Advertisement

How China is using military radar technology to wage war on mosquitoes

Scientists are developing a device to detect the insect flapping its wings up to 2km away – and it could be used to save millions of lives, researcher says

Reading Time:4 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
Deadliest creature on Earth: mosquitoes cause more than 1 million deaths each year. Photo: Reuters
Stephen Chenin Beijing

China is developing a super-sensitive radar that can detect the wing-flapping of a mosquito up to 2km (1.2 miles) away, according to a senior scientist involved in the government research project.

Advertisement

A prototype of the device is being tested at a defence laboratory at the Beijing Institute of Technology (BIT), said the researcher, who declined to be named as the project involves sensitive technology used in China’s missile defence system.

“Identifying and tracking individual, mosquito-sized targets is no longer science fiction,” he said. “We are actually quite close to bringing this technology out of the laboratory and using it to save lives.”

Mosquitoes have claimed more human lives than all wars combined – their infectious bites still cause more than 1 million deaths each year, according to the World Health Organisation. 

The insect plays host to a wide range of disease-bearing microorganisms, from malaria to newer viruses such as Zika.
Advertisement
Advertisement