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The USDA is preparing to release 180 million flies. Here’s why
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The USDA is preparing to release 180 million flies. Here’s why

Fast Company · Jun 30, 2026, 7:30 PM

In an effort to combat the threat of flesh-eating parasitic flies, The US Department of Agriculture (USDA) turned to a surprising solution: sterile flies. On June 27, the USDA inaugurated a 22,000-square-foot sterile fly production plant in Metapa, Mexico, with plans to release them in response to rising cases of the New World screwworm, a type of parasitic fly that is deadly to animals. According to the USDA, the facility has been under construction for the last 11 months, and has been a collaborative effort between the current administration and the Mexican government. The facility’s inauguration arrives at a critical time in the US. While the New World screwworm was believed to have been eradicated in the 1960s, at least 27 new animal cases have been reported in the US. According to the USDA, the first case was reported on June 3, 2026, quickly rising to 27 cases by June 29 across two states. The infected animals have been identified as domestic, with no active cases reported in the wild. Currently, Texas is the only state with active cases, with authorities quarantining parts of 20 counties across the state. The sterile flies are set to be used as part of a sterile insect technique (SIT) by sustainably disrupting the insect’s ability to reproduce. The technique works by using gamma radiation to sterilize New World screwworm pupae, then released in environments infested with flies. “Released through ground and aerial operations, these sterile flies disrupt the pest’s life cycle and support our multi‑agency effort to protect livestock,” the USDA’s New World screwworm Rapid Response official X account said in a post. By doing so, the screwworms will no longer be able to cause harm to the animals, as it’s the maggots which eat the flesh of warm-blooded animals. Additionally, the fly population eventually dies out as wild screwworms mate with sterile flies. The technique is the same one used in the 1960s, which led to the parasite’s eradication, and was also used to

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