The project, unique in
Portugal, aims to test the sterile insect technique (SIT) to reduce the
population of the “Aedes albopictus” mosquito, a species that poses a potential
threat for the transmission of several diseases, including dengue, zika and
chikungunya.
Recommended by the
World Health Organization (WHO) to reduce the population of these mosquitoes
and prevent the emergence of diseases, the SIT technique consists of releasing
sterile males that, when mating with females, make new generations unfeasible.
The two-year project
is led by researchers from the Instituto Nacional de Saúde Doutor Ricardo Jorge
(INSA) in collaboration with the public health service of the Regional Health
Administration (ARS) of the Algarve, within the scope of the National Health
Network Vector Surveillance (REVIVE), funded by the International Atomic Energy
Agency (IAEA).
The regional
coordinator for the Algarve of the REVIVE program, Nélia Guerreiro, told Lusa
that the monitoring of the population of the insects is being carried out in a
specific area of 40 hectares in the Gambelas area, near Faro international
airport, where the species was identified in 2020.
“For three weeks,
field activities were carried out, with the release of about 90,000 insects
sterilised in the laboratory and marked, so that the SIT technique can be
validated, as a complementary ecological tool for vector control”, she pointed
out.
The results to
understand whether the eggs that are produced by mosquitoes released into the
environment "are sterile or not should only be known near the end of the
year", said the official.
Robust data
Nélia Guerreiro said that
monitoring carried out since 2020 on the mosquito population in the Gambelas
area “has enabled the collection of very robust data, namely its density, when
the mosquito is active and when it loses activity”.
"Due to the data
collected, it was possible to submit a project of this type that intends to
validate the sterile mosquito technique as a complementary ecological tool for
a vector control program, so that in the future it can be used for the
suppression of the mosquito population that exists in a given region", he
concluded.
Originating in
Southeast Asia, “Aedes albopictus” has been spreading globally through the
passive transport of eggs originated in commercial activities, namely, the
global trade of used tires and ornamental plants.
The Asian tiger
mosquito arrived in Europe via Albania in 1979, and since then has been
detected in several countries, such as Italy, France or Spain, being capable of
transmitting diseases such as dengue, zika and chikungunya, as well as filarial
parasites,
Presence in Portugal
The invasive species
was first detected in Portugal in September 2017 at a tire factory in the north
of the country, which triggered a surveillance response by public health
authorities at local, regional and national levels.
A year later, the same
species was detected in the Algarve in very specific areas, and it is not known
precisely how it was introduced.