ROBOTIC STERILISED AEDES MOSQUITO BY BACTERIA WILL CONTROL DENGUE,ZIKA,CHIKUNGUNYA FEVER

ROBOTIC STERILISED AEDES MOSQUITO BY BACTERIA WILL CONTROL DENGUE,ZIKA,CHIKUNGUNYA FEVER

PROF .DRRAM,HIV /AIDS,HEPATITIS ,SEX DISEASES & WEAKNESS expert,New Delhi,India, profdrram@gmail.com,+917838059592,+919832025033,ON WHATSAPP

Dengue,Chikungunya,Zika,Malaria,Yellow fever,Filaria  etc are highly contagious fever causing hugh mobidities and mortality through out the world and is challenge for human population for existence as these fevers beside making us diseased and dead parlyse our economy,education,travelling and livehood
          They are spread by bite of different type of mosquiotes which are hard to be controlled by different pests and insecticides as they gradually mutate their gene,so a new control of them by making their gene changed so they become sterile or donot carry these parasites inside them but recently making them sterile by infecting with bacteria and producing them in billions by a robots is successful.Recently spread or fumigation of these mosquiotes done in Miami and Rio de Janeiro.
        Verily company Robot  has treated male mosquitoes  with Wolbachia, a type of naturally occurring bacteria that infects many types of insects. Verily says it is using custom-built software algorithms and machines to ramp up the number of mosquitoes it’s able to grow and release. The mosquitoes are part of the company’s plan, announced last October, to fight diseases like Zika and dengue fever.
        Verily’s effort represents a growing interest by industry and nonprofit organizations in using altered insects to stop the transmission of deadly diseases and protect crops from agricultural pests. The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation is also exploring the idea of sterilized mosquitoes, and the U.K. company Oxitec is genetically engineering moths with a gene that makes the insects die off over time.

        When the treated males mate with females in the wild, the females’ eggs aren’t able to develop properly and don’t hatch. The idea is that the sterile males will help deplete the local mosquito population. Male mosquitoes do not bite humans and cannot transmit disease to people, so Verily and its partners aim to release only males. The company has created an automated sex-sorting process to lower the risk that females will end up in the mix.

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