| Literature DB >> 26895980 |
Molly C Reid1,2, F Ellis McKenzie3.
Abstract
The fight against malaria is increasingly threatened by failures in vector control due to growing insecticide resistance. This review examines the recent primary research that addresses the putative relationship between agricultural insecticide use and trends in insecticide resistance. To do so, descriptive evidence offered by the new research was categorized, and additional factors that impact the relationship between agricultural insecticide use and observed insecticide resistance in malaria vectors were identified. In 23 of the 25 relevant recent publications from across Africa, higher resistance in mosquito populations was associated with agricultural insecticide use. This association appears to be affected by crop type, farm pest management strategy and urban development.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26895980 PMCID: PMC4759738 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-016-1162-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Criteria for associating insecticide resistance in malaria vectors with agricultural insecticide use
| Criterion | Example |
|---|---|
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| Mosquito populations from Khartoum express 60–80 % mortality when exposed to the carbamate beniocarb, but carbamates are not approved for public health use in Khartoum, and are the most commonly used class of pesticides for agriculture [ |
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| Mosquitoes collected from cotton farms in Cameroon during the cotton spraying season showed a 1.6-fold increase in median knockdown time relative to mosquitoes collected from the same sites just prior to the spraying [ |
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| In Mali, the frequency of the |
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| Mosquito populations collected from two vegetable farms in Benin showed mortality to insecticides that varied inversely with concentrations of insecticides in the soil and water from these sites [ |
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| At a site in Cameroon where pyrethroids make up a higher proportion of pesticides used in agriculture, mosquitoes showed higher pyrethroid resistance compared to mosquitoes from another agricultural site with less reliance on pyrethroids [ |
Fig. 1Map of study locations considered in this review. Parentheses enclose number of publications per county
Reviewed publications by first author and year of publication
| Paper | Country | Species | Resistant to | Timeline | Correlation in space | Correlation in time | Correlation in quantity | Chemical correlation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Diabaté et al. [ | Burkina Faso | 1 | DDT, PYs | + | + | |||
| Akogbéto et al. [ | Benin | 1 | NA | + | + | |||
| Tia et al. [ | Cameroon | 2 | DDT, PYs | + | + |
| ||
| Corbel et al. [ | Benin | 1, 5 | DDT, PYs | + |
| |||
| Tripet et al. [ | Mali | 2 | DDT, PYs | + | + |
| ||
| Chouaïbo et al. [ | Cameroon | 1 | DDT, PYs | + | + |
| ||
| Djouaka et al. [ | Benin | 2 | PYs | + |
| |||
| Djogbénou et al. [ | Burkina Faso | 2 | OPs, CMs | + | ||||
| Kerah-Hinzoumbe et al. [ | Chad | 1 | PYs | + | ||||
| Klinkenberg, et al. [ | Ghana | 1 | PYs | 0 | ||||
| Müller et al. [ | Cameroon | 3 | PYs | + |
| |||
| Mzilahowa et al. [ | Malawi | 1, 4 | DDT | + | + |
| ||
| Dabiré et al. [ | Burkina Faso | 1 | DDT, PYs | + | + | |||
| Dabiré et al. [ | Burkina Faso | 2 | OPs, CMs | + | + | |||
| Nwane et al. [ | Cameroon | 2 | DDT, PYs | + | 0 | + |
| |
| Antonio-Nkondjio et al. [ | Cameroon | 2 | CMs, DDT, PYs | + |
| |||
| Djègbè et al. [ | Benin | 1 | DDT, PYs | + | ||||
| Yadouléton et al. [ | Benin | 1 | DDT, PYs | + | + |
| ||
| Badolo et al. [ | Burkina Faso | 1 | DDT, PYs | + | + |
| ||
| Dabiré et al. [ | Burkina Faso | 1 | OPs, CMs | + | + | + | ||
| Abuelmaali et al. [ | Sudan | 3 | OPs, CMs, PYs | + | 0 | + |
| |
| Koffi et al. [ | Cote d’Ivoire | 1 | OCs, CMs, PYs | + | ||||
| Nwane et al. [ | Cameroon | 1 | DDT, PYs | 0 | ||||
| Nkya et al. [ | Tanzania | 1 | PYs | + | + | |||
| Nkya et al. [ | Tanzania | 2 | OCs, OPs, PYs | + |
|
+, tested and/or observed with positive results; 0, tested and/or observed with null or inconclusive results; Species 1, Anopheles gambiae s.l.; 2, Anopheles gambiae s.s.; 3, Anopheles arabiensis; 4, Anopheles quadriannulatus; 5, Culex quinquefasciatus. Plus marks indicate positive associations found by evidence type. DDT dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane, PYs pyrethroids, OPs organophosphates, OCs organochlorines, and CMs carbamates