Munhenga Givemore, Brooke Basil D, Gilles Jeremie R L, Slabbert Kobus, Kemp Alan, Dandalo Leonard C, Wood Oliver R, Lobb Leanne N, Govender Danny, Renke Marius, Koekemoer Lizette L
Centre for Opportunistic, Tropical and Hospital Infections, National Institute for Communicable Diseases, Private Bag X4, Sandringham, Johannesburg, South Africa.
Wits Research Institute for Malaria, School of Pathology, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa.
Parasit Vectors. 2016 Mar 2;9:122. doi: 10.1186/s13071-016-1385-9.
Anopheles arabiensis Patton is primarily responsible for malaria transmission in South Africa after successful suppression of other major vector species using indoor spraying of residual insecticides. Control of An. arabiensis using current insecticide based approaches is proving difficult owing to the development of insecticide resistance, and variable feeding and resting behaviours. The use of the sterile insect technique as an area-wide integrated pest management system to supplement the control of An. arabiensis was proposed for South Africa and is currently under investigation. The success of this technique is dependent on the ability of laboratory-reared sterile males to compete with wild males for mates. As part of the research and development of the SIT technique for use against An. arabiensis in South Africa, radio-sensitivity and mating competitiveness of a local An. arabiensis sexing strain were assessed.
The optimal irradiation dose inducing male sterility without compromising mating vigour was tested using Cobalt 60 irradiation doses ranging from 70-100 Gy. Relative mating competitiveness of sterile laboratory-reared males (GAMA strain) compared to fertile wild-type males (AMAL strain) for virgin wild-type females (AMAL) was investigated under laboratory and semi-field conditions using large outdoor cages. Three different sterile male to fertile male to wild-type female ratios were evaluated [1:1:1, 5:1:1 and 10:1:1 (sterile males: fertile, wild-type males: fertile, wild-type females)].
Irradiation at the doses tested did not affect adult emergence but had a moderate effect on adult survivorship and mating vigour. A dose of 75 Gy was selected for the competitiveness assays. Mating competitiveness experiments showed that irradiated GAMA male mosquitoes are a third as competitive as their fertile AMAL counterparts under semi-field conditions. However, they were not as competitive under laboratory conditions. An inundative ratio of 10:1 induced the highest sterility in the representative wild-type population, with potential to effectively suppress reproduction.
Laboratory-reared and sterilised GAMA male An. arabiensis at a release ratio of 3:1 (3 sterile males to 1 wild, fertile male) can successfully compete for insemination of wild-type females. These results will be used to inform subsequent small-scale pilot field releases in South Africa.
在使用室内喷洒残留杀虫剂成功抑制其他主要病媒物种后,阿拉伯按蚊(Anopheles arabiensis Patton)成为南非疟疾传播的主要责任者。由于杀虫剂抗性的发展以及不同的摄食和栖息行为,使用当前基于杀虫剂的方法来控制阿拉伯按蚊变得困难。南非已提议采用昆虫不育技术作为区域综合虫害管理系统来辅助控制阿拉伯按蚊,目前该技术正在研究中。这项技术的成功取决于实验室饲养的不育雄蚊与野生雄蚊争夺配偶的能力。作为在南非针对阿拉伯按蚊使用昆虫不育技术研发工作的一部分,对当地一种阿拉伯按蚊性别品系的辐射敏感性和交配竞争力进行了评估。
使用70 - 100戈瑞的钴60辐射剂量,测试诱导雄性不育且不损害交配活力的最佳辐射剂量。在实验室和半田间条件下,使用大型户外笼子,研究实验室饲养的不育雄蚊(GAMA品系)与可育野生型雄蚊(AMAL品系)相比,对野生型处女雌蚊(AMAL)的相对交配竞争力。评估了三种不同的不育雄蚊、可育雄蚊与野生型雌蚊的比例[1:1:1、5:1:1和10:1:1(不育雄蚊:可育野生型雄蚊:可育野生型雌蚊)]。
所测试剂量的辐射不影响成虫羽化,但对成虫存活率和交配活力有中等程度影响。选择75戈瑞的剂量用于竞争力测定。交配竞争力实验表明,在半田间条件下,经辐射的GAMA雄蚊的竞争力仅为可育的AMAL雄蚊的三分之一。然而,在实验室条件下它们的竞争力较弱。淹没比例为10:1时,在代表性野生型种群中诱导出最高不育率,具有有效抑制繁殖的潜力。
实验室饲养并经绝育处理的GAMA品系阿拉伯按蚊雄蚊以3:1(3只不育雄蚊对1只野生可育雄蚊)的释放比例能够成功竞争与野生型雌蚊交配授精。这些结果将用于为南非后续的小规模田间试验释放提供参考。