The United States has deployed an unlikely military unit to the Mexican border: millions of sterile flies and teams of sniffer dogs. The enemy is the New World screwworm, a flesh-eating maggot that has re-emerged in Central America and threatens to cross into the US. This is not a conventional war. It is a biological offensive, fought with radiation-sterilised insects and canine scent-detectors. And it reveals something about how we choose to fight nature: with nature itself.
The screwworm, Cochliomyia hominivorax, is a parasite that burrows into living tissue. It can kill a grown cow in a week. For humans, it means agony and disfigurement. The US Department of Agriculture has launched a campaign to drop 40 million sterile male flies per week over Panama, aiming to mate the pest out of existence. It is the same technique that eradicated screwworm from the US in the 1960s. But now, with climate change and lax border controls, the worm has returned to Central America. The stakes are higher. The border is more porous.
What does this tell us about the human condition? It tells us that our first instinct is not to kill, but to sterilise. We want to control nature without destroying it entirely. The sterile insect technique is a moral compromise: we use radiation to make flies infertile, then release them to compete with wild males. It is a slow, patient war. Meanwhile, dogs sniff out the wounds of infected animals, alerting veterinarians to new cases before they spread. The dogs are heroes, but they are also victims: some have been infected by the very maggots they are trained to find.
On the ground, the cost is visible. In the cattle markets of Honduras and Guatemala, farmers watch their livestock slowly consumed by rot. The economic toll is crippling. But there is also a cultural shift: a renewed respect for the invisible enemy. We cannot see screwworm eggs, but we can see the flies. We cannot track their movement, but we can trace the wounds. This is a disease of the poor, of the rural, of those who cannot afford the sterile flies. Yet the US is paying for the programme, because the worm knows no borders.
The deployment of dogs and flies is a throwback to a simpler era of pest control, before pesticides and antibiotics. It is a return to biological warfare, where the weapon is biology itself. But it is also a reminder that, for all our technology, we are still vulnerable to the creatures that live beneath our skin. The flies are sterile. The dogs are loyal. The worms are hungry. And the border is a line in the sand. The question is not whether we can stop the screwworm, but whether we have the patience to wait out the invasion. In a world of instant solutions, we are resorting to the slowest weapon of all: the sterile fly.









