What percentage of the irradiated mosquitos die before mating? or were successful in bearing offspring? Seems like a very 'blunt' method, but perhaps cheaper than the Oxitec (genetic engineering) approach?
As I understand it, this approach is used with insects that mate just once. You flood the population with sterile males. As the population is suppressed, the males become increasingly effective at preventing the females from reproducing (since a smaller and smaller fraction of the male population is fertile). The population collapses at a superexponential rate, and can be driven to zero.
California is being absolutely inundated by invasive mosquitos from China. They're a proper scourge. Absolutely awful, and they're everywhere in huge numbers.
Some company recently withdrew its application to do this kind of sterile single generation mosquito population control program. I can't find any valid reason why.
They're invasive. They don't belong. Why WOULDN'T the government want to eradicate them locally?
It is. For instance, it was used to eradicate screwworm in North and Central America, and continues to be used in Panama to prevent this pest from recolonizing the continent.
It will work better on species that disperse widely. Otherwise, you have to release the sterilized males all over the area where the insect exists, and that could be difficult.
according to this [1], it's difficult to package them up and deliver them without harming them. if it was an easier / more lucrative problem to solve then surely it would be solved.
Which baffles me. Because these invasive species literally got here by stowing away in containers on ships. In the least hospitable transportation. And we can't do it even with dedicated design controls and science?