FFAR Research to Advance New World Screwworm Control
As cases of New World screwworm mount in the U.S., the Foundation for Food & Agriculture Research, Agragene and North Carolina State University are investing $300,000 in a Rapid Outcomes from Agricultural Research grant to suppress the New World screwworm population by testing new technology that produces sterile, reproductively vigorous male flies.
New World screwworm is a fly whose larvae feed on the living tissue of warm-blooded animals, causing severe wounds, weight loss and often death if untreated. A major screwworm outbreak in Texas alone is estimated to cost $1.8 billion in livestock losses, veterinary expenses and labor costs, underscoring the urgent need for new, sustainable control solutions...
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