Alphabet’s attempt to "debug" nature through mass biological intervention showcases impressive technical ambition but risks unforeseen ecological consequences. Entrusting a private corporation with the power to manipulate genetic populations demands far more transparency and long-term accountability than a news headline provides.
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MOSQUITO APOCALYPSE? Google Plans To Release 32 MILLION Genetically Modified Mosquitoes In The US!本站添加:
Google has a new product launch and no, it is not a phone. It is 32 million mosquitoes. That's right. The world's most powerful tech company wants to release an army of mosquitoes across American cities.
And the US government is actually considering saying yes to that. So, should you be alarmed or is this the smartest public health idea of the decade? Let's get into it.
First, a number [music] that will stop you cold. 700,000.
That is how many people mosquitoes kill every year. Not sharks, not snakes, not wars. Mosquitoes. The world's deadliest animal is smaller than your pinky finger and it has been winning for centuries.
Dengue, Zika, malaria, West Nile, chikungunya. These [music] diseases don't have reliable vaccines. They don't have full-proof 100% treatments >> [music] >> and they are spreading fast as warming temperatures push mosquito habitats further north, deeper into the American heartland.
One species alone, Aedes aegypti, carries dengue fever, Zika, and chikungunya, sickening hundreds and hundreds of people every single year across the world for that matter.
So, enter Project Debug.
Through its parent company Alphabet, Google is seeking federal approval to release 32 million mosquitoes in California and Florida particularly over the next 2 years as part of an ongoing initiative called the Debug Project, which aims to control mosquito populations and cut down on mosquito-borne diseases. Now, here's where it gets interesting, viewers, because the mosquitoes Google wants to release, Google says they are a cure.
Debug is releasing male mosquitoes carrying a naturally occurring bacteria called Wolbachia. And when those males mate with wild female mosquitoes in the field, the eggs simply don't hatch. The population shrinks. That is the idea, generation by generation, until the disease spreaders are completely gone.
Male mosquitoes do not bite. They don't carry disease. They just mate unsuccessfully. It is a biological con job, sort of.
And here is how this plan works in practice. If the EPA grants final approval, Google will release up to 16 million male mosquitoes in Florida in the first year, and another 16 million in California the following year.
Google's scientists use AI-powered computer vision to precisely separate males from females before releasing them, and automated rearing systems to breed the fragile creatures at scale.
Now, Debug has already released more than a billion mosquitoes across four different continents, but this this would be its most aggressive American expansion yet.
Now, not everyone is pleased. Not everyone is clapping. Katherine Hill, an entomologist, has warned that mosquitoes represent a large part of the biomass in many ecosystems, and that removing them abruptly could produce consequences scientists cannot even predict as of yet.
Fair concern, but consider the alternative. Pesticides are becoming toxic and losing effectiveness.
Eliminating breeding grounds is nearly impossible at this point. You cannot drain every puddle, every flower pot, every forgotten bucket across two of America's the most densely populated states.
And the diseases the diseases keep coming.
The EPA will make the final call, but here's the larger story. The world's deadliest creature has for centuries had an unfair advantage. It is small, it is everywhere, it breeds in a teaspoon of water.
Google just decided that is a bug it can fix. I am Nikita Kapoor, and what do you think about it? Tell us in the comments section below.
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