
French start-up unveils plan to sterilise mosquitoes
Twenty years later, it has been detected in
78 of France's 96 mainland départements
.
Originally found in tropical forests in southeast Asia, the tiger mosquito thrives in urban environments and it is extremely difficult to get rid of once it has begun inhabiting a place.
Until, it seems, now.
Montpellier-based start-up Terratis is the first to use a well-known method to limit the proliferation of the insect.
Advertisement
The Sterile Insect Technique (SIT), is considered to be one of the most environmentally-friendly insect pest control methods developed. Irradiation with gamma rays and X-rays sterilises mass-reared insects so that, while they remain sexually competitive, they cannot produce offspring.
The method has been around for more than 60 years, according to the
International Atomic Energy Agency
, but this is the first time it has been tested on mosquitoes in France.
READ ALSO
How to prevent the spread of tiger mosquitoes in France
Large numbers of sterilised male tiger mosquitoes will be released in specific areas, where they will mate with females – which will lay empty eggs, thereby limiting their proliferation.
According to a study by France's Institut de Recherche pour le Développement, which has studied the technique for more than a decade, a real-world test in the Duparc area of Sainte-Marie, on Réunion, reduced the birth rate of tiger mosquitoes by an average of 50 percent, rising to 60 percent in the first year.
Projections suggest that second-year birth rates would be cut by as much as 90 percent.
READ ALSO
5 plants that (allegedly) repel mosquitoes
'While researchers agree SIT will not completely eliminate the mosquito population, it is a truly convincing means of control,' Louis Clément Gouagna, coordinator of the SIT program in Réunion, told BFM TV.
Terratis now hopes to have a factory up and running by 2028 so it can expand into agriculture, particularly to fight agricultural pests. The startup announced fundraising of €1.5 million last March and is already receiving requests from local authorities and homeowners' associations.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


AFP
4 days ago
- AFP
Photo shows 7-year-old child in Gaza, not dead teenager
Warning: graphic images of suffering "This 17-year-old Palestinian youth called Atif Ebu Hatir starved to death in the Gaza famine jointly manufactured by the United States and Israel," reads part of a simplified Chinese RedNote post shared August 7, 2025. It includes a picture showing the back of a severely emaciated person. Show Hide Content warning Show Image Screenshot of the false RedNote post taken August 8, 2025, with a red X added by AFP Hide Turkey's Anadolu Agency and TRT Global reported on the teenager's death while AFP distributed multiple pictures of his body in a Gaza City hospital (archived here and here). The World Health Organization has said 99 people are known to have died from malnutrition in Gaza so far this year, with the figure likely an underestimate (archived link). International outrage over the humanitarian situation has ratcheted up pressure on Israel, with UN agencies warning of famine in the Palestinian territory. Since returning to the White House in January, US President Donald Trump has offered Israel ironclad support, even while pushing for better humanitarian support (archived link). Similar posts on Douyin also shared the picture but a reverse search on Google traced it to an Anadolu report on August 5, 2025 (archived link). AFP also distributed the photo, which is credited to Gaza-based Anadolu photographer Ali Jadallah (archived link). "Seven-year-old May Abu Arar, whose life is in danger due to severe malnutrition, is receiving treatment at the Patient Friends Association Hospital in Gaza City, Gaza on August 03, 2025," its caption says. "Israel's closed border crossings and the tight blockade it imposes severely restrict the flow of food and medicine into Gaza." Show Hide Content warning Show Image Screenshot comparison of the false post (L) and photo from AFP's archives Hide Photographer Ali Jadallah posted another picture of the child from a slightly different angle on his Instagram page ( ). AFP has debunked more misinformation about the Gaza war here.


Euronews
6 days ago
- Euronews
As social prescribing gains traction, can nature, art, and sport heal?
When patients shuffle through Natalie Viaux's medical clinic in Brandenburg, a German city west of Berlin, she has no clue what their health problems are – and that's by design. Rather than checking patients' blood pressure or reviewing their medical charts, Viaux asks about their lives, challenges, and resources. Her clinic is experimenting with social prescribing, which aims to boost patients' health by 'prescribing' things far outside the medical realm, such as museum visits, sports clubs, and time spent in nature. Social connection and community support are a priority. 'It's valuable, all the modern medicine and what it does, yet with humans, some things can be rather simple,' Viaux, who is also a trained therapist, told Euronews Health. Here's how it works: Doctors flag patients grappling with social problems that may be hurting their wellbeing – loneliness, grief, relationship issues, finances, housing, employment, or anything else – and send them to 'link workers' like Viaux. Rather than treating a medical diagnosis, link workers partner with patients to create personalised plans that address the issues holding them back from good health. The idea is that by helping people get back on their feet – mentally, financially, or physically – they'll be empowered to take charge of their health, in turn reducing the burden on overstretched medical systems. 'We described it many years ago as focusing on what matters to people, rather than what the matter is with them,' said Dr Sam Everington, a UK-based physician and an early pioneer of the social prescribing movement, which has now spread to more than 30 countries worldwide. Research indicates social prescribing can help improve people's mental and physical health, reduce their visits to general practitioners, and boost their motivation and sense of meaning in life. Now, 22 health centres in eight European countries – Belgium, Croatia, Denmark, Germany, Poland, Portugal, Slovenia, and Spain – are trying social prescribing as part of a research project to identify how well this approach works to improve health for refugees and immigrants, older adults who live alone, and LGBTQ people. 'It's not about privileged persons who would like to have a yoga class,' Dr Wolfram Herrmann, who is leading the five-year project at Charité University Hospital in Berlin, told Euronews Health. 'It's really about people who have social problems, and usually also have mental problems and somatic problems,' he said. Social services v. social prescriptions Many programmes already address the so-called social determinants of health, even if they aren't labeled social prescribing. This includes everything from doctors' referrals to social or legal services, to 'food as medicine' initiatives or unconditional cash transfers for new mothers. But social prescribing introduces new ideas, like prescription pottery classes or community gardening, that go beyond traditional support services. Julia Hotz, a US journalist who chronicled social prescribing efforts across the globe for her book, 'The Connection Cure,' says the material and social aspects are two sides of the same coin. She views social prescribing as an umbrella term for any initiative to address the non-medical factors that affect our health. 'I think you need them both together,' Hotz told Euronews Health. 'A nature prescription or culture prescription is not going to do somebody much good if they're unemployed, struggling to make ends meet, or not eating healthy food'. 'If you think about Maslow's hierarchy of needs, you need those things in order to achieve these sorts of higher delights,' she added. 'But on the other hand, ethically, who are we to say' what matters most to an individual person's wellbeing. 'The most advanced social prescribing communities recognise all of that,' Hotz said. Link workers are key In some cases, link workers have helped physicians rethink what might improve patients' health. When Viaux joined the Brandenburg clinic, doctors initially gave her a list of services, including the Red Cross, a church, and migration support. But Viaux had some ideas of her own. 'She had a new brochure [that included] many more ideas we didn't even consider,' Dr Benjamin Senst told Euronews Health, such as local clubs, sports leagues, nature, and art. 'This was so eye-opening,' Senst said. It 'went beyond the well-established, basic structures of social support, to something broader [that] also addresses certain problems with disease and social diagnosis'. Having strong link workers, who are sometimes called bridge-builders or community health nurses, appears to be the key to making social prescribing programmes work. Everington ticked off a list of qualities they should have: emotionally intelligent, creative problem-solvers who go the extra mile to support and motivate people. 'A sign-poster might just say, 'the swimming pool is there,' Everington told Euronews Health. 'A social prescriber will say, 'well, actually, there's all female sessions.' Or, 'by the way, there's lots of people who are very overweight, so don't feel body-shy about going swimming.' Or, 'this time of day, the pools are actually empty''. 'It's actually [about] how you get somebody to go through the door, not just pointing them to the door,' he added. Viaux worked with one older woman, for example, who had mental health issues and obesity and used a wheelchair. While a doctor might have advised her to work out more, Viaux found her a water exercise programme after she said she wasn't comfortable attending a tai chi class due to her weight. She also helped the woman overcome bureaucratic hurdles to get a new wheelchair. Soon after, the woman began leaving her house more often and joined a local card-playing group. 'Once the ball was rolling, she took over,' said Viaux, who works with 40 to 50 patients at a time for a maximum of three months each. 'The beauty of social prescribing, for me, is that we connect [patients] to something existing,' she added. 'We use the resources that are already there, which makes it a very cost-effective approach to health'. Building the evidence base Yet while advocates say the benefits of social prescribing are clear, they cite a common challenge: proving, conclusively, that it works. It's also been hard to home in on exactly which programmes are the most effective. 'Oftentimes, people will look at that data and they'll say, 'Well, this was a small sample size, how do you demonstrate that it was the social prescription, specifically?'' Hotz said. 'I get that from a research perspective,' she added. 'But a social prescription will often have all these intangible benefits, like giving us more confidence, getting us out of the house more, [and] helping us to adopt other healthy behaviours'. Social prescribing also isn't a silver bullet solution to all of society's ills. As one research team put it, these programmes are 'not a quick fix to address problems of inequality and social exclusion in disadvantaged areas'. That's exactly what the new research project aims to explore, with nearly nearly €7 million in funding from the European Union. It will run a randomised trial that splits patients into two groups: one that gets social prescribing and one that receives standard care, so researchers can determine what impact the approach has on vulnerable groups. 'There are things which seem to make total sense and [be] very good, but in the end, they do not show positive effects,' Herrmann said. 'We would like to see if there are really positive effects,' with the goal of influencing health policy decisions across Europe. In the meantime, Everington is continuing to push for social prescribing – which the UK government committed to rolling out in primary care clinics nationwide in 2019 – to enter the global mainstream. He said his London clinic, which runs more than 100 social prescribing projects, hosts thousands of visitors per year, including national health ministers interested in replicating his model. 'We learned very early on that you cannot describe it and get people to understand it by a document,' Everington said. 'You actually have to come and taste it, smell it, feel it, and talk to people who are actually doing it'. His personal enthusiasm may be another selling point. 'We have a cure for a hell of a lot of disease and illness, and it's called social prescribing,' Everington said. 'This is the magic medicine that we've been looking for'.


AFP
08-08-2025
- AFP
Major climate-GDP study under review after facing challenge
But a re-analysis by Stanford University researchers in California, released August 6, 2025, challenges the conclusion of the climate paper (archived here and here). It found the projected hit to be about three times smaller and broadly in line with earlier estimates, after excluding an anomalous result tied to Uzbekistan (archived here). The saga may culminate in a rare retraction, with Nature telling AFP August 6 it will have "further information to share soon" -- a move seized upon by climate-change skeptics following the publication of the re-analysis and pre-print correction of the paper. Both the original authors -- who have acknowledged errors in their methodology and data processing -- and the Stanford team hoped the transparency of the review process would bolster, rather than undermine public confidence in science. Climate scientist Maximilian Kotz and co-authors at the renowned Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK) published the original research in April 2024, using datasets from 83 countries to assess how changes in temperature and precipitation affect economic growth (archived here). Influential paper It became the second most cited climate paper of the year, according to the UK-based Carbon Brief outlet, and informed policy at the World Bank, International Monetary Fund, US federal government and others (archived here and here). AFP was among numerous media outlets to report on it. Yet the eye-popping claim that global GDP would be lowered by 62 percent by the year 2100 under a high emissions scenario soon drew scrutiny. "That's why our eyebrows went up because most people think that 20 percent is a very big number," scientist and economist Solomon Hsiang, one of the researchers behind the re-analysis, also published in Nature, told AFP August 5, 2025 (archived here). When they tried to replicate the results, Hsiang and his Stanford colleagues spotted serious anomalies in the data surrounding Uzbekistan. Specifically, there was a glaring mismatch in the provincial growth figures cited in the Potsdam paper and the national numbers reported for the same periods by the World Bank. "When we dropped Uzbekistan, suddenly everything changed. And we were like, 'whoa, that's not supposed to happen,'" Hsiang said. "We felt like we had to document it in this form because it's been used so widely in policy making." The authors of the 2024 paper acknowledged methodological flaws, including currency exchange issues, and on August 6 uploaded a corrected version, which has not yet been peer-reviewed. "We're waiting for Nature to announce their further decision on what will happen next," Kotz told AFP. He stressed that while "there can be methodological issues and debate within the scientific community," the bigger picture was unchanged: climate change will have substantial economic impacts in the decades ahead. Undeniable climate impact Frances Moore, an associate professor in environmental economics at the University of California, Davis, who was not involved in either the original paper or the re-analysis, agreed (archived here). She told AFP on August 5 that the paper's correction did not alter overall policy implications. Projections of an economic slowdown by the year 2100 are "extremely bad" regardless of the Kotz-led study, she explained, and "greatly exceed the costs of reducing greenhouse gas emissions to stabilize the climate, many times over." "Future work to identify specific mechanisms by which variation in climate affects economic output over the medium and long-term is critical to both better understand these findings and prepare society to respond to coming climate disruption," she also noted. Image Riverbank dwellers carry banana produce over the dry Solimoes riverbed in the Pesqueiro community in Manacapuru, Amazonas state, northern Brazil, on September 30, 2024 (AFP / MICHAEL DANTAS, MICHAEL DANTAS) Hsiang said even smaller impacts on GDP should be considered "enough that it makes a lot of sense to invest in reducing climate change." "It's very cost effective," he told AFP. Heat stress on the economy manifests through various mechanisms, he said. For example, workforce productivity dips at high temperatures, risks of potential health complications rise, while machinery also deteriorates (archived here, here and here). "The very hottest countries in the world, near the tropics, we see this effect even more magnified," Hsiang said. "Every one degree of warming for them is a much larger impact on their economy." 'Final stages' Asked whether Nature would be retracting the Potsdam paper, Karl Ziemelis, the journal's physical sciences editor, did not answer directly but said an editor's note was added to the paper in November 2024 "as soon as we became aware of an issue" with the data and methodology (archived here). "We are in the final stages of this process and will have further information to share soon," he told AFP August 6. The episode comes at a delicate time for climate science, under heavy fire from the US government under President Donald Trump's second term, as misinformation about the impacts of human-driven greenhouse gases abounds. Yet even in this environment, Hsiang argued, the episode showed the robust nature of the scientific method. "One team of scientists checking other scientists' work and finding mistakes, the other team acknowledging it, correcting the record, this is the best version of science," he said. AFP has previously reported on other flawed reports and predatory studies on climate change.