School of Animal, Plant and Environmental Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa.
Malar J. 2010 Mar 8;9:71. doi: 10.1186/1475-2875-9-71.
Control of the major African malaria vector species continues to rely extensively on the application of residual insecticides through indoor house spraying or bed net impregnation. Insecticide resistance is undermining the sustainability of these control strategies. Alternatives to the currently available conventional chemical insecticides are, therefore, urgently needed. Use of fungal pathogens as biopesticides is one such possibility. However, one of the challenges to the approach is the potential influence of varied environmental conditions and target species that could affect the efficacy of a biological 'active ingredient'. An initial investigation into this was carried out to assess the susceptibility of insecticide-susceptible and resistant laboratory strains and wild-collected Anopheles arabiensis mosquitoes to infection with the fungus Beauveria bassiana under two different laboratory temperature regimes.
Insecticide susceptibility to all four classes of insecticides recommended by WHO for vector control was tested on laboratory and wild-caught An. arabiensis, using standard WHO bioassay protocols. Mosquito susceptibility to fungus infection was tested using dry spores of B. bassiana under two temperature regimes (21 +/- 1 degrees C or 25 +/- 2 degrees C) representative of indoor conditions observed in western Kenya. Cox regression analysis was used to assess the effect of fungal infection on mosquito survival and the effect of insecticide resistance status and temperature on mortality rates following fungus infection.
Survival data showed no relationship between insecticide susceptibility and susceptibility to B. bassiana. All tested colonies showed complete susceptibility to fungal infection despite some showing high resistance levels to chemical insecticides. There was, however, a difference in fungus-induced mortality rates between temperature treatments with virulence significantly higher at 25 degrees C than 21 degrees C. Even so, because malaria parasite development is also known to slow as temperatures fall, expected reductions in malaria transmission potential due to fungal infection under the cooler conditions would still be high.
These results provide evidence that the entomopathogenic fungus B. bassiana has potential for use as an alternative vector control tool against insecticide-resistant mosquitoes under conditions typical of indoor resting environments. Nonetheless, the observed variation in effective virulence reveals the need for further study to optimize selection of isolates, dose and use strategy in different eco-epidemiological settings.
对主要的非洲疟疾媒介物种的控制仍然广泛依赖于通过室内喷洒或蚊帐浸渍来施用残留杀虫剂。杀虫剂抗性正在破坏这些控制策略的可持续性。因此,迫切需要替代目前可用的常规化学杀虫剂。利用真菌病原体作为生物农药就是这样一种可能性。然而,该方法面临的挑战之一是,不同的环境条件和目标物种可能会影响生物“活性成分”的功效。为此,进行了一项初步调查,以评估对杀虫剂敏感和抗性的实验室品系以及野外采集的阿拉伯按蚊对两种不同实验室温度下感染球孢白僵菌的敏感性。
使用标准世界卫生组织生物测定方案,对实验室和野外采集的阿拉伯按蚊进行了对世界卫生组织推荐用于病媒控制的四类杀虫剂的敏感性测试。在代表肯尼亚西部室内条件的两个温度条件(21 +/- 1°C 或 25 +/- 2°C)下,使用球孢白僵菌的干孢子测试了蚊子对真菌感染的敏感性。Cox 回归分析用于评估真菌感染对蚊子存活率的影响,以及杀虫剂抗性状态和温度对真菌感染后死亡率的影响。
生存数据显示,杀虫剂敏感性与对 B. bassiana 的敏感性之间没有关系。所有测试的品系对真菌感染均表现出完全敏感性,尽管有些品系对化学杀虫剂表现出高抗性水平。然而,在温度处理之间,真菌诱导的死亡率存在差异,25°C 时的毒力明显高于 21°C。即便如此,由于疟疾寄生虫的发育也随着温度的降低而减慢,在较凉爽的条件下,由于真菌感染导致疟疾传播潜力的预期降低仍将很高。
这些结果表明,球孢白僵菌具有作为针对对杀虫剂具有抗性的蚊子的替代病媒控制工具的潜力,在典型的室内栖息环境条件下使用。尽管如此,观察到的有效毒力的变化表明需要进一步研究,以优化在不同生态流行病学环境中选择分离株、剂量和使用策略。