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THU · 2026-06-04 · 22:53 GMTBRIEF NSR-2026-0605-81871
News/Quarantine in Texas: US races to contain/What to know about the New World screwworm fly and its reapp…
NSR-2026-0605-81871News Report·EN·Economic Impact

What to know about the New World screwworm fly and its reappearance in the US

The New World screwworm fly, whose larvae eat live flesh, has reappeared in the U.S. for the first time since 1966, with an infestation confirmed in a calf in south Texas.

By  JOHN HANNA and RUSS BYNUMAssociated Press (AP)Filed 2026-06-04 · 22:53 GMTLean · CenterRead · 6 min
What to know about the New World screwworm fly and its reappearance in the US
Associated Press (AP)FIG 01
Reading time
6min
Word count
1 413words
Sources cited
2cited
Entities identified
11entities
Quality score
100%
§ 01

Briefing Summary

AI-generated
NEWSAR · AI

The New World screwworm fly, whose larvae eat live flesh, has reappeared in the U.S. for the first time since 1966, with an infestation confirmed in a calf in south Texas. This parasite, which can affect any warm-blooded animal, poses a significant threat to the $113 billion U.S. cattle industry. Officials had been working to prevent its arrival after it was detected in Mexico in late 2024, following years of containment in Panama. The U.S. previously eradicated the fly in the mid-20th century by releasing sterile males. In response, Texas has imposed a quarantine zone, and the USDA is increasing its release of sterile flies, with new production facilities planned. The fly has sickened thousands of animals and hundreds of people in Central America and Mexico, with ten human deaths reported.

Confidence 0.90Sources 2Claims 5Entities 11
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Article analysis

Model · rule-based
Framing
Economic Impact
Public Health
Tone
Measured
AI-assessed
CalmNeutralAlarmist
Factuality
0.90 / 1.00
Factual
LowHigh
Sources cited
2
Limited
FewMany
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Key claims

5 extracted
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The larvae of New World screwworm flies eat live flesh and fluids, unlike most flies that consume dead material.

factual
Confidence
1.00
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The USDA stated the most recent case is the first in Texas since 1966.

factualUSDA
Confidence
1.00
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The fly was an annual scourge from the 1930s-1960s until the U.S. eradicated it by breeding sterile male flies.

factual
Confidence
1.00
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An infestation of New World screwworm fly larvae was confirmed in a 3-week-old calf in La Pryor, Texas.

factual
Confidence
1.00
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The New World screwworm fly is threatening the $113 billion U.S. cattle industry for the first time in over 50 years.

statistic
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1.00
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Full report

6 min read · 1 413 words
What to know about the New World screwworm fly and its reappearance in the US 1 of 2 | An adult New World screwworm fly sits in this undated photo. (Denise Bonilla/U.S. Department of Agriculture via AP) 2 of 2 | A test container of dyed fly pupae are displayed at a Domestic New World Screwworm Sterile Fly Production Facility to combat the northward spread of NWS and protect American livestock, in Edinburg, Texas, Feb. 9, 2026. (AP Photo/Eric Gay, File) 1 of 2 | An adult New World screwworm fly sits in this undated photo. (Denise Bonilla/U.S. Department of Agriculture via AP) 1 of 2 An adult New World screwworm fly sits in this undated photo. (Denise Bonilla/U.S. Department of Agriculture via AP) Add AP News on Google Add AP News as your preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Share 2 of 2 | A test container of dyed fly pupae are displayed at a Domestic New World Screwworm Sterile Fly Production Facility to combat the northward spread of NWS and protect American livestock, in Edinburg, Texas, Feb. 9, 2026. (AP Photo/Eric Gay, File) 2 of 2 A test container of dyed fly pupae are displayed at a Domestic New World Screwworm Sterile Fly Production Facility to combat the northward spread of NWS and protect American livestock, in Edinburg, Texas, Feb. 9, 2026. (AP Photo/Eric Gay, File) Add AP News on Google Add AP News as your preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Share Updated [hour]:[minute] [AMPM] [timezone], [monthFull] [day], [year] The New World screwworm fly is threatening the $113 billion U.S. cattle industry for the first time in more than a half century, with an infestation from its flesh-eating larvae confirmed in south Texas.The infestation was discovered in a single 3-week-old calf in Texas" class="entity-link entity-location" data-entity-id="140565" data-entity-type="location">La Pryor, Texas, about 100 miles (161 kilometers) southwest of San Antonio and 50 miles (80 kilometers) from the Mexico-border" class="entity-link entity-location" data-entity-id="44690" data-entity-type="location">U.S.-Mexico border. Federal and state officials had been working to keep the parasite from reaching Texas, home to $17 billion worth of the nation’s cattle, making it the industry’s No. 1 state.The deadly flies were detected in Mexico late in 2024, after years of being contained at the southern end of Panama. The fly was an annual warm-weather scourge of cattle ranchers from at least the 1930s through the 1960s, until the U.S. eradicated the pest by breeding sterile male flies and dropping swarms of them from planes to mate with wild females. The USDA said the most recent case was the first in Texas since 1966. Here is what to know about the fly, the threat it poses and the response: Being unusual makes the flies a threatThe New World screwworm fly in the Western Hemisphere and its Old World cousin in Africa and Asia are unusual among flies because their larvae, or maggots, eat live flesh and fluids instead of dead material. Females lay their eggs in open wounds and mucous membranes after mating only once in their monthslong lives.Any warm-blooded animal, including wildlife, pets and occasionally even humans, can be infested. Livestock are vulnerable because of how they’re handled, Lee Haines, an associate research professor of biological sciences at the University of Notre Dame, said in an email Thursday. Standard practices with cattle can break the skin, including shearing and de-horning, or even moving them in and out of corrals can cause scrapes and cuts. Birth would also make a mother and calf vulnerable, she said. 3 MIN READ 2 MIN READ Stephen Diebel, a Texas rancher and president of the Texas & Southwestern Cattle Raisers Association, added that even wounds “as small as a tick bite,” can put cattle at risk. Death can result if an infestation is not treated, though a dozen treatments have been approved for use in a variety of species. In decades past, ranchers had tens of millions of dollars in losses — potentially billions in today’s dollars.But agriculture officials were quick to note that the fly does not infest food, and U.S. Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins said it’s unlikely to damage beef production -- welcome news given that consumers are already facing record prices. Officials sounded alarms for nearly 2 years Federal and state officials and cattle industry leaders have been sounding public alarms about the fly’s movement through Mexico and toward the U.S. since a case was confirmed in southern Mexico in November 2024. Officials had considered the pest eradicated from Central and North America nearly two decades before an outbreak in Panana prompted a state of emergency there early in 2023, according to the joint U.S.-Panama program established in 1994 to stop the parasite. Cases jumped to Costa Rica and Nicaragua later that year. Edward Burgess, a University of Florida entomologist who studies the fly, said it reproduces quickly and is carried across wide areas by its hosts, namely wild animals such as deer. Outside of Panama, he said, programs that produced and released sterile flies have largely shut down.“It’s hard to stay ahead of it because of how fast that fly is able to move and regenerate,” Burgess said. Outside the US, thousands of animals and hundreds of humans sickenedAs of June 2, the parasite had sickened more than 171,700 animals and 2,000 people across Central America and Mexico, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. There have been 10 human deaths, the CDC says.Starting in May 2025, Rollins closed border entries to livestock and on Thursday she credited that move with delaying the fly’s arrival in Texas by a year. Rollins has argued that the Mexican government has not done enough to control animals moving within the country, a suggestion Mexican authorities have rejected. But Haines said climate change is a key element in the spread of a tropical species that thrives in warm weather. Warmer temperatures are expanding the fly’s habitat and cold snaps that killed them off each year in marginal habitats are becoming less frequent and less severe, she said. Officials quarantine a swath of TexasTexas State Veterinarian Bud Dinges imposed a 12-mile (20-kilometer) quarantine zone covering much of Zavala County, home to La Pryor, and a small part of neighboring Uvalde County. Animals cannot leave that zone without being inspected. Local ranchers are concerned that the fly will spread among wildlife, particularly deer, as a small, short-lived outbreak did in the Florida Keys in 2016. That was the last time a U.S. case was confirmed among animals, though the CDC confirmed a case last year in a Maryland man who had traveled to El Salvador and recovered. Zavalas County Sheriff Eusevio Salinas said Thursday that state officials were setting up several road checkpoints in the county to enforce the quarantine.“They said they were going to do that for three to four days, and hopefully after that it’s already under control,” Salinas said.In Texas, shots and fly dropsDiebel, whose family ranch is about 200 miles (322 kilometers) east of the quarantine zone, said ranchers are proactively giving injections that prevent screwworm infestation. They’re also taking extra care to treat wounds from ear tagging and other practices and keeping a close eye for signs of illness. The USDA has been dropping sterile flies in south Texas since February, when it opened a center for dispersing them in south Texas. It is now dropping them twice a week, for a total of 4 million flies, and it’s also putting 4 million more a week in the ground as pupae, flies in the stage between larvae and adult, said Rear Admiral Michael Schmoyer, a member of the USDA’s response team. Releasing sterile files is both time-tested and highly effective. While males are “promiscuous,” in the scientific sense, females are not, and if their one mating hookup is with a sterile male, no eggs from that female will hatch. Once sterile males are prevalent enough, the fly’s population declines and then dies out.But with sites outside Panama shut down for years, the USDA didn’t think sterile flies were being bred fast enough. It invested $21 million in a new fly-breeding facility in southern Mexico that is expected to start operations next month.The USDA also is spending $750 million to build a fly factory in southern Texas that can produce up to 300 million sterile flies a week. It is expected to begin operating next fall. Hanna covers politics and state government in Kansas for The Associated Press. He’s worked for the AP in Topeka since 1986.
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Entities

11 identified
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Keywords & salience

8 terms
new world screwworm fly
1.00
cattle industry
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infestation
0.80
sterile fly production
0.70
pest eradication
0.60
livestock protection
0.50
texas
0.40
usda
0.40
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