| Literature DB >> 26969430 |
Tanya L Russell1, Nigel W Beebe2,3, Hugo Bugoro4, Allan Apairamo4, Weng K Chow5, Robert D Cooper5, Frank H Collins6, Neil F Lobo6, Thomas R Burkot7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The effectiveness of vector control on malaria transmission by long-lasting insecticidal nets (LLINs) and indoor residual spraying (IRS) depends on the vectors entering houses to blood feed and rest when people are inside houses. In the Solomon Islands, significant reductions in malaria have been achieved in the past 20 years with insecticide-treated bed nets, IRS, improved diagnosis and treatment with artemisinin combination therapies; despite the preference of the primary vector, Anopheles farauti, to feed outdoors and early in the evening and thereby avoid potential exposure to insecticides. Rational development of tools to complement LLINs and IRS by attacking vectors outdoor requires detailed knowledge of the biology and behaviours of the target species.Entities:
Keywords: Anopheles farauti; Bionomics; Biting profile; Feeding cycle; Mark-release-recapture; Seasonality; Solomon Islands
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26969430 PMCID: PMC4788858 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-016-1195-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Fig. 1Map of the Solomon Islands (a) showing Haleta village on Nggela Sule Island in Central Province (b −9°5′56″S, 160°6′56″E) as well as the layout of the village (c)
Fig. 2The hourly indoor and outdoor profile of Anopheles farauti biting (a) and the number of humans outside of houses throughout the night (b) in Haleta village, Central Province, Solomon Islands. The stacked line graph (c) is the estimated contact between humans and mosquitoes, which considers the movement pattern of people by weighting the indoor and outdoor biting rates throughout the night by the proportion of humans that are typically indoors or outdoors at each time period [41, 42]. Note b/p/h = bites/person/hour
Fig. 3Monthly biting rate for Anopheles farauti in Haleta village, Central Province, Solomon Islands, estimated using human landing catch from 18.00 to 00.00 h. Note ND no data
The estimated malaria transmission intensity attributable to Anopheles farauti in Haleta village, Central Province, The Solomon Islands
| Time | Sporozoite rate (n positive) | All night biting rate (b/p/18.00–06.00 h)a | Daily EIR (ib/p/d)b | Annual EIR (ib/p/y)c | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total tested |
|
| Overall | ||||
| Nov 2011 | 207 | 0.0000 (0) | 0.0000 (0) | 0.0000 (0) | 15.16 | 0.000 | |
| 2012 | 2062 | 0.0000 (0) | 0.0005 (1) | 0.0005 (1) | 13.98 | 0.007 | 2.5 |
| 2013 | 1907 | 0.0026 (5) | 0.0052 (10) | 0.0073 (14)d | 13.33 | 0.098 | 35.7 |
| Jan–Feb 2014 | 531 | 0.0038 (2) | 0.0113 (6) | 0.0132 (7)d | 27.90 | 0.368 | |
| Overall | 4707 | 0.0015 (6) | 0.0036 (17) | 0.0047 (22)d | 14.81 | 0.069 | 25.3 |
aAll night biting rate was calculated with a calibration factor of 93 % biting before midnight. This figure was calculated from the biting profile presented in the first section of this paper
bDaily EIR [infective bites per person per day (ib/p/d)] = sporozoite rate × biting rate (18.00–06.00 h)
cAnnual EIR [infective bites per person per year (ib/p/y)] = sporozoite rate × biting rate (18.00–06.00 h) × 365
dThese sample periods include mixed P. falciparum and P. vivax infections (one from 2013, one from Jan–Feb 2014 and thus two mixed infections overall)
Fig. 4The feeding cycle length of Anopheles farauti examined by a mark-release-recapture experiment, expressed as a frequency histogram of the interval of time between release and recapture for each individual mosquito. Note: the different colours represent the information from each of the three events when mosquitoes were released