UN Launches $1 Million Screwworm Containment Project

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The International Atomic Energy Agency and the ‌U.N. food agency have launched a $1 million research project to help contain the screwworm outbreak in the Americas, including efforts to address a shortage of sterile flies, they said ‌on Friday.

The pest has re-emerged in ​Central America and Mexico and was confirmed in the U.S. this month, the first ⁠occurrence there in more than 40 years, raising ​risks for livestock, wildlife and pets and sending beef ⁠prices to near record highs.

Female screwworm flies lay eggs in wounds on any warm-blooded animal. Once the eggs hatch, hundreds ‌of larvae eat through living flesh, eventually ​killing their host ‌if untreated.

The outbreak could be tackled through the release of flies treated ‌with radiation to make them unable to reproduce, the agencies said. The sterile flies then mate ⁠with wild flies, reducing the ‌population over time.

Emergency ⁠response efforts could require up to 600 million sterile flies ⁠a ⁠week, they said. The only operational facility located in Panama now produces ‌about 100 million.

They said planned capacity in Metapa de Dominguez, Mexico, and Mission, Texas, could add up to ‌400 ​million sterile flies ‌a week in coming years.

The sterile insect technique helped eradicate the pest from the U.S., Mexico ​and Central America in an earlier campaign, they said.

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