Wits Research Institute for Malaria, School of Pathology, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa.
Centre for Opportunistic, Tropical &Hospital Infections, National Institute for Communicable Diseases, Johannesburg, South Africa.
Sci Rep. 2017 Mar 6;7:43779. doi: 10.1038/srep43779.
South Africa aims to eliminate malaria within its borders by 2018. Despite well-coordinated provincial vector control programmes that are based on indoor residual insecticide spraying, low-level residual malaria transmission continues in the low-altitude border regions of the north-eastern sector of the country. In order to identify the underlying causes of residual transmission, an enhanced vector surveillance system has been implemented at selected sites in the Mpumalanga and KwaZulu-Natal (KZN) provinces. The collection periods for the data presented are March 2015 to April 2016 for Mpumalanga and January 2014 to December 2015 for KZN. The mosquito collection methods used included indoor and outdoor traps based on the use of traditional ceramic pots, modified plastic buckets and exit window traps (KZN only). All Anopheles funestus species group mosquitoes collected were identified to species and all females were screened for the presence of Plasmodium falciparum sporozoites. Two An. vaneedeni females, one from each surveillance site, tested positive for P. falciparum sporozoites. These are the first records of natural populations of An. vaneedeni being infective with P. falciparum. As both specimens were collected from outdoor-placed ceramic pots, these data show that An. vaneedeni likely contributes to residual malaria transmission in South Africa.
南非旨在到 2018 年消除其境内的疟疾。尽管省级病媒控制计划协调良好,以室内残留杀虫剂喷洒为基础,但在该国东北部低海拔边境地区仍持续存在低水平的残留疟疾传播。为了确定残留传播的根本原因,在姆普马兰加省和夸祖鲁-纳塔尔省(KZN)的选定地点实施了强化病媒监测系统。本文介绍的数据的采集期为 2015 年 3 月至 2016 年 4 月,用于姆普马兰加省;2014 年 1 月至 2015 年 12 月,用于 KZN。使用的蚊虫收集方法包括基于传统陶瓷罐、改良塑料桶和出口窗诱捕器(仅限 KZN)的室内和室外诱捕器。收集到的所有按蚊种群组蚊子均鉴定到种,所有雌性均进行了疟原虫裂殖子的筛查。来自每个监测地点的 2 只安蚊(vaneedeni)雌性蚊子对疟原虫裂殖子检测呈阳性。这是安蚊(vaneedeni)自然种群感染疟原虫的首例记录。由于这两个标本均采集自户外放置的陶瓷罐,这些数据表明,安蚊(vaneedeni)可能对南非的残留疟疾传播有贡献。