06/08/22 – MOSQUITO CONTROL TO SAVE HAWAIIAN HONEYCREEPERS DOES NOT INVOLVE GMOS

Posted on Jun 8, 2022 in News Releases, slider
DAVID Y. IGE
GOVERNOR
SUZANNE D. CASE
CHAIRPERSON

For Immediate News Release: June 8, 2022

MOSQUITO CONTROL TO SAVE HAWAIIAN HONEYCREEPERS DOES NOT INVOLVE GMOS 

Dept. of Agriculture Advisory Committee to Consider Import Permit on Thursday 

To view video please click on photo or view at this link: https://vimeo.com/205268213

(HONOLULU) – Despite misinformation circulating on social media, the importation of “incompatible-male” mosquitoes to control populations of wild mosquitoes and to save four native bird species from extinction, does not involve the use of any genetically modified organisms (GMOs) or genetically engineered (GE) organisms.

On Thursday, the Plant and Animal Advisory Committee of the Dept. of Agriculture will consider listing three species of mosquitoes on its Restricted Species List A. The listing would allow the importation of three species of mosquitoes, all of which are already present in Hawai‘i. One of these, the Southern House Mosquito (Culex quinquefasciatus) isresponsible for sharp declines in the populations of many honeycreeper species on Kaua‘i, Maui, and Hawai‘i Island. The other two species – Yellow Fever Mosquito (Aedes aegypti) and Asian Tiger Mosquito (Aedes albopictus) – transmit human diseases.

A collection of agencies and organizations working under the Birds, Not Mosquitoes partnership, plan to introduce a mosquito birth control into bird habitats to try and stop avian malaria from killing the last remaining populations of these birds…some of which have fewer than 100 individuals in the wild and are expected to go extinct in less than two years.

The birth control method uses male mosquitoes (which do not bite) with a strain of a bacterium called Wolbachia that is incompatible with the strain of Wolbachia currently found in wild mosquitoes in Hawaiʻi. When these male mosquitoes mate with females in the forest, the mosquito eggs do not hatch and the mosquito population size drops. No genes are modified in the mosquito or in the Wolbachia bacteria.

This mosquito birth control approach is being safely used in 15 different countries, including on the continental U.S. The Birds, Not Mosquitoes partnership is guided by the State’s top scientists and researchers, who collectively have many decades of experience studying Hawaiʻi’s forest birds and mosquitoes. According to Birds, Not Mosquitoes, “We need these Wolbachia-incompatible male mosquitoes to be listed so that importation can commence.”

Landscape-scale control of disease-carrying mosquitoes is considered the most urgent conservation issue in Hawai‘i. A recent U.S. Department of Interior report estimated ‘akikiki on Kaua‘i are likely to go extinct in 2023, and the ʻākohekohe, kiwikiu, and ʻakekeʻe, soon after that. Information from the Birds, Not Mosquitoes group notes, “The extinction of the Hawaiian honeycreepers is being driven by exposure to avian diseases transmitted by non-native mosquitoes. Climate change is allowing non-native, disease-carrying mosquitoes to invade higher elevation forests, which was previously the last disease-free habitat where the honeycreepers were safe.”

The facts:

  • The Culex/Wolbachia process is not genetic modification or genetic engineering
  • The Culex species involved is already in Hawai‘i
  • The Wolbachia bacteria being implanted already occurs in Hawai‘i
  • The only change is the strain of Wolbachia being implanted currently occurs in another mosquito genus (Aedes).
  • The different Wolbachia strains in Culex will make the male and female mosquitos produce infertile eggs.

DLNR Chair Suzanne Case said, “It’s disappointing that some people are misinforming others by saying this is using GMOs or GEs. These are not genetically modified or engineered organisms. The proposed technique does not modify the genes of mosquitoes or Wolbachia. It is similar process to taking anti-biotics, then eating pro-biotics, to replace the existing community of bacteria with a different community within your stomach.”

All three of the mosquitoes are known to carry human diseases in Hawai‘i. Listing the species will enable the Department of Health to utilize this tool to reduce populations of mosquitoes of health concern in a safe, targeted manner, without the use of chemical insecticides.

The Birds, Not Mosquitoes partnership is asking people to send supportive testimony for listing the three species of mosquitoes no later than 4 p.m. today. Submit testimony to Mr. Jonathan Ho, Inspection and Compliance Section Chief, [email protected] or Fax to (808) 832-0582.

Please include “Hawai‘i Plant and Animal Advisory Committee on Proposal to Add Three Mosquito Species to List of Restricted Animals” in the subject line.

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(All images/video courtesy: DLNR)

HD video – University of Hawaii Mosquito Lab ( Feb. 22, 2017):
https://vimeo.com/205268213

Media Contact: 

Dan Dennison
Senior Communications Manager
Hawai’i Dept. of Land and Natural Resources
[email protected]