Experts have reasserted the safety of the relatively new technology, noting that available studies show it poses little to no ...
There is little to no risk for the humans, pets and the environment from the spread of Wolbachia-infected mosquitoes or eggs.
This will see 580,000 households covered by Project Wolbachia, first introduced in 2016 in dengue hot spots such as Bukit ...
Another 100,000 Singapore households will benefit from a programme that can lower the risk of dengue by 75%. Project Wolbachia will be rolled out to five more residential areas in Hougang, Serangoon ...
The five locations are Serangoon Central, Serangoon North, Jurong East, Jurong West and an expansion of an existing study ...
Amid a rise in cases of dengue fever, the provincial government of Jakarta has decided to release Aedes aegypti mosquitoes ...
A new study led by researchers at Penn State has uncovered how a widespread bacteria called Wolbachia and the WO virus that it carries can cause sterility in male insects by hijacking their sperm.
The National Environment Agency (NEA) will be expanding Project Wolbachia to help fight the spread of dengue transmitted by ...
Jakarta Provincial Government launched dengue fever handling program with Wolbachia Aedes Aegypti mosquito at Taman Agro ...
The National Environment Agency (NEA) will be expanding Project Wolbachia – Singapore to five more sites starting October.
The image shows a flourescent microscope image of a Drosophila embryo infected with Wolbachia. The embryo is about 1.5 mm long. Disclaimer: AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the ...
The Jakarta Provincial Government and Health Ministry (Kemenkes) are about to launch a program to release Wolbachia-carrying Aedes aegypti mosquitoes in West Jakarta.