The Japan Times - Dengue outpaces virus-blocking mosquitoes in Brazil

EUR -
AED 4.31338
AFN 74.584664
ALL 95.181751
AMD 433.346482
ANG 2.102235
AOA 1078.198906
ARS 1636.189453
AUD 1.627792
AWG 2.114116
AZN 1.986864
BAM 1.952365
BBD 2.366217
BDT 144.415951
BGN 1.959201
BHD 0.443416
BIF 3496.829459
BMD 1.174509
BND 1.491725
BOB 8.116237
BRL 5.740877
BSD 1.174823
BTN 111.896104
BWP 15.796078
BYN 3.285393
BYR 23020.373689
BZD 2.362823
CAD 1.609576
CDF 2596.839342
CHF 0.917057
CLF 0.026775
CLP 1053.793065
CNY 7.980745
CNH 7.981592
COP 4417.750652
CRC 538.448204
CUC 1.174509
CUP 31.124485
CVE 110.433232
CZK 24.327013
DJF 209.208408
DKK 7.471667
DOP 69.557046
DZD 155.340397
EGP 62.342736
ERN 17.617633
ETB 183.441138
FJD 2.569532
FKP 0.860418
GBP 0.868238
GEL 3.14179
GGP 0.860418
GHS 13.2601
GIP 0.860418
GMD 85.739023
GNF 10308.514692
GTQ 8.96481
GYD 245.684921
HKD 9.19577
HNL 31.23878
HRK 7.533767
HTG 153.754287
HUF 356.913862
IDR 20576.866728
ILS 3.420642
IMP 0.860418
INR 112.408896
IQD 1539.079423
IRR 1540430.020979
ISK 143.619175
JEP 0.860418
JMD 185.342377
JOD 0.83271
JPY 185.161064
KES 151.688062
KGS 102.711287
KHR 4713.54763
KMF 492.119252
KPW 1057.079405
KRW 1750.869705
KWD 0.361807
KYD 0.979073
KZT 544.300177
LAK 25772.552475
LBP 105341.461292
LKR 378.432669
LRD 215.199385
LSL 19.30915
LTL 3.468019
LVL 0.710448
LYD 7.430802
MAD 10.683626
MDL 20.136406
MGA 4884.34532
MKD 61.621593
MMK 2465.239774
MNT 4205.740398
MOP 9.474253
MRU 46.911077
MUR 54.85442
MVR 18.099579
MWK 2037.190257
MXN 20.26349
MYR 4.620484
MZN 75.053652
NAD 19.30915
NGN 1604.191428
NIO 43.232291
NOK 10.776004
NPR 179.062478
NZD 1.976076
OMR 0.451607
PAB 1.174619
PEN 4.0362
PGK 5.102936
PHP 72.198819
PKR 327.279879
PLN 4.249485
PYG 7221.173901
QAR 4.27815
RON 5.212938
RSD 117.389845
RUB 86.678058
RWF 1718.155562
SAR 4.406502
SBD 9.433958
SCR 16.286211
SDG 705.289244
SEK 10.888166
SGD 1.495485
SHP 0.876889
SLE 28.887532
SLL 24628.859072
SOS 671.413166
SRD 43.930745
STD 24309.962113
STN 24.456561
SVC 10.279872
SYP 129.817787
SZL 19.302879
THB 38.088738
TJS 10.994686
TMT 4.122526
TND 3.360856
TOP 2.827936
TRY 53.330172
TTD 7.963956
TWD 37.061663
TZS 3059.595591
UAH 51.630914
UGX 4416.459927
USD 1.174509
UYU 46.829709
UZS 14264.784638
VES 587.060661
VND 30930.690873
VUV 138.97194
WST 3.182091
XAF 654.796751
XAG 0.013964
XAU 0.00025
XCD 3.174169
XCG 2.117366
XDR 0.814357
XOF 654.793969
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.296619
ZAR 19.436583
ZMK 10571.985369
ZMW 22.212735
ZWL 378.191374
  • CMSC

    0.0100

    23.12

    +0.04%

  • RIO

    2.5200

    107.9

    +2.34%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    87.16

    +0.31%

  • RBGPF

    -2.6100

    61

    -4.28%

  • CMSD

    0.0763

    23.61

    +0.32%

  • RYCEF

    0.2200

    16.59

    +1.33%

  • GSK

    -0.6000

    49.81

    -1.2%

  • RELX

    -0.3100

    33.27

    -0.93%

  • BTI

    2.1600

    60.44

    +3.57%

  • BCC

    -1.4700

    69.2

    -2.12%

  • VOD

    0.1200

    16.32

    +0.74%

  • AZN

    -0.9900

    181.86

    -0.54%

  • BP

    0.8800

    44.22

    +1.99%

  • JRI

    -0.0197

    13.13

    -0.15%

  • BCE

    0.1400

    24.28

    +0.58%

Dengue outpaces virus-blocking mosquitoes in Brazil
Dengue outpaces virus-blocking mosquitoes in Brazil / Photo: Apu GOMES - AFP/File

Dengue outpaces virus-blocking mosquitoes in Brazil

Brazilian scientist Luciano Moreira tenderly handles a glass box of swarming mosquitoes infected with a bacterium that blocks the transmission of dengue.

Text size:

These mosquitoes have protected millions in Brazil, but the debilitating disease is spreading faster than the insects can be bred and shipped around the immense country.

Climate change "accelerates the spread of the virus. In the south of the country, which used to be much colder, there was no dengue before, but now there is," Moreira, 59, told AFP.

The world's largest breeding factory for the mosquitoes -- nicknamed "wolbitos" after the Wolbachia bacterium they were injected with -- is located in the southern city of Curitiba.

Employees drip with sweat in the breeding room, set to an ideal temperature for the Aedes aegypti mosquitoes, which are confined in large, brightly lit cages made of translucent fabric.

The "wolbitos" are fed a pungent combination of warm horse blood and sugar water.

The bio-factory, inaugurated in 2025, can produce up to 100 million eggs per week that are stored in capsules and shipped to their final destinations in urban areas where they will hatch.

Over the next months these "wolbitos" -- which also have a reproductive advantage over normal mosquitoes -- slowly displace those that transmit dengue, as well as Zika and chikungunya, other mosquito-borne viral diseases.

- 'A decisive moment' -

The method of infecting the mosquitoes was first developed in Australia in 2008 by a team which included the entomologist Moreira.

He was recognized in 2025 by Nature magazine as one of the world's top 10 scientists, and this year was named one of Time magazine's 100 most influential people.

To protect the secrets of the method, no photographs can be taken of equipment in the bio-factory.

The anti-dengue mosquitoes have been introduced to 15 countries, but nowhere have they protected as many people as in Brazil -- an estimated six million people since 2011, when Moreira first began testing the method.

However, more than 200 million are still at risk in the vast nation, where more than 6,000 people died during a 2024 outbreak of dengue, which causes joint and bone pain, earning it the nickname "breakbone fever."

The virus can provoke hemorrhagic fever in severe cases, and even death.

"We are at a decisive moment to expand in Brazil," said Moreira.

In two cities where the method was scientifically tested -- Niteroi, near Rio de Janeiro, and Campo Grande in central‑western Brazil -- dengue cases fell by 89 percent and 63 percent, respectively.

The left-wing government of Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva has recognized the "wolbitos" as a public health measure, but state bureaucracy has failed to match the pace of breeding.

"The factory had to scale back production because demand (from the health ministry) wasn't that high," said Moreira.

- No 'magic bullet' -

Biologist and epidemiologist Ludimila Raupp, a professor at the Pontifical Catholic University of Rio, said there is an "urgent need" to expand the project but it "is not easy."

She said in Rio de Janeiro, for example, implementation of the project has suffered "serious flaws" and "institutional lack of coordination."

Local health teams hampered its effectiveness with heavy use of larvicides that are harmful to the Wolbachia-infected mosquitoes, said Raupp.

Meanwhile, violence linked to organized crime has interfered with the release of the mosquitoes in the city's sprawling favelas, said Moreira.

Expanding this program presents "technical, operational, logistical, and financial" challenges, Brazil's Health Minister Alexandre Padilha told AFP.

Nevertheless, the Wolbachia method is set to be implemented in 54 new cities this year, bringing the total number of participating municipalities to 70.

Moreira said the method is not a "magic bullet" against dengue, but rather a strategy that is "complementary" to other measures, such as vaccines.

Brazil last year developed the world's first single-dose vaccine against dengue, and India is in the final stages of testing another.

K.Yoshida--JT