| Literature DB >> 26960327 |
Tanya L Russell1, Nigel W Beebe2,3, Hugo Bugoro4, Allan Apairamo5, Frank H Collins6, Robert D Cooper7, Neil F Lobo8, Thomas R Burkot9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In the 1970s, Anopheles farauti in the Solomon Island responded to indoor residual spraying with DDT by increasingly feeding more outdoors and earlier in the evening. Although long-lasting insecticidal nets (LLINs) are now the primary malaria vector control intervention in the Solomon Islands, only a small proportion of An. farauti still seek blood meals indoors and late at night where they are vulnerable to being killed by contract with the insecticides in LLINs. The effectiveness of LLINs and indoor residual spraying (IRS) in controlling malaria transmission where the vectors are exophagic and early biting will depend on whether the predominant outdoor or early biting phenotypes are associated with a subpopulation of the vectors present.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26960327 PMCID: PMC4784415 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-016-1194-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Fig. 1Anopheles farauti mosquito that has been marked with green fluorescent dust for the mark-release-recapture experiment
Fig. 2The preference of An. farauti to host-seek early (18.00–21.00 h) or late (00.00–06.00 h) as examined by a mark-release-recapture experiment. The expected proportion was calculated directly for the overall human landing catch dataset (a). The second capture indicates where mosquitoes were recaptured after they were marked and released (b)
A comparison of the proportion of mosquitoes caught biting either early or late in the night for each experimental mosquito label and analysed with a binomial generalized linear model (GLM)
| Label of captured mosquitoes | Proportion caught early (n/total) | Odds ratio (se) |
|
|---|---|---|---|
| Unmarked | 0.82 (911/1112) | ||
| Released from early | 0.78 (7/9) | 0.773 (0.805) | 0.748 |
| Released from late | 0.89 (8/9) | 1.765 (1.063) | 0.593 |
Fig. 3The preference of An. farauti to host-seek indoors or outdoors as examined by a mark-release-recapture experiment. The expected proportion was calculated directly for the overall human landing catch dataset (a). The second capture indicates where mosquitoes were recaptured after they were marked and released (b)
A comparison of the proportion of mosquitoes caught biting either indoors or outdoors for each experimental mosquito label and analysed with a binomial generalized linear model (GLM)
| Label of captured mosquitoes | Proportion caught indoors (n/total) | Odds ratio (se) |
|
|---|---|---|---|
| Unmarked | 0.34 (317/919) | ||
| Released from indoors | 0.33 (7/21) | 0.949 (0.468) | 0.912 |
| Released from outdoors | 0.44 (30/68) | 1.499 (0.254) | 0.111 |