| Literature DB >> 26558365 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is a growing interest in larval control intervention to supplement existing malaria control strategies, particularly in urban areas. However, effective implementation requires a good understanding of habitat ecology of Anopheles mosquitoes. Clean water bodies have long been reported by several studies as a preferred breeding habitat for Anopheles gambiae. Other studies have also reported the breeding of An. gambiae in polluted water bodies. However, the term clean or polluted is mostly based on visual examination and is not well defined. This study was conducted with the aim of assessing water quality in Anopheles breeding habitats and the practicability of larval control in Cape Coast, Ghana.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26558365 PMCID: PMC4642735 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-015-0989-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Fig. 1Mean monthly temperature, relative humidity and total monthly rainfall in Cape Coast from January 2014 to April 2015. Temperature mean maximum daily temperature; relative humidity mean daily relative humidity at 12 noon
Fig. 2Map of Cape Coast Metropolis. Study sites were selected according to landscape (high/low altitude areas), land cover (swampy/non swampy areas) and land use settings (plan/unplanned residential areas and commercial areas). The study sites were: Third Ridge (high altitude area); UCC campus and Ola/Adisadel (residential areas); Duakor, Apewosika/Amamoma (shanty communities); Aboom/Kotokuraba (commercial areas); Nkafoa (peri-urban area); Abakam and Bakano (swampy areas)
Anopheles species composition over space and time in Cape Coast, Ghana
| Habitat | Community | Date | Season |
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|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pool of water | Bakano | January 2014 |
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| Pond | Abakam | February 2014 |
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| Pool of water | Duakro | February 2014 |
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| Stream | UCC campus | February 2014 |
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| Pool of water | Apewosika | March 2014 | Dry |
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| Pool of water | Amamoma | March 2014 |
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| Pond | Amamoma | March 2014 |
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| Pool of water | Apewosika | March 2014 |
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| Pool of water | Apewosika | May 2014 |
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| Tyre track | Amamoma | May 2014 |
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| Rain pool | Adisadel | June 2014 | Rainy |
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| Pothole | North Ola | June 2014 |
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| Tyre track | North Ola | June 2014 |
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| Pool of water | Abura | July 2014 |
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| Choked gutter | North Ola | January 2015 |
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| Stream | UCC campus | January 2015 |
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| Concrete tank | North Ola | January 2015 | Dry |
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| Gutter | Nkafoa | February 2015 |
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The median (IQR) of physicochemical parameters in mosquito breeding habitats in Cape Coast
| Water quality parameter | Type of breeding habitats* | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pool of water (APL habitat) (N = 20) | Choked gutters (APL habitat) (N = 5) | All APL habitats# (N = 72) |
| |
| Temp °C | 36.7 (35.6–37.9) | 33.9 (33.3–34.4) | 34.9a (33.4–37.1) | 31b (29.5–32.4) |
| pH | 7.6 (7.1–8.0) | 8.8 (8.2–8.9) | 8.1a (7.3–8.6) | 7.3b (6.9–7.7) |
| DO mg/l | 5.2 (3.1–6.8) | 8.8 (8.5–11.5) | 7.6a (4.6–8.8) | 0.2a (0–0.8) |
| Sal ppt | 0.87 (0.5–1.4) | 0.94 (0.9–1.5) | 0.8a (0.4–2.3) | 0.6a (0.5–0.7) |
| SC µs/cm | 1743 (977–2680) | 1518 (1210–2668) | 1452.5a (793–4209) | 1052a (667–1439) |
| TDS mg/l | 1134 (511–1742) | 988 (953–1492) | 952.9a (435–2371) | 600a (521–979) |
| Res ohm–cm | 466 (375–1055) | 537 (394–546) | 545.8a (226–1169) | 729.2a (537–1010) |
| NH4+ mg/l§ | 3.4 (3–3.7) | 16.5 (9.7–23.2) | 3.3a (2.4–4.2) | 35.7b (29.9–68.1) |
| NH3 mg/l§ | 0.5 (0.4–1.2) | 3.2 (2.6–3.8) | 0.6a (0.2–1.8) | 0.9a (0.7–1.8) |
* APL habitats (Anopheles positive habitats) comprises habitats that were either being colonized by only Anopheles or both Anopheles and Culex species, whereas Culex only habitats were habitats that were colonized by only Culex species
# Values in ‘All APL habitats’ and Culex only habitats for each water quality parameter sharing same letter are not significantly different; (IQR inter-quartile range, Temp temperature, DO dissolved oxygen, Sal salinity, SC specific conductivity, TDS total dissolved solids, Res resistivity, NH4 ionized ammonia, NH3 non-ionized ammonia)
§ Ammonia ions were not measured in habitats that had salinity of 1 ppt or more
The median (IQR) of concentration of bacterial fauna in mosquito breeding habitats in Cape Coast
| Type of breeding habitata | Median (IQR) of total viable count (×103 cfu/ml) | Bacterial speciesb |
|---|---|---|
|
| 49 (36.5–59) |
|
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| 42 (22–8) |
|
aBacteria fauna was assessed in these breeding habitats during the dry season (January–March 2014)
bFive species: Escherichia coli, Clostridium species, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Enterobacter aerogenes, Salmonella species were present in all individual habitats
Fig. 3Spatial variation in water quality in mosquito breeding habitat in Cape Coast and its effect on distribution of Anopheles larvae in space over the breeding habitat. Picture 1—a stream on University campus, Picture 2—a gutter in Amamoma, Picture 3—a choked gutter in North Ola; A spot where Anopheles larvae were found, B spot where only Culex larvae were found
Fig. 4Temporal changes in water quality in a mosquito breeding habitat in Cape Coast and its effect on the distribution of Anopheles larvae in time in the breeding habitat. a water quality measured in 5 January, 2015; b water quality measure in 19 January, 2015
Fig. 5Some major Anopheles positive breeding habitats in Cape Coast. During the rainy (a–d) and dry (e–h) seasons; a, b water puddles on a public road and waterway; c water pool in a concrete receptacle holding a stopcock of a public water pipeline; d: poorly drained gutter in a private residential property; e, f abandoned water-holding containers on private properties; g concrete water tank at a private construction site; h choked gutter with high input of solid and liquid waste from households
Fig. 6Distribution of mosquito breeding habitats in study communities in Cape Coast. Spatial distribution of mosquito breeding habitats in Cape Coast during the dry season in study communities (Anopheles-positive habitat = anopheline + Anopheles and culicine)
Fig. 7Distribution of mosquito breeding habitats according to elevation in Cape Coast. Spatial distribution of mosquito breeding habitats in Cape Coast during the dry season according to elevation (Anopheles-positive habitat = anopheline + Anopheles and culicine)