| Literature DB >> 31307509 |
Chouaïbou Seïdou Mouhamadou1,2, Sarah Souline de Souza3, Behi Kouadio Fodjo4,5, Marius Gonse Zoh6,7,8, Nestor Kesse Bli4, Benjamin Guibehi Koudou4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The wetlands used for some agricultural activities constitute productive breeding sites for many mosquito species. Thus, the agricultural use of insecticide targeting other pests may select for insecticide resistance in malaria mosquitoes. The purpose of this study is to clarify some knowledge gaps on the role of agrochemicals in the development of insecticide resistance in malaria vectors is of utmost importance for vector control.Entities:
Keywords: Agriculture; Anopheles coluzzii; Insecticide resistance; Resistance selection; Vector control
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31307509 PMCID: PMC6631620 DOI: 10.1186/s40249-019-0572-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Infect Dis Poverty ISSN: 2049-9957 Impact factor: 4.520
Resistance ratio of wild Anopheles coluzzii populations from non-agricultural (Vitre) and agricultural areas (Tiassale and Gagnoa) exposed to three neonicotinoids
| Localities | Insecticides | KDT50 (95% | Resistance ratio* | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kisumu | Wild strains | |||
| Vitre | Acetamiprid | 13.7 (10.47–16.68) | 15.52 (13.6–18.013) | 1.130 |
| Imidachloprid | 18.2 (14.95–21.88) | 104.6 (77.2–197.7) | 5.747 | |
| Tiassale | Acetamiprid | 13.7 (10.47–16.68) | 20.9 (14.14–25.7) | 1.526 |
| Imidachloprid | 18.2 (14.95–21.88) | 111.6 (78.3–247.4) | 6.132 | |
| Gagnoa | Acetamiprid | 13.7 (10.47–16.68) | 15.7 (11.6–19.07) | 1.062 |
| Imidachloprid | 18.2 (14.95–21.88) | 1 knock down only after 1 h | +++ | |
KDT50: The time necessary to allow 50% of test mosquito populations to be knocked down. Determined using the PoloPlus software 1.0 via log-probit analysis
*Resistance ratio (RR) calculated as the KDT50 of the wild strain divided by the KDT50 of the susceptible Kisumu strain
+++ could not be calculated, indefinite
Fig. 1Knockdown and resistance factor of wild Anopheles coluzzii populations from non-agricultural (Vitre in column a) and agricultural areas (Tiassale in column b and Gagnoa in Column c) and exposed to three neonicotinoids. We were unable to generate a regression curve for clothianidin as only two time-points knockdown data were recorded after 30 min exposure with more than 90% mosquito’s dead in less than 15 min. The resistance ratio (RR) was calculated as the time necessary to allow 50% of test mosquitoes to be knocked down (KDT50) of the wild strain divided by the KDT50 the susceptible Kisumu strain. We could not calculate the RR for imidachloprid in Gagnoa because only one mosquito was knocked down after exposure. This was referred here as +++ (extremely high)
Fig. 2Mortality in CDC bottle bioassay of wild Anopheles coluzzii exposed to acetamiprid, imidachloprid and clothianidin. Vitre is a sub-urban area with a very low agricultural practice. Tiassale is a rice-growing irrigated area with intensive use of chemicals including neonicotinoids. Gagnoa on is a cocoa growing area where neonicotinoids use is common. Resistance to imidachloprid is found in all the three localities whereas resistance to acetamiprid is seen in agricultural growing areas only. No resistance was found to clothianidin. The bars represent the confidence intervals at 95% (95% CI)