Scientists at Yale and other universities came to some surprising findings when they studied a group of genetically modified mosquitoes released in Brazil.

A biotech company released tens of millions of male mosquitoes over the course of two years. They were genetically modified to produce sterile offspring. The company wanted to prevent the spread of diseases like malaria and Zika by culling the mosquito population.

“The idea would be that when these males mated with females, the offspring would die. And therefore the overall population size of the mosquitos would decline.”

Yale professor Jeffrey Powell studied some mosquitos in Brazil to find out how the experiment went.

“What we found was unexpected. Unpredicted.”