Department of Biology, University of Nairobi, Nairobi, 00100, Kenya.
Sub-Saharan Africa International Center of Excellence for Malaria Research, Tom Mboya University, Homa Bay, 40300, Kenya.
Parasitol Res. 2022 Dec;121(12):3529-3545. doi: 10.1007/s00436-022-07678-2. Epub 2022 Oct 7.
Irrigation not only helps to improve food security but also creates numerous water bodies for mosquito production. This study assessed the effect of irrigation on malaria vector bionomics and transmission in a semi-arid site with ongoing malaria vector control program. The effectiveness of CDC light traps in the surveillance of malaria vectors was also evaluated relative to the human landing catches (HLCs) method. Adult mosquitoes were sampled in two study sites representing irrigated and non-irrigated agroecosystems in western Kenya using a variety of trapping methods. The mosquito samples were identified to species and assayed for host blood meal source and Plasmodium spp. sporozoite infection using polymerase chain reaction. Anopheles arabiensis was the dominant malaria vector in the two study sites and occurred in significantly higher densities in irrigated study site compared to the non-irrigated study site. The difference in indoor resting density of An. arabiensis during the dry and wet seasons was not significant. Other species, including An. funestus, An. coustani, and An. pharoensis, were collected. The An. funestus indoor resting density was 0.23 in irrigated study site while almost none of this species was collected in the non-irrigated study site. The human blood index (HBI) for An. arabiensis in the irrigated study site was 3.44% and significantly higher than 0.00% for the non-irrigated study site. In the irrigated study site, the HBI of An. arabiensis was 3.90% and 5.20% indoor and outdoor, respectively. The HBI of An. funestus was 49.43% and significantly higher compared to 3.44% for An. arabiensis in the irrigated study site. The annual entomologic inoculation rate for An. arabiensis in the irrigated study site was 0.41 and 0.30 infective bites/person/year indoor and outdoor, respectively, whereas no transmission was observed in the non-irrigated study site. The CDC light trap performed consistently with HLC in terms of vector density. These findings demonstrate that irrigated agriculture may increase the risk of malaria transmission in irrigated areas compared to the non-irrigated areas and highlight the need to complement the existing malaria vector interventions with novel tools targeting the larvae and both indoor and outdoor biting vector populations.
灌溉不仅有助于提高粮食安全,还为蚊子的繁殖创造了众多水体。本研究评估了灌溉对半干旱地区疟疾媒介生物学生态学和传播的影响,该地区正在进行疟疾媒介控制计划。还评估了 CDC 诱蚊灯在监测疟疾媒介方面的有效性,与人体诱蚊捕集法(HLC)相比。在肯尼亚西部,使用多种诱捕方法在两个代表灌溉和非灌溉农业生态系统的研究点采集成蚊样本。用聚合酶链反应对蚊子样本进行鉴定,以确定其物种,并检测其宿主血液来源和疟原虫属。在两个研究点,阿拉伯按蚊是主要的疟疾媒介,在灌溉研究点的密度明显高于非灌溉研究点。在旱季和雨季,室内休息的阿拉伯按蚊密度差异不显著。还采集了其他物种,包括冈比亚按蚊、库蚊和法氏按蚊。在灌溉研究点,冈比亚按蚊的室内休息密度为 0.23,而在非灌溉研究点几乎没有这种物种。在灌溉研究点,阿拉伯按蚊的人血指数(HBI)为 3.44%,明显高于非灌溉研究点的 0.00%。在灌溉研究点,室内和室外的阿拉伯按蚊 HBI 分别为 3.90%和 5.20%。冈比亚按蚊的 HBI 为 49.43%,明显高于灌溉研究点的阿拉伯按蚊的 3.44%。在灌溉研究点,阿拉伯按蚊的年昆虫接种率为 0.41,室内和室外的感染性叮咬/人/年分别为 0.30,而在非灌溉研究点未观察到传播。在监测媒介密度方面,CDC 诱蚊灯与 HLC 的性能一致。这些发现表明,与非灌溉地区相比,灌溉农业可能会增加灌溉地区疟疾传播的风险,并强调需要用针对幼虫和室内外叮咬媒介种群的新工具来补充现有的疟疾媒介干预措施。