Skip to main content

Should We Kill Off Disease-Causing Pests? Not So Fast

Eradicating harmful species may have unintended consequences

Tsetse fly.

Credit:

Getty Images

Sleeping sickness (or trypanosomiasis), endemic to sub-Saharan Africa, is a horribly debilitating disease. When the parasitic protozoan that causes it gets into the nervous system and brain, weeks or months after being transmitted by the blood-eating tsetse fly, it sends the victim into a steep decline marked by depression, aggressiveness, psychotic behavior, disrupted sleep patterns and—if untreated—death.

Happily, a concerted multinational effort has reduced the reported incidence of the disease by 92 percent in this century, from 26,550 cases in 2000 to just 2,164 cases in 2016. That puts the fight against sleeping sickness on track to meet the World Health Organization (WHO) goal of eliminating it by 2020, according to a study published in December in PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases. Thanks to increasingly sophisticated methods of reducing the population of tsetse flies, the area where people are at risk of infection has also decreased by 61 percent in the same period.

Why not just finish the job and end sleeping sickness by eradicating the tsetse (pronounced TET-see) fly from the entire African continent? This is the stated goal of the African Union’s Pan African Tsetse and Trypanosomiasis Eradication Campaign. But another new study, published in December in BioScience, calls for reexamining that approach. “The important ethical question remains: Is tsetse fly elimination morally appropriate?” entomologist Jérémy Bouyer and his co-authors wrote. The study lays out a protocol for properly considering a question that is less simple and more momentous than it seems at first glance, says Bouyer, who spent seven years in tsetse control in Senegal and now works on pest-control programs for the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).


On supporting science journalism

If you're enjoying this article, consider supporting our award-winning journalism by subscribing. By purchasing a subscription you are helping to ensure the future of impactful stories about the discoveries and ideas shaping our world today.


For one thing, tsetse fly eradication is not about getting rid of a single species—but rather an entire taxonomic family called Glossinidae, with 31 species and subspecies across Africa. Conservationists commonly eradicate introduced or invasive species from habitats where they do not belong; but tsetse flies are native to Africa, the study notes, and have “a complex biology and unique evolutionary history.”

The female rears one larva at a time in her abdomen and “lactates,” a little like a mammal, to feed it in utero. When she eventually evicts the larva, she has provisioned it with enough food to burrow underground, mature as a pupa and emerge as an adult fly a month or so later. These traits help demonstrate what conservationists call “intrinsic value”—meaning both the worth a species gives to its own life experience and also the worth of its evolutionary and ecological character as a unique species.

But making a case for intrinsic value proved elusive as the researchers were developing their protocol for thinking about tsetse fly eradication, says study co-author Neil Carter of Boise State University. It is easier to quantify “instrumental value”—the costs and benefits of a species for humans, other species and ecosystems. On the one hand, for example, tsetse flies can be devastating for livestock as well as people; eliminating these insects on the island of Zanzibar made it possible for many more small farmers there to keep cattle, raising their income by 30 percent. On the other hand, getting rid of tsetse flies can lead to increased cattle encroachment into natural areas where they conflict with wildlife.

After considering a long list of such pros and cons, the study concludes, “arguments predicated entirely on instrumental value do not provide compelling support for global tsetse fly eradication.” But the study says it is “morally justified” to identify areas where tsetse flies pose a threat, and then control or eliminate local populations.

For the authors, the main point is it is important to think through the ethical and practical implications rather than simply acting on the initial impulse to eradicate a pest. For instance, Carter says, it might seem like common sense to eliminate leopards from a national park in the middle of Mumbai, India—which has grown up around the park into a city of 20 million people. But it turns out the leopards feed largely on the city’s thriving population of feral dogs. So losing the predators could dramatically increase incidence of dog bites and rabies.

It is almost impossible to predict the future instrumental value of a species. The fer-de-lance, for instance, was once considered just another deadly South American viper. But beginning in the 1980s its venom became the source for the first ACE inhibitor drugs, a life-changing treatment for cardiovascular disease. Carter says he is optimistic about humans’ increasing willingness “to be transparent about all the benefits and costs” of a pest species “and come to a conclusion as a community, rather than having to say, ‘Oops, it’s too late.’”

Glyn Vale, former director of Tsetse and Trypanosomiasis Control for Zimbabwe’s Department of Veterinary Services, says he welcomes the study’s stand against eradication. But he is also sharply critical of Bouyer’s employer, the IAEA, for heavily promoting the “sterile insect technique”—a method for disrupting insect reproduction by releasing large numbers of flies that have been sterilized by irradiation. That technique is far too expensive, he says, adding it is ineffective in tsetse flies and does more to boost the IAEA’s agenda of demonstrating peaceful uses of atomic energy than it does to improve the health of people in Africa. Bouyer says he began work on the study well before joining the IAEA, and the study is not about the sterile insect technique but about the ethics of eradication.

“People have been trying to get rid of tsetse flies for 100 years, and they haven’t succeeded so far,” says Michael Barrett, a University of Glasgow trypanosomiasis expert who was not involved in the study. The biggest recent successes, he says, have come from “insecticide-impregnated tiny targets”—inexpensive handkerchief-size bits of blue fabric set out on sticks in areas infested by the tsetse fly. The flies are attracted to the color and pick up the insecticide on landing, resulting in “incredible decreases in the number of tsetse flies and the incidence of disease,” he notes.

Barrett, who chaired the WHO’s 2018 working group to eliminate the disease, is also optimistic about an epidemiological technique that calculates how frequently the disease gets transmitted by tsetse fly bite from one person to another. Mathematical modeling of the infection makes it possible to estimate the required reduction in tsetse fly numbers to bring transmission down to zero. It eliminates the disease, but not necessarily the flies themselves.

One other cause for optimism stems from improving treatments for sleeping sickness, which comes in two varieties. Current treatments are inconvenient at best. One type of the disease requires intravenous injection two to four times a day for at least a week—a challenge in the remote, isolated and impoverished areas where sleeping sickness is most common. Another type requires an injection so painful it has been likened to having chili peppers injected straight into the heart; it also kills one patient in 20. But late last year the European Medicines Agency approved a new drug called fexinidazole in pill form, for use in the first type of sleeping sickness. Approval for its use in treating the other type is expected soon, and approval for use by individual countries in Africa appears likely to follow.

Such developments could make the proposed eradication of tsetse flies seem not just impractical but also, in the not too distant future, irrelevant.