From 14 July:
https://www.wired.com/story/verilys-automated-mosquito-factory-accelerates-the-fight-against-zika/
Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vVozrgEwi_Q
Blog: https://blog.verily.com/2017/07/debug-fresno-our-first-us-field-study.html
EARLY THIS MORNING, a white Mercedes Sprinter van began a delivery route along the streets of Fancher Creek, a residential neighborhood on the southeastern edge of Fresno, California. Its cargo? 100,000 live mosquitoes, all male, all incapable of producing offspring. As it crisscrossed Fancher Creeks 200 acres, it released its payload, piping out swarms of sterile Aedes aegypti into the air. Itll do the same thing tomorrow, and the next day, from now until the end of December.
Though counterintuitive, the goal of this daily mosquito dump is actually to get _fewer_mosquitoes. Specifically, fewer female Aedes aegypti, the ones that bite and lay eggs and transmit diseases, including the United States newest scourge: Zika.
https://www.wired.com/story/verilys-automated-mosquito-factory-accelerates-the-fight-against-zika/
Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vVozrgEwi_Q
Blog: https://blog.verily.com/2017/07/debug-fresno-our-first-us-field-study.html