The U.S. fought the flesh-eating screwworm for decades. Now it must begin again. [View all]
June 7, 2026, 5:00 AM CDT
By Evan Bush
The United States spent more than half a century and hundreds of millions of dollars driving the flesh-eating New World screwworm as far from its borders as possible. Now, its back.The species can eat the tissue of any warm-blooded animal, but its a particular threat to livestock and is often fatal for cattle. Some environmentally minded bioethicists have openly debated whether it would be moral to deliberately drive the screwworm into extinction.
There are some species that its worth considering wiping out altogether and I do think the screwworm is one, said Gregory Kaebnick, a senior research scholar at the Hastings Center for Bioethics.
The Agriculture Department announced Wednesday that the New World screwworm had been found in a calf in Texas the first detection in U.S. cattle during a natural incursion since 1982. The agency reported a second case Friday. It was discovered about six miles from the first infection. The discovery represents a worrisome comeback for the species and a failure in containment for the U.S., reprising a decadeslong battle the country waged once already.
Experts said the U.S. will run much the same playbook as it did starting in the late 1950s, when the government embarked on an aggressive, multinational fight against the screwworm. Because female screwworms only mate once, the strategy is to mass-produce sterile males and release them into the wild, where they serve as reproductive dead ends.
https://www.nbcnews.com/science/environment/flesh-eating-screw-worm-fight-plan-rcna348521