Environmental Health and Ecological Sciences, Ifakara Health Institute, Ifakara, Tanzania.
Faculty of Health Sciences, School of Public Health, University of the Witwatersrand, Parktown, Republic of South Africa.
PLoS One. 2021 Jan 28;16(1):e0245750. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0245750. eCollection 2021.
While malaria transmission in Africa still happens primarily inside houses, there is a substantial proportion of Anopheles mosquitoes that bite or rest outdoors. This situation may compromise the performance of indoor insecticidal interventions such as insecticide-treated nets (ITNs). This study investigated the distribution of malaria mosquitoes biting or resting outside dwellings in three low-altitude villages in south-eastern Tanzania. The likelihood of malaria infections outdoors was also assessed.
Nightly trapping was done outdoors for 12 months to collect resting mosquitoes (using resting bucket traps) and host-seeking mosquitoes (using odour-baited Suna® traps). The mosquitoes were sorted by species and physiological states. Pooled samples of Anopheles were tested to estimate proportions infected with Plasmodium falciparum parasites, estimate proportions carrying human blood as opposed to other vertebrate blood and identify sibling species in the Anopheles gambiae complex and An. funestus group. Environmental and anthropogenic factors were observed and recorded within 100 meters from each trapping positions. Generalised additive models were used to investigate relationships between these variables and vector densities, produce predictive maps of expected abundance and compare outcomes within and between villages.
A high degree of fine-scale heterogeneity in Anopheles densities was observed between and within villages. Water bodies covered with vegetation were associated with 22% higher densities of An. arabiensis and 51% lower densities of An. funestus. Increasing densities of houses and people outdoors were both associated with reduced densities of An. arabiensis and An. funestus. Vector densities were highest around the end of the rainy season and beginning of the dry seasons. More than half (14) 58.3% of blood-fed An. arabiensis had bovine blood, (6) 25% had human blood. None of the Anopheles mosquitoes caught outdoors was found infected with malaria parasites.
Outdoor densities of both host-seeking and resting Anopheles mosquitoes had significant heterogeneities between and within villages, and were influenced by multiple environmental and anthropogenic factors. Despite the high Anopheles densities outside dwellings, the substantial proportion of non-human blood-meals and absence of malaria-infected mosquitoes after 12 months of nightly trapping suggests very low-levels of outdoor malaria transmission in these villages.
尽管非洲的疟疾传播主要仍发生在室内,但仍有相当比例的疟蚊在户外叮咬或栖息。这种情况可能会影响室内杀虫剂干预措施(如经杀虫剂处理的蚊帐(ITNs))的效果。本研究调查了坦桑尼亚东南部三个低海拔村庄中户外栖息和叮咬的疟蚊分布情况。还评估了户外疟疾病例的可能性。
户外进行了为期 12 个月的夜间诱捕,以收集休息的蚊子(使用休息桶诱捕器)和寻找宿主的蚊子(使用气味诱饵的 Suna®诱捕器)。蚊子按物种和生理状态进行分类。对聚集的疟蚊样本进行检测,以估计感染恶性疟原虫寄生虫的比例,确定携带人类血液而非其他脊椎动物血液的比例,并识别冈比亚按蚊复合体和冈比亚按蚊组中的姐妹种。在每个诱捕位置 100 米范围内观察和记录环境和人为因素。使用广义加性模型调查这些变量与矢量密度之间的关系,生成预期丰度的预测图,并比较村庄内和村庄之间的结果。
在村庄之间和内部观察到疟蚊密度存在高度的细微差异。植被覆盖的水体与按蚊 arabiensis 的密度增加 22%和按蚊 funestus 的密度降低 51%有关。户外房屋和人员密度的增加都与按蚊 arabiensis 和按蚊 funestus 的密度降低有关。在雨季结束和旱季开始时,矢量密度最高。在 14 只 58.3%的吸血按蚊 arabiensis 中,有 25%的血液来自牛,有 6 只(25%)的血液来自人。在户外捕获的按蚊蚊子中,没有一只感染疟疾寄生虫。
户外觅食和休息的按蚊的密度在村庄之间和内部都存在显著的异质性,并且受到多种环境和人为因素的影响。尽管户外栖息的按蚊密度很高,但在进行为期 12 个月的夜间诱捕后,大量非人类血液摄入和未发现感染疟疾的蚊子表明,这些村庄的户外疟疾传播水平非常低。