Research for more effective control of devasting livestock disease
As cases of New World screwworm (NWS) continue to rise in the U.S., scientists are searching for ways to get control of the fly that can cause death in livestock.
The Foundation for Food & Agriculture Research (FFAR), Agragene, and North Carolina State University (NC State) are investing $300,000 in a Rapid Outcomes from Agricultural Research (ROAR) grant to suppress the New World screwworm population by testing new technology that produces sterile, reproductively vigorous male flies.
Since the 1950’s, government agencies in the U.S. and Mexico have managed screwworm fly populations by sterilizing male flies with radiation and releasing them to mate with wild females. As these flies only mate once, the sterile male flies cause the screwworm population to decline and eventually die out. However, studies show that sterilizing flies with radiation can reduce their fitness and mating competitiveness. The sterile flies’ lack of virility requires significantly more sterile males to suppress wild populations, which slows the response to this invasion.
Dr. Maxwell Scott, professor in the Department of Entomology and Plant Pathology at NC State, previously collaborated on the development of NovoFly, an all-male NWS strain.


