| Literature DB >> 30071091 |
Brian J Johnson1,2, Barukh B Rohde1,2,3, Nicholas Zeak1,2,3, Kyran M Staunton1,2, Tim Prachar4, Scott A Ritchie1,2.
Abstract
The Aedes aegypti mosquito is a primary vector of several serious arboviruses throughout the world and is therefore of great concern to many public health organizations. With vector control methodology pivoting towards rearing and releasing large numbers of genetically modified, sterilized, or Wolbachia-infected male mosquitoes to control vector populations, economical surveillance methods for release tracking becomes increasingly necessary. Previous work has identified that male Ae. aegypti are attracted to female wingbeat frequencies and can be captured through artificial playback of these frequencies, but the tested systems are cost-prohibitive for wide-scale monitoring. Thus, we have developed a simple, low-cost, battery-powered, microcontroller-based sound lure which mimics the wingbeat frequency of female Ae. aegypti, thereby attracting males. We then tested the efficacy of this lure in combination with a passive (non-powered) gravid Aedes trap (GAT) against the current gold-standard, the Biogents Sentinel (BGS) trap, which requires main power (household power) and costs several times what the GAT does. Capture rates of male Ae. aegypti in sound-baited GATs (Sound-GATs) in these field tests were comparable to that of the BGS with no inhibitory effects of sound playback on female capture. We conclude that the Sound-GAT is an effective replacement of the costly BGS for surveillance of male Ae. aegypti mosquitoes, particularly in the developing countries where funding is limited, and has the potential to be adapted to target males of other medically important species.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30071091 PMCID: PMC6072092 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0201709
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Diagram of sound lure.
(A) Detailed schematic of the Arduino-based sound lure (Pro Mini 3.3 V board). The lure is programmed to produce a pulse-width-modulated 484 Hz sinusoidal-approximating signal through pin 11, from which it would travel through a DC-blocking capacitor to a speaker. The device is powered via a battery pack (SBH331AS, Memory Protection Devices Inc, Farmingdale, NY), containing three AA batteries and an on/off switch. (B) Assembled sound lure with a United States quarter dollar (diameter 2.54 cm) on top of battery box for size comparison. The components are: (A) assembled Arduino board, (B) speaker, (C) wired TTL serial adapter to connect to FTDI USB to TTL serial adapter to enable programming of board (Note: this component can be removed after programming if desired) and (D) battery pack.
Sound-GAT bill of materials.
| Item | Manufacturer/Supplier | Cost (US$) Per Unit |
|---|---|---|
| Arduino Pro Mini 3.3 V | Sparkfun/eBay | 1.85 |
| Speaker | PUI Audio/DigiKey | 6.20 |
| Capacitor | DigiKey | 0.75 |
| Battery Case w/ Switch | eBay | 0.75 |
| Photoresistor | DigiKey | 0.40 |
| Sound Lure total not incl. batteries | ||
| 3x AA batteries | Varta/Element14 | 0.99 (0.33 each) |
| Sound Lure total incl. batteries | ||
| Gravid | Biogents AG | 13.63 |
| Total Trap Purchasing Cost |
Fig 2Male and female capture in biogents sentinel traps and Sound-GATs.
(A) Mean weekly catches (± S. E.) of male Ae. aegypti caught by BGS, GAT and sound-baited GAT (S-GAT) traps. (B) Mean weekly catches (± S. E.) of female Aedes aegypti caught by BGS, GAT and sound-baited GAT (S-GAT) traps. (C) Mean weekly (± S. E.) Aedes aegypti trap totals (males and females) in BGS, GAT and sound-baited GAT (S-GAT) traps. Labels indicate significant groupings (P < 0.05, Factorial ANOVA, n = 30).
Surveillance device cost (US$) comparison.
| Item | Biogents Sentinel | Sound-GAT |
|---|---|---|
| Trap Cost w/o Battery (US$) | $197.00 (Bioquip Products, USA) | $23.60 |
| Active current (mA) | 280 | 5.8 |
| Active Power (mW) | 3360 | 29 |
| Battery Cost per Trap (US$) | $22.81 (10 Ah, 12V; (Universal Power Group Inc., USA) | $0.99 (3 x AA) |
| Battery Capacity (mA-h) | 10000 | 1800–2600 |
| Active Battery Life (weeks) | 0.21 (36 hr) | 4.3–6.3 (30–44 days) |