| Literature DB >> 22550627 |
F Darriet1, M Rossignol, F Chandre.
Abstract
In this laboratory study, we investigated how the biological cycle of Anopheles gambiae s.s. (VKPR strain) would be like when grew in an environment containing more or less plant matter (2.5 or 5 g/l) and fertilizer (8-12-8 or 17-23-17 mg/l). Half of the environments studied were not exposed to insecticide (control) whereas the other half was submitted to deltamethrin treatment at the concentration of 0.015 mg/l. The bioassays showed that 2.5 g/l of plant matter in water are not sufficient to feed the hundred larvae, each breeding site contains. Treating these breeding sites with deltamethrin reversed the situation as it decreased the competition for food resources and allowed the surviving larvae to share the small amount of food enabling them to pursue their development until adults. If the introduction of NPK in untreated sites has not improved the nutritive qualities of the water, in the treated sites it multiplied the number of emerging adults by 2.5. In the waters containing 5 g/l of plant matter, the larvae did not undergo feeding competition and the impact of insecticide followed of a more traditional selection scheme that expressed itself by a lower number of emerging adults. In these environments treated or nontreated where plant matter is abundant, adding NPK brings food supplement to the larvae therefore increases the survival rate of An. gambiae. To conclude, whether in habitats with little or much plant matter, NPK presence in water results in larger adults with generally, more soluble proteins.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22550627 PMCID: PMC3671440 DOI: 10.1051/parasite/2012192159
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasite ISSN: 1252-607X Impact factor: 3.000
Fig. 1.Quantities of plant matter (PM), NPK fertilizer and deltamethrin (Δ) included in the combination of the environments evaluated on Anopheles gambiae VKPR and KIS strains. An. gambiae females from untreated environments were submitted to susceptibility tests using deltamethrin while those emerging from treated environments were weighed and analyzed to determine their soluble protein content.
Fig. 2.Cumulated percentages of male and female adults of Anopheles gambiae VKPR strain whose larvae lived in environments composed of plant matter (PM1) alone or in combination with a NPK fertilizer, treated or untreated with deltamethrin (Δ).
Fig. 3.Cumulated percentages of male and female adults of Anopheles gambiae VKPR strain whose larvae lived in environments composed of plant matter (PM2) alone or in combination with a NPK fertilizer, treated or untreated with deltamethrin (Δ).
Activity of deltamethrin at a discriminating dosage (0.05 % = 18,4 mg/m2) against the pyrethroid-resistant strain of Anopheles gambiae (VKPR) and the insecticide-susceptible strain of An. gambiae (KIS).
| Number of females tested | Mortality 24 h (95% CI) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| VKPR | PM2 | 84 | 91.7 (85.8–97.6) |
| PM2 + NPK1 | 61 | 91.8 (85.0–98.6) | |
| PM2 + NPK2 | 72 | 86.1 (78.1–94.1) | |
| KIS | Insectarium | 105 | 100 |
Average weights and soluble protein contents in females of Anopheles gambiae VKPR strain.
| Environment | Average weights (mg) per female (95% CI) | Average of soluble proteins (mg) per female (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|
| PM1 + Δ | 0.77 (0.74–0.80) | 0.051 (0.047–0.055) |
| (PM1 + NPK1) + Δ | 1.12 (1.04–1.20) | 0.089 (0.081–0.096) |
| (PM1 + NPK2) + Δ | 0.97 (0.93–1.01) | 0.066 (0.060–0.071) |
| PM2 + Δ | 1.18 (1.11–1.25) | 0.073 (0.068–0.079) |
| (PM2 + NPK1) + Δ | 1.42 (1.34–1.49) | 0.083 (0.076–0.090) |
| (PM2 + NPK2) + Δ | 1.60 (1.50–1.70) | 0.079 (0.073–0.086) |