Florida residents claim 'pest control trial' that will release up to a BILLION genetically engineered mosquitos in the K

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Florida residents claim 'pest control trial' that will release up to a BILLION genetically engineered mosquitos in the K

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https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech ... ORISM.html
Florida residents claim 'pest control trial' that will release up to a BILLION genetically engineered mosquitos in the Keys to reduce species carrying diseases is 'TERRORISM'
Trials of the first-ever US release of genetically engineered being this week
Florida has been chosen due to its influx of Aedes aegypti mosquitoes
This species, which comes from Brazil, carries Zika and other diseases
The modified mosquitoes pass a specific protein to females during mating
This ensures female offspring do not survive the next generation
However, residents are furious about the 'live experiment'
Some are saying the release of up to a billion is an act of terrorism
By STACY LIBERATORE FOR DAILYMAIL.COM

PUBLISHED: 00:15 GMT, 27 April 2021

The Florida Keys will soon be buzzing with close to a billion 'fraken-squitoes' – gene-hacked mosquitoes aimed at eradicating a disease carrying mosquito.

The Florida Keys Mosquito Control District (FKMCD) and Oxitec, a British biotech company, are starting the first-ever U.S. release of genetically engineered (GE) Aedes aegypti mosquitoes this week, which will see up to a billion over a two-year period.

The project aims to reduce the numbers of Aedes aegypti, one of several mosquito species that can carry diseases including dengue, chikungunya, Zika and yellow fever.


Floridians, however, are calling on the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to end 'this live experiment' saying they are being subjected to terrorism by the FKMCD.

The trial is set to begin this week, with the first phase releasing up to 144,000 GE mosquitoes over the next 12 weeks. Ultimately, up to a billion will be released in Monroe County.
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The GE mosquitos, developed by Oxitec, have been modified to pass on a particular protein when they mate, which ensures female offspring do not survive the next generation.

With fewer females in each subsequent generation, the researchers hope overall mosquito populations in the region will decrease along with transmission rates of disease passed through mosquito bites.

The modified mosquitoes - from the Aedes aegypti species - are all male and the company contends that because only female mosquitoes can bite, there is no risk to humans in releasing them.

Barry Wray of the Florida Keys Environmental Coalition said: 'People here in Florida do not consent to the genetically engineered mosquitoes or to being human experiments.'
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Islamorada resident Virginia Donaldson told Futurism that on April 23, two men in uniforms came to her home to do 'mosquito control' and asked her to participate in a new pest control program.

In a hurry, Donaldson agreed and signed a waiver, but later told Futurism: 'I don't even know what I signed.'

And later found out that she had agreed to the genetic mosquito experiment.

Dana Perls, food and technology Program Manager at Friends of the Earth, said: 'This is a dark moment in history. The EPA must halt this live experiment immediately.

'The release of genetically engineered mosquitoes puts Floridians, the environment, and endangered species at risk in the midst of a pandemic.'

In March, a panel of independent experts testified to the Florida Keys mosquito board that GE mosquitoes could also pose significant threats to sensitive ecosystems and human populations in the Florida Keys.

Megan Hull, a resident of Islamorada, spoke at the council meeting where she stated her grievances.

'I find this criminal, that we are being bullied into the experiment,' she said in March.

'I find it criminal that we are being subjected to this terrorism by our own Florida Keys Mosquito Control Board.'

Residents say the EPA did not require peer review or preliminary trials for caged GE mosquitoes before releasing them into the wild.
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Oxitec and FKMCD's claim that the GMO mosquito experiments will be monitored by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is misleading.

CDC has agreed to review data provided by Oxietc, but that data will not include independent health assessments.

A Florida Keys resident opposed to Oxitec's GMO mosquitoes received an email response from the CDC dated April 12, 2021, which reads: 'CDC is not formally involved in any evaluation at this time. CDC is not overseeing the trial, and CDC does not plan to conduct any health assessments before, during, or after the trials.'

Oxitec, however, has said it has assembled extensive amounts of research to show the mosquitoes are safe, and previously conducted trial releases in Brazil where the mosquitos were effective in cutting disease transmission rates.

If the mosquitoes prove effective, Oxitec hopes they can be used in regions with high prevalence of mosquito-born diseases like Dengue fever and Zika virus.

'I truly believe we are fighting one of the most consequential regulatory malfunctions we could ever imagine,' Wray said.

'We all watched as four experts in the biotech field, each enthusiastic about the technology Oxitec had created and each wise enough to say that without proper scientific rigor and prudence, we risk unnecessary outcomes and mistakes.

'The problem is that the discovery of those mistakes and consequences may not be realized until damages are more severe and irreversible.

'All this risk to benefit a for-profit company getting to market quicker with a product that has yet to actually prove anything other than failure in all of its historical field trials.'
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Florida furious over release of genetically modified mosquitos

The Florida Keys will soon be buzzing with close to a billion 'fraken-squitoes' – gene-hacked mosquitoes aimed at eradicating a disease carrying mosquito.


The GE mosquitos, developed by Oxitect, have been modified to pass on a particular protein when they mate, which ensures female offspring do not survive the next generation.

With fewer females in each subsequent generation, the researchers hope overall mosquito populations in the region will decrease along with transmission rates of disease passed through mosquito bites.

WHO 2012 Draft of the testing of Genetically Modified Mosquitos
GMM_Guidance_2012.pdf
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