Killer fish, "cannibal" mosquitoes and drones are just three of the tactics that China is using to fight a new virus.
After thousands of cases of the debilitating chikungunya infection were found across the southern Guangdong province, public health officials have been creative in their efforts to contain it.
China employed hardline tactics during the Covid-19 pandemic and this time the authorities are using similar "patriotic public health" measures like mass testing, mandatory quarantines, widespread surveillance and citywide lockdowns. But they are also employing more novel methods.
The virus is transmitted by infected mosquitoes, so China is using giant "compulsive killers" known as elephant mosquitoes, whose larvae "devour" the Aedes mosquito, which passes chikungunya to people, said The Telegraph.
Mosquitoes aren’t the only creatures being used. Researchers at Sun Yat-sen University in Guangdong have "deployed 5,000 larvae-eating fish, which consume the larvae that hatch in the city's lakes".
Insecticide is also being widely used and Chinese state television has shown masked soldiers spraying it "around city streets, residential areas, construction sites" and other areas, said The Associated Press. Meanwhile, community workers in red vests are going "door to door" to inspect homes, said The New York Times.
Another 1,387 cases of the chikungunya virus were confirmed in China last week, said the Daily Mail. This took the tally to more than 10,000 overall, with infections also reported in Taiwan and Hong Kong, Europe and the US. But last week's figure was down on the previous seven-day tally of 2,892 cases, a sign that the outbreak could be slowing. |