Releasing incompatible males drives strong suppression across populations of wild and Wolbachia -carrying Aedes aegypti in Australia.
Nigel W BeebeDan PagendamBrendan J TrewinAndrew BoomerMatt BradfordAndrew FordCatherine LiddingtonArtiom BondarencoPaul J De BarroJoshua GilchristChristopher PatonKyran M StauntonBrian JohnsonAndrew J MaynardGregor J DevineLeon E HugoGordana RašićHelen CookPeter MassaroNigel SnoadJacob E CrawfordBradley J WhiteZhiyong XiScott A RitchiePublished in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2021)
Releasing sterile or incompatible male insects is a proven method of population management in agricultural systems with the potential to revolutionize mosquito control. Through a collaborative venture with the "Debug" Verily Life Sciences team, we assessed the incompatible insect technique (IIT) with the mosquito vector Aedes aegypti in northern Australia in a replicated treatment control field trial. Backcrossing a US strain of Ae. aegypti carrying Wolbachia w AlbB from Aedes albopictus with a local strain, we generated a w AlbB2-F4 strain incompatible with both the wild-type (no Wolbachia ) and w Mel- Wolbachia Ae. aegypti now extant in North Queensland. The w AlbB2-F4 strain was manually mass reared with males separated from females using Verily sex-sorting technologies to obtain no detectable female contamination in the field. With community consent, we delivered a total of three million IIT males into three isolated landscapes of over 200 houses each, releasing ∼50 males per house three times a week over 20 wk. Detecting initial overflooding ratios of between 5:1 and 10:1, strong population declines well beyond 80% were detected across all treatment landscapes when compared to controls. Monitoring through the following season to observe the ongoing effect saw one treatment landscape devoid of adult Ae. aegypti early in the season. A second landscape showed reduced adults, and the third recovered fully. These encouraging results in suppressing both wild-type and w Mel- Ae. aegypti confirms the utility of bidirectional incompatibility in the field setting, show the IIT to be robust, and indicate that the removal of this arbovirus vector from human-occupied landscapes may be achievable.