{"id":1190,"date":"2025-09-17T11:15:00","date_gmt":"2025-09-17T11:15:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/audiomateria.com\/?p=1190"},"modified":"2025-09-19T19:17:36","modified_gmt":"2025-09-19T19:17:36","slug":"inside-texass-grand-laboratory-of-dangerous-mosquitoes","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/audiomateria.com\/index.php\/2025\/09\/17\/inside-texass-grand-laboratory-of-dangerous-mosquitoes\/","title":{"rendered":"Inside Texas\u2019s grand laboratory of dangerous mosquitoes"},"content":{"rendered":"
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\n\tThe Arbovirus-Entomology Laboratory of the Texas State Department of Public Health Services is the epicenter of the Lone Star State\u2019s work to contain dangerous vector-borne diseases. | Umair Irfan\/Vox\t<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

Austin, Texas \u2014 <\/strong>Under a microscope, a mosquito can look stunning. Their blue-green iridescent scales, purple bands, and attractive spotted wings shimmer \u2014 dazzling enough to forget, for a moment, the insect lives to take a sip of your blood. <\/p>\n

Mosquitoes range in size, from smaller than your pinky fingernail to a commanding presence in your palm, but it takes a skilled eye and a steady hand to sort the most dangerous species. <\/p>\n

At the Arbovirus-Entomology Laboratory of the Texas Department of State Health Services, getting a close-up look is a key step in an active statewide effort to keep vector-borne diseases at bay \u2014 and alert the rest of the country when a major outbreak is looming.<\/p>\n

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The US has proved successful in driving away some of the most common mosquito-borne diseases, like malaria and yellow fever, during the 20th century. With less worries about insect-borne illnesses, there are few local and state health agencies in the US investing in active efforts to find and eliminate dangerous insects. Now, these old diseases are starting to creep back in, and new ones are lurking in stagnant puddles, garbage dumps, and culverts. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention<\/a> report that the rates of infections spread by animals has more than doubled over the past 20 years. Yet, the picture of these illnesses across the US is spotty at best, and they are likely far more prevalent than we may realize. <\/p>\n

However, Texas has been looking out for mosquitoes since 1954, and it\u2019s still a priority. \u201cTexas and Florida are the most vulnerable. \u2026 A lot of times, we’re the ones that see the first human cases of emerging diseases because of our climate, the vectors that we have, and the population levels,\u201d said Bethany Bolling, who manages the zoonotic virology group at the Texas state health office. \u201cWe have active programs throughout Texas that are weekly collecting mosquitoes. We’re monitoring the population levels. We monitor the species, where they are. And then we’re also looking for pathogens.\u201d The state of Texas spends $755,000 per year on its arbovirus surveillance program and employs seven molecular biologists on the team. <\/p>\n

But the US as a whole is not investing enough to contain the threat, and even Texas is scrambling to keep up. This year, West Nile virus, which is mainly spread by mosquitoes from the Culex genus, has been detected in 37 states \u2014 including Texas<\/a>, Massachusetts<\/a> and Utah<\/a> \u2014 causing at least one death. The CDC has tallied at least 500 cases<\/a> across the country this year so far.<\/p>\n

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The US is also contending with a dengue outbreak<\/a> in Puerto Rico and the US Virgin Islands that began last year. The disease is spread by Aedes mosquitoes, and since 2024, health officials have detected locally acquired cases<\/a> in Texas, California, and Florida. <\/p>\n

There have been at least 60 cases of Chikungunya<\/a> found in travelers returning to the US this year but no local spread so far. The disease, also transmitted by Aedes mosquitoes, arrived in the Americas<\/a> in 2013. <\/p>\n

The US typically sees about 2,000 malaria cases<\/a> per year in travelers coming into the country, but in 2023, health officials identified the first locally acquired malaria cases<\/a> in 20 years in Florida and Texas. <\/p>\n

Many of these infections don\u2019t have cures, so preventing them in the first place remains the most effective tactic. Yet, at a time when the US public health system needs more money, staff, and research to stay ahead of these diseases, the Trump administration is pulling it apart, with across-the-board job cuts<\/a> at the CDC and more targeted cuts aimed at global vector-borne disease monitoring<\/a> and research into the role of climate change<\/a>. Federal health officials are also undermining confidence in vaccines<\/a>, a critical tool that could help limit the damage from vector-borne disease. <\/p>\n

And as the researchers in Austin have learned, there\u2019s only so much they can do from the lab. <\/p>\n

Containing disease-spreading mosquitoes demands a holistic strategy that includes maintaining natural ecosystems that house natural mosquito predators, improving the housing stock to prevent indoor bites, and training a new generation of insect-borne pathogen specialists to carry on this work.<\/p>\n

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Texas is an underrated hotspot for vector-borne disease<\/h2>\n

The words \u201cvector-borne disease\u201d might evoke images of humid, tropical jungles and scenes of poverty. So, Texas might not be the first place that comes to mind. But the state has a long history with these illnesses, and many of the factors that worsen them intersect in the Lone Star State: year-round mosquito weather, rising average temperatures, more severe rainfall<\/a>, a growing population<\/a>, plenty of travelers and migrants, and expanding urban and suburban sprawl. <\/p>\n

That\u2019s why I was so interested in seeing how Texas is managing these threats and what lessons the rest of the country can learn. <\/p>\n

In Austin, the Texas Department of State Health Services operates a laboratory at the northwest corner of town to keep an eye on diseases spread by animals \u2014 not just mosquitoes, but ticks, midges, and kissing bugs<\/a>. (Lyme disease, spread by ticks, is actually the most common vector-borne disease<\/a> in the US, and the State of Texas tests and tracks ticks, as well<\/a>). They also monitor diseases, like rabies, that are spread by mammals. Local health departments across the state send suspected insects, bats, and dogs to Austin to see if they\u2019re carrying anything dangerous. \u201cWe get animal heads from all over the state for rabies testing,\u201d Bolling said. <\/p>\n