day? Hundreds have died since the start of 2011, most of them children. No one's trying to play God. We're simply trying to make use of what's already there & use the knowledge that have been gifted to us to find a solution that can save thousands of lives in the future.
        If you're gonna lecture more about practicing cleanliness and discipline, then that's fine as well. But there is nothing wrong with finding easier, more efficient, effective and quicker ways to deal with the situation (especially now that dengue cases are rising significantly each year)
      • ben 8 months ago
        my first sentence is:

        To forumlate a cure or vaccine is one thing, but to create another specie of animal is another
      • ben 8 months ago
        Furthermore, an intention may be good but it doenst necessarily mean that all solution we can come up with for the same intention are RIGHT.

        For example:
        gusto natin mabawasan ang criminality sa bansa,
        possible solutions: stricter law and effecient law implementation; or have a vigilante group hunt the suspected criminals down and kill them.
        They both hav the same good intention, but one of them is RIGHT and the other is WRONG.
    • ben  •  8 months ago
      solutions is simple: CLEAN UP our communities

      We are so lazy that we prefer looking for an easy solution that do not require us to lift a finger.

      But I hope scientists will also focus more on finding a cure or vaccine instead of propagating genetically modified mosquitos.
      • Miguelito 8 months ago
        Ben, if cleaning up communities is indeed simple, we wouldn't have this problem in the first place. Believe me, forming a genetic mosquito is an easier solution than trying to convince everybody to clean up and maintain.
      • ben 8 months ago
        exactly my point, u want an EASY and LAZY solution.
        Sa ibang parte ng metro manila like Pasig, Las Pinas, Mandaluyong, walang dengue kasi they maintain their cities clean.

        besides, kahit na mawala ang dengue pero nde parin tayo maglilinis ng kapaligiran, may bagong virus, bagond diseases na lalabas.
      • Fatima 8 months ago
        You can't assume that there are NO cases there. What proof do you have that there are none?

        Well, the thing is, while you start cleaning the environment and all, you have to do something to make sure the species are stabilized. Of course, there ARE dangers in manipulating the genetic make-up of these insects, but you must understand that the purpose of the GM proposal is NOT merely lazy. It's the GENETIC MAKE-UP of the insects that cause the disease, not merely the bacteria they pick up. Otherwise, ANY mosquito could be a dengue agent.
    • RIK  •  8 months ago
      'this is the beginning of "Blood Sucking" or "ZOMBIE" era, once you are bitten by this genetic mosquitoes you will transform into vampire or zombie.. . bwa ha ha ha ha. victory to evil deeds.
    • Fernan  •  8 months ago
      What will happen if human are bitten by this kind of lamok?
    • Maginoo  •  8 months ago
      tapos nakagat ka... parang LAMOK MAN!! ^_^ DEFENDER OF THE PHILIPPINES gyahahaha
    • Askal  •  8 months ago
      thank God. keep up the good work guys.
    • ben  •  8 months ago
      no matter how scary these tiny bloodsuckers are, they play a role in our ecosystem.
      They should juz come up with a cure for the dengue virus or a vaccine, instead.
    • ben  •  8 months ago
      im not sure about this.
      Starts with genetically modified mosquitos to fight dengue carrying mosquitos.
      Next time it will be genetically modified humans to fight HIV carrying humans.
      I am not for tampering with what nature intended things to be.
      While there is no cure or vaccine yet (which these scientists shud really focus on),
      the solution for now is simple and we already know it: regular clean-up of our communities and our environment.
    • Ruel DG  •  8 months ago
      baka magkaroon ng kakaibang lamok out from that genetically-form insect.......
    • Vene Vidi Vicci  •  8 months ago
      Do it! now, forget the people that worry about evolving bugs. They evolve anyway!. How stupid. If they had their choice they would not allow vaccines, antibiotics and valuable drugs. I bet that they would want them if any one of their family was infected.
    • Cabal Dos  •  8 months ago
      Playing God is dangerous.. the aim maybe for the betterment but this genetically modified mosquitoes might modify Dengue also into a more disastrous virus...it will create a female fightless mosquito, what if that flightless female mosquito (which still carry the dengue virus) manage to evolve into a crawling dengue carrier (like ants) and furthermore the male offspring of the genetically mosquito might carry the virus as well because of the mutation (we never know yet, but a possibility) now we doubled the carrier.. Life always finds a way, that's evolution.
    • Makki  •  8 months ago
      dapat noon pa ginawa, kung kailan dami nang namatay at my tawa-tawa na . . . . kuha mo? panibagong sakit na lang imbentuhin para panibagong gamot!
    • Paul  •  8 months ago
      I hope not only for ae. aegypti but also to other aedes like albopictus, scutillares, etc which are also capable of carrying and transmitting the virus of dengue to humans,
    • Arnold  •  8 months ago
      The lab environment is not the same as the wild. Nature is about survival. Trying to wipe out a species by screwing with it's genetics will result in unforeseeable permutations that may have far greater consequences than the ones they are trying to eliminate.
      Find another way.
    • Flong  •  8 months ago
      ganyan pala katalino ng mga scientists pati lamok hindi pinalampas...ginawa pang GMO...ilang taong pag-aaral sa mataas na universidad lamok lang pala ang katapat
    POLL
    Loading...
    Poll Choice Options