City
Epaper

Study finds bacteria can accelerate mosquito control, prevent dengue, Zika

By IANS | Updated: November 5, 2024 10:05 IST

New Delhi, Nov 5 In a breakthrough research, UK scientists have identified a bacteria that can curb the ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Nov 5 In a breakthrough research, UK scientists have identified a bacteria that can curb the growth of disease-spreading mosquitoes.

The team from the universities of Exeter and Wageningen showed that mosquito larvae grow faster if they’re exposed to Asaia bacteria and could help global health programmes in curbing diseases like dengue, yellow fever, and Zika, caused by the Aedes aegypti mosquito.

The study, published in the Journal of Applied Microbiology, showed that Asaia accelerated development time by a day. This, the team said, could boost mass-rearing schemes that need to produce millions of adult mosquitoes.

Previously, anti-disease programmes have been used to breed and release non-biting male mosquitoes that are either sterile or prevent the transmission of diseases. These mass-release programmes are substantially more effective than the widespread spraying of insecticides, as these insects have developed resistance to many commonly employed chemicals.

“Asaia bacteria have been suggested as beneficial parts of mosquito microbiomes, but this has never been rigorously tested in Aedes aegypti,” said Professor Ben Raymond, of the Centre for Ecology and Conservation on the University of Exeter’s Penryn Campus in Cornwall.

“We know that Aedes aegypti mosquito larvae can’t develop at all without a microbiome, and our study shows two Asaia species can play a beneficial role,” Raymond added.

The larval period of Aedes aegypti mosquitoes usually lasts about 10 days, so accelerating by a day could be a valuable boost to mass production, the researchers said.

In the study, they added Asaia bacteria to the water where mosquito larvae developed.

They found two particular species that accelerated larval development.

While the mechanism remains unclear, it does not appear that these bacteria provided direct nutritional benefits, rather, they changed the wider bacterial community, the team said.

This reduced the abundance of certain bacteria, including some species that may be slightly parasitic. Asaia bacteria also remove oxygen – creating conditions that produce hormones to promote development, the researchers said.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

NagpurNagpur: 3 Workers Killed, Several Injured After Water Tank Collapse at Solar Plant in Butibori MIDC

Cricket"Important to put pressure on yourself....": Varun Chakravarthy on preparing for T20 World Cup at home

EntertainmentVikas Jain apologizes for missing Ankita Lokhande’s birthday, promises to make it up to her

Other SportsKuldeep Yadav receives signed Argentina football jersey from legend Lionel Messi

BusinessMUFG acquires 20 pc stake in Shriram Finance for nearly Rs 39,600 crore

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologyWhat is SHANTI Bill, 2025, how can it help India achieve self-reliance in nuclear energy

TechnologyPune records 14,234 property registrations in Nov, stamp duty collections reach Rs 565 crore

TechnologyCentre releases over Rs 94 crore to strengthen rural local bodies in Uttarakhand

TechnologyIndia’s direct tax collection clocks 8 pc growth at Rs 17.05 lakh crore in April-Dec

TechnologyIndian study shows how freshwater sponge-associated microbes can tackle metal pollution