"There is, therefore, an urgent need for new pest management options that offer greater effectiveness and sustainability, and a lighter environmental footprint," Matzen adds.
The pest is native to the Americas but has since spread rapidly across Africa, Australia, India and South-East Asia.
An initial three-year research phase, according to Matzen, enabled the early development of the friendly fall armyworm, and testing the competitiveness of the genetically modified male-only cohorts of the pest against wild-type males.
"We are continuing the work and the current research phase is focused on conducting product development trials and product stewardship activities, conducting field trials in Brazil, and piloting scale-up of the technology," she explains.
"For now, our focus with fall armyworm is on assessing the performance of the friendly fall armyworm in Brazil. When we have completed further product development, we will explore how we can make the product available to farmers in other regions."
Improving control of fall armyworm could improve harvests for local farmers and protect their livelihoods, and has the potential to improve food security through the availability of corn grain for countries around the world, the study says.
But Ivan Rwomushana, a senior scientist and an invasive species management specialist based at the regional center for Africa of CABI, the parent organization of SciDev.Net, says that it will be difficult to deploy the Oxitec technology in Sub-Saharan Africa without the support of governments.
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