Cancún, QR — Amid circulating rumors, the National Chamber of Restaurant and Seasoned Food Industry in Quintana Roo (Canirac) firmly dismissed claims that meat contaminated with botfly larvae—a parasite known as the “gusano barrenador”—is being served in Cancún restaurants.
Julio Villarreal Zapata, Canirac’s local president, highlighted two key points grounded in expert findings: botflies infest living tissue, not processed meat, and 95% of restaurant-grade beef in the region is sourced from safe producers in Mexico’s central and northern states.
Infection Requires Live Hosts, Not Processed Meat
According to specialists and confirmed by the state’s Department of Rural, Agricultural and Fisheries Development (Sedarpe), botfly larvae feed on living tissue and cannot survive in dead animals or meat products—making transmission through consumption impossible. Tapachula-based health sources and animal health experts have reiterated that there is no threat to human health from eating infected meat.
Julio Villarreal emphasized that nearly all beef used in Cancún eateries is imported or sourced from central or northern Mexico, far removed from localized outbreaks occurring in southern municipalities like Bacalar and Othón P. Blanco—making contamination in local restaurants extremely unlikely.
Monitoring, Veterinary Response & Public Safety
Sedarpe reports 15–32 confirmed cases of botfly infestation in livestock—mainly cattle and one dog—from Bacalar, Othón P. Blanco, and Tulum. Authorities have responded with containment efforts including veterinary inspections, lesion kits, and planning for a sterile fly release program to break the pest lifecycle.
Jorge Aguilar Osorio of Sedarpe emphasized active surveillance efforts throughout the Yucatán Peninsula and recommended prompt reporting of suspected cases, stressing that thorough meat inspection and food safety regulations protect consumers from any risk.
Both Canirac and regional health officials confirm that the botfly issue remains localized to live animals, with no evidence to suggest a threat to public health via consumption of meat in Cancún’s restaurants.
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