Dida Gabriel O, Gelder Frank B, Anyona Douglas N, Abuom Paul O, Onyuka Jackson O, Matano Ally-Said, Adoka Samson O, Kanangire Canisius K, Owuor Philip O, Ouma Collins, Ofulla Ayub Vo
School of Public Health and Community Development, Maseno University, Kisumu, Kenya ; Department of Vector Ecology and Environment, Institute of Tropical Medicine (NEKKEN), Nagasaki University, Nagasaki, Japan.
Probe International, Inc., USA and Auckland, Ohio, New Zealand.
Springerplus. 2015 Mar 20;4:136. doi: 10.1186/s40064-015-0905-y. eCollection 2015.
Among all the malaria controlling measures, biological control of mosquito larvae may be the cheapest and easiest to implement. This study investigated baseline predation of immature mosquitoes by macroinvertebrate predators along the Mara River, determined the diversity of predators and mosquito larvae habitats and the range of their adaptive capacity to water physico-chemical parameters. Between July and August 2011, sampling sites (n=39) along the Mara River were selected and investigated for the presence of macroinvertebrate predators and mosquito larvae. The selected sampling sites were geocoded and each dipped 20 times using standard mosquito larvae dipper to sample mosquito larvae, while a D-frame dip net was used to capture the macroinvertebrate predators. Water physico-chemical parameters (dissolved oxygen, temperature, pH, conductivity, salinity and turbidity) were taken in situ at access points, while hardness and alkalinity were measured titrimetically. The influence of macroinvertebrate predator occurrence was correlated with mosquito larvae and water quality parameters using Generalized Linear Model (GLM). Predators (n=297) belonging to 3 orders of Hemiptera (54.2%), Odonata (22.9%) and Coleoptera (22.9%), and mosquito larvae (n=4001) belonging to 10 species, which included An.gambiae s.l (44.9%), Culex spp. (34.8%) and An. coustani complex (13.8%), An. maculipalpis (3.6%), An. phaorensis (1.2%), An. funestus group (0.5%), An. azaniae (0.4%), An. hamoni (0.3%), An. christyi (0.3%), An. ardensis (0.08%), An. faini (0.07%), An. sergentii (0.05%) and 0.05% of Aedes mosquito larvae which were not identified to species level, due to lack of an appropriate key, were captured from different habitats along the Mara river. It was established that invasion of habitats by the macroinvertebrate predators were partially driven by the presence of mosquito larvae (p < 0.001), and the prevailing water physico-chemical parameters (DO, temperature, and turbidity, p <0.001). Understanding abiotic and biotic factors which favour mosquitoes and macroinveterbrate co-occurrence may contribute to the control of malaria.
在所有疟疾控制措施中,对蚊虫幼虫的生物控制可能是最便宜且最易于实施的。本研究调查了马拉河沿岸大型无脊椎动物捕食者对未成熟蚊虫的基线捕食情况,确定了捕食者和蚊虫幼虫栖息地的多样性以及它们对水体理化参数的适应能力范围。2011年7月至8月期间,在马拉河沿岸选择了39个采样点,调查大型无脊椎动物捕食者和蚊虫幼虫的存在情况。对选定的采样点进行地理编码,每个采样点使用标准蚊虫幼虫捞网捞取20次以采集蚊虫幼虫,同时使用D形捞网捕获大型无脊椎动物捕食者。在取水点现场测量水体理化参数(溶解氧、温度、pH值、电导率、盐度和浊度),而硬度和碱度则通过滴定法测量。使用广义线性模型(GLM)将大型无脊椎动物捕食者的出现情况与蚊虫幼虫及水质参数进行相关性分析。捕获了属于半翅目(54.2%)、蜻蜓目(22.9%)和鞘翅目(22.9%)3个目的捕食者(n = 297),以及属于10个物种的蚊虫幼虫(n = 4001),其中包括冈比亚按蚊复合种(44.9%)、库蚊属(34.8%)和科斯塔尼按蚊复合种(13.8%)、黄斑按蚊(3.6%)、法老按蚊(1.2%)、恶疟按蚊种群(0.5%)、阿赞尼亚按蚊(0.4%)、哈蒙按蚊(0.3%)、克里斯蒂按蚊(0.3%)、阿德按蚊(0.08%)、费氏按蚊(0.07%)、塞尔吉按蚊(0.05%)以及由于缺乏合适的检索表而未鉴定到种级别的伊蚊属蚊虫幼虫(0.05%),这些均采自马拉河沿岸的不同栖息地。结果表明,大型无脊椎动物捕食者对栖息地的入侵部分是由蚊虫幼虫的存在(p < 0.001)以及当时的水体理化参数(溶解氧、温度和浊度,p < 0.001)驱动的。了解有利于蚊虫和大型无脊椎动物共生的非生物和生物因素可能有助于疟疾的控制。