Wadsworth Center, New York State Department of Health, Albany, NY, USA.
Laboratorio ICEMR-Amazonia, Laboratorios de Investigación y Desarrollo, Facultad de Ciencias E Ingeniería, Universidad Peruana Cayetano Heredia, Lima, Peru.
Malar J. 2024 Apr 19;23(1):112. doi: 10.1186/s12936-024-04940-z.
In malaria endemic regions of the Peruvian Amazon, rainfall together with river level and breeding site availability drive fluctuating vector mosquito abundance and human malaria cases, leading to temporal heterogeneity. The main variables influencing spatial transmission include location of communities, mosquito behaviour, land use/land cover, and human ecology/behaviour. The main objective was to evaluate seasonal and microgeographic biting behaviour of the malaria vector Nyssorhynchus (or Anopheles) darlingi in Amazonian Peru and to investigate effects of seasonality on malaria transmission.
We captured mosquitoes from 18:00 to 06:00 h using Human Landing Catch in two riverine (Lupuna, Santa Emilia) and two highway (El Triunfo, Nuevo Horizonte) communities indoors and outdoors from 8 houses per community, during the dry and rainy seasons from February 2016 to January 2017. We then estimated parity rate, daily survival and age of a portion of each collection of Ny. darlingi. All collected specimens of Ny. darlingi were tested for the presence of Plasmodium vivax or Plasmodium falciparum sporozoites using real-time PCR targeting the small subunit of the 18S rRNA.
Abundance of Ny. darlingi varied across village, season, and biting behaviour (indoor vs outdoor), and was highly significant between rainy and dry seasons (p < 0.0001). Biting patterns differed, although not significantly, and persisted regardless of season, with peaks in highway communities at ~ 20:00 h in contrast to biting throughout the night (i.e., 18:00-06:00) in riverine communities. Of 3721 Ny. darlingi tested for Plasmodium, 23 (0.62%) were infected. We detected Plasmodium-infected Ny. darlingi in both community types and most (20/23) were captured outdoors during the rainy season; 17/23 before midnight. Seventeen Ny. darlingi were infected with P. vivax, and 6 with P. falciparum. No infected Ny. darlingi were captured during the dry season. Significantly higher rates of parity were detected in Ny. darlingi during the rainy season (average 64.69%) versus the dry season (average 36.91%) and by community, Lupuna, a riverine village, had the highest proportion of parous to nulliparous females during the rainy season.
These data add a seasonal dimension to malaria transmission in peri-Iquitos, providing more evidence that, at least locally, the greatest risk of malaria transmission is outdoors during the rainy season mainly before midnight, irrespective of whether the community was located adjacent to the highway or along the river.
在秘鲁亚马逊地区的疟疾流行地区,降雨以及河流水位和滋生地的可利用性导致媒介蚊虫数量和人类疟疾病例出现波动,从而导致时间异质性。影响空间传播的主要变量包括社区位置、蚊虫行为、土地利用/土地覆盖以及人类生态/行为。主要目标是评估亚马逊秘鲁疟疾病媒 Nyssorhynchus(或 Anopheles) darlingi 的季节性和微观地理叮咬行为,并研究季节性对疟疾传播的影响。
我们于 2016 年 2 月至 2017 年 1 月在旱季和雨季,从 18:00 到 06:00 小时,在 18 个社区的每个社区的 8 个房屋内,在两条河流(Lupuna,Santa Emilia)和两条公路(El Triunfo,Nuevo Horizonte)中,使用人体降落捕捉法,在室内和室外捕获疟疾病媒 Nyssorhynchus(或 Anopheles) darlingi。然后,我们估计了每部分 Ny. darlingi 的生殖率、日存活率和年龄。所有收集的 Ny. darlingi 标本均使用针对 18S rRNA 小亚基的实时 PCR 检测是否存在间日疟原虫或恶性疟原虫孢子虫。
Ny. darlingi 的丰度在村庄、季节和叮咬行为(室内与室外)方面存在差异,并且在旱季和雨季之间差异非常显著(p<0.0001)。尽管没有显著差异,但叮咬模式不同,并且无论季节如何都持续存在,与公路社区相比,在河流社区中晚上 20:00 左右有高峰,而在公路社区中则整夜(即 18:00-06:00)叮咬。在 3721 只被测试是否感染疟原虫的 Ny. darlingi 中,有 23 只(0.62%)被感染。我们在两种社区类型中均检测到了感染疟原虫的 Ny. darlingi,并且大多数(23/23)在雨季在户外捕获;在雨季之前的午夜之前捕获 17/23。在 17 只 Ny. darlingi 中感染了间日疟原虫,在 6 只中感染了恶性疟原虫。在旱季没有捕获到感染的 Ny. darlingi。在雨季(平均 64.69%)中,Ny. darlingi 的生殖率明显高于旱季(平均 36.91%),并且 Lupuna,一个河流社区,在雨季中拥有最多的多产和不育的雌性。
这些数据为伊基托斯周边地区的疟疾传播增加了季节性维度,提供了更多证据表明,至少在当地,最大的疟疾传播风险是在雨季户外,主要是在午夜之前,无论社区是位于高速公路附近还是沿着河流。