The Florida Keys are flying in 40,000 mosquitos a week to take their own buzzing vacations, of sorts.

“There’s 1,000 male aedis agypti mosquitos in this tube,” says Catherine Pruszynski, field officer for the Florida Keys Mosquito Control District.

Pruszynski is packing 20 of these tubes in her bag, all full of male mosquitos.

Twice a week, she walks a 10-acre test site on Stock Island (right next door to Key West) — part industrial, part residential — putting her mouth up to one end of the tube and then blowing the thousand mosquitos out into the air, to mix and mingle with the native mosquito population.

[lz_ndn video=32357897]

The males don’t bite humans, instead pursuing their one purpose: finding a female with which to mate.

And this is where the “mad science” comes in. The male mosquitos in the tubes come from Kentucky’s MosquitoMate laboratory, which has partnered with the University of Kentucky. In the lab, the males are fed a natural bacteria called wolbachia, which has the effect of sterilizing the males.

“That’s the key advantage with this trial. The mosquitos have been fed the bacteria, they’re released and they do the rest. They go find a female, mate and the egg dies.”

So, logically, the local mosquito population should dramatically shrink over time.

Aedis agypti females are the ones that have blood-lust for humans and are the mosquitos that bite you and can spread the devastating, and potentially deadly viruses of Zika, dengue, and chikungunya.

Who do you think would win the Presidency?

By completing the poll, you agree to receive emails from LifeZette, occasional offers from our partners and that you've read and agree to our privacy policy and legal statement.

The 2016 Zika pandemic in the Western hemisphere infected more than 5,000 Americans, mostly travel-related. Florida led the way with locally transmitted Zika cases, 217, prompting the governor to designate Miami Beach and the Wynwood neighborhood in Miami as active Zika zones. It’s most dangerous for pregnant women who get bitten by a Zika-carrying mosquito, as the Centers for Disease Control has concluded for babies it can lead to microcephaly, a severe birth defect. The CDC still advises all pregnant women against traveling to Miami-Dade County.

Related: The Right Steps for Your Health: Do You Know What They Are?

In Southern California, this species of mosquito has infected more than 3,000 people with dengue fever in the past three years, an issue that has also popped up in the Florida Keys over the years.

That’s why the Keys’ mosquito experts are eager to see how effective the tubes buzzing with thousands of lab-raised and bacteria-fed males will be in this 12-week experiment.

“People come to the Keys to fish, to boat, to be outside,” said Florida Keys Mosquito Control Commissioner Jill Cranney-Gage. “If we didn’t have mosquito control, it would be miserable. People wouldn’t live here.”

Related: The Zika Battles in Some of the Most Vulnerable Places

As for eradicating the aedis agypti mosquito population, Dr. Dobson says that’s most likely impossible, as winds will always blow in mosquitos from elsewhere.

Florida’s governor, Rick Scott, and the state surgeon general, Dr. Celeste Philip, have already begun ramping up preparations for this summer, when the wet and humid season gets underway. And no one wants another summer of Zika.

Phil Keating joined Fox News Channel (FNC) in March 2004 and currently serves as FNC’s Miami-based correspondent. This article originally appeared in Fox News and is used by permission. 

Read more at Fox News:
Hardball Health Care Option May Cost Trump and Taxpayers
Utah Man Initially Denied Lung Transplant Over Pot Use Dies After Complications, Family Says
Why Your Brain Has Two Halves