Flesh-eating New World screwworm can infect humans and pets. Here are the symptoms to look for
After decades of eradication, the New World screwworm is back in the United States.
After decades of eradication, the New World screwworm is back in the United States. This report comes from The Hill. The story centres on Flesh-eatin
Read Full Story at The Hill โWhy This Matters
The resurgence of the New World screwworm is more than a localized pest control problemโit signals the fragility of invasive species containment in an era of climate change and global mobility. While the parasite was once thought eradicated in the U.S., its return underscores how rapidly ecological balances can shift, posing direct threats to livestock economies and public health. The stakes go beyond agriculture; this is a test case for how preparedโor unpreparedโmodern systems are for re-emerging zoonotic threats.
Background Context
First identified in the Americas in the 19th century, the New World screwworm (*Cochliomyia hominivorax*) devastated cattle industries before a landmark U.S. eradication program, launched in the 1950s, seemed to eliminate it by 2006. The strategy relied on sterile insect technique (SIT), a biological control method that remains one of public healthโs greatest successesโuntil now. Recent outbreaks, including cases in Florida and Alabama, suggest either a breakdown in surveillance or the parasiteโs stealthy adaptation to new environments.
What Happens Next
Expect aggressive containment efforts, likely involving aerial releases of sterile flies and heightened livestock inspections, but the window for eradication is narrowing as temperatures rise and migration patterns shift. The bigger unknown is whether this reflects a one-off failure or the first signs of a broader ecological domino effect, where once-vanquished pests exploit warming climates or disrupted habitats. Public health agencies will need to balance immediate responses with long-term strategies to prevent similar reversals in other eradicated diseases.
Bigger Picture
This case fits a troubling global pattern: the resurgence of vector-borne and parasitic diseases once thought controlled, from malaria in previously cleared regions to tick-borne illnesses expanding northward. Itโs a reminder that human interventionsโno matter how successfulโoperate within dynamic systems where climate, trade, and wildlife movements can rewrite the rules. The screwwormโs return may force a reckoning with how much weโve underestimated the adaptability of natureโand our own preparedness.

