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First report of the infection of insecticide-resistant malaria vector mosquitoes with an entomopathogenic fungus under field conditions

BACKGROUND: Insecticide-resistant mosquitoes are compromising the ability of current mosquito control tools to control malaria vectors. A proposed new approach for mosquito control is to use entomopathogenic fungi. These fungi have been shown to be lethal to both insecticide-susceptible and insectic...

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Autores principales: Howard, Annabel FV, N'Guessan, Raphael, Koenraadt, Constantianus JM, Asidi, Alex, Farenhorst, Marit, Akogbéto, Martin, Knols, Bart GJ, Takken, Willem
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3045381/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21288359
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-10-24
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author Howard, Annabel FV
N'Guessan, Raphael
Koenraadt, Constantianus JM
Asidi, Alex
Farenhorst, Marit
Akogbéto, Martin
Knols, Bart GJ
Takken, Willem
author_facet Howard, Annabel FV
N'Guessan, Raphael
Koenraadt, Constantianus JM
Asidi, Alex
Farenhorst, Marit
Akogbéto, Martin
Knols, Bart GJ
Takken, Willem
author_sort Howard, Annabel FV
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Insecticide-resistant mosquitoes are compromising the ability of current mosquito control tools to control malaria vectors. A proposed new approach for mosquito control is to use entomopathogenic fungi. These fungi have been shown to be lethal to both insecticide-susceptible and insecticide-resistant mosquitoes under laboratory conditions. The goal of this study was to see whether entomopathogenic fungi could be used to infect insecticide-resistant malaria vectors under field conditions, and to see whether the virulence and viability of the fungal conidia decreased after exposure to ambient African field conditions. METHODS: This study used the fungus Beauveria bassiana to infect the insecticide-resistant malaria vector Anopheles gambiae s.s (Diptera: Culicidae) VKPER laboratory colony strain. Fungal conidia were applied to polyester netting and kept under West African field conditions for varying periods of time. The virulence of the fungal-treated netting was tested 1, 3 and 5 days after net application by exposing An. gambiae s.s. VKPER mosquitoes in WHO cone bioassays carried out under field conditions. In addition, the viability of B. bassiana conidia was measured after up to 20 days exposure to field conditions. RESULTS: The results show that B. bassiana infection caused significantly increased mortality with the daily risk of dying being increased by 2.5× for the fungus-exposed mosquitoes compared to the control mosquitoes. However, the virulence of the B. bassiana conidia decreased with increasing time spent exposed to the field conditions, the older the treatment on the net, the lower the fungus-induced mortality rate. This is likely to be due to the climate because laboratory trials found no such decline within the same trial time period. Conidial viability also decreased with increasing exposure to the net and natural abiotic environmental conditions. After 20 days field exposure the conidial viability was 30%, but the viability of control conidia not exposed to the net or field conditions was 79%. CONCLUSIONS: This work shows promise for the use of B. bassiana fungal conidia against insecticide-resistant mosquitoes in the field, but further work is required to examine the role of environmental conditions on fungal virulence and viability with a view to eventually making the fungal conidia delivery system more able to withstand the ambient African climate.
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spelling pubmed-30453812011-02-26 First report of the infection of insecticide-resistant malaria vector mosquitoes with an entomopathogenic fungus under field conditions Howard, Annabel FV N'Guessan, Raphael Koenraadt, Constantianus JM Asidi, Alex Farenhorst, Marit Akogbéto, Martin Knols, Bart GJ Takken, Willem Malar J Research BACKGROUND: Insecticide-resistant mosquitoes are compromising the ability of current mosquito control tools to control malaria vectors. A proposed new approach for mosquito control is to use entomopathogenic fungi. These fungi have been shown to be lethal to both insecticide-susceptible and insecticide-resistant mosquitoes under laboratory conditions. The goal of this study was to see whether entomopathogenic fungi could be used to infect insecticide-resistant malaria vectors under field conditions, and to see whether the virulence and viability of the fungal conidia decreased after exposure to ambient African field conditions. METHODS: This study used the fungus Beauveria bassiana to infect the insecticide-resistant malaria vector Anopheles gambiae s.s (Diptera: Culicidae) VKPER laboratory colony strain. Fungal conidia were applied to polyester netting and kept under West African field conditions for varying periods of time. The virulence of the fungal-treated netting was tested 1, 3 and 5 days after net application by exposing An. gambiae s.s. VKPER mosquitoes in WHO cone bioassays carried out under field conditions. In addition, the viability of B. bassiana conidia was measured after up to 20 days exposure to field conditions. RESULTS: The results show that B. bassiana infection caused significantly increased mortality with the daily risk of dying being increased by 2.5× for the fungus-exposed mosquitoes compared to the control mosquitoes. However, the virulence of the B. bassiana conidia decreased with increasing time spent exposed to the field conditions, the older the treatment on the net, the lower the fungus-induced mortality rate. This is likely to be due to the climate because laboratory trials found no such decline within the same trial time period. Conidial viability also decreased with increasing exposure to the net and natural abiotic environmental conditions. After 20 days field exposure the conidial viability was 30%, but the viability of control conidia not exposed to the net or field conditions was 79%. CONCLUSIONS: This work shows promise for the use of B. bassiana fungal conidia against insecticide-resistant mosquitoes in the field, but further work is required to examine the role of environmental conditions on fungal virulence and viability with a view to eventually making the fungal conidia delivery system more able to withstand the ambient African climate. BioMed Central 2011-02-02 /pmc/articles/PMC3045381/ /pubmed/21288359 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-10-24 Text en Copyright ©2011 Howard et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Howard, Annabel FV
N'Guessan, Raphael
Koenraadt, Constantianus JM
Asidi, Alex
Farenhorst, Marit
Akogbéto, Martin
Knols, Bart GJ
Takken, Willem
First report of the infection of insecticide-resistant malaria vector mosquitoes with an entomopathogenic fungus under field conditions
title First report of the infection of insecticide-resistant malaria vector mosquitoes with an entomopathogenic fungus under field conditions
title_full First report of the infection of insecticide-resistant malaria vector mosquitoes with an entomopathogenic fungus under field conditions
title_fullStr First report of the infection of insecticide-resistant malaria vector mosquitoes with an entomopathogenic fungus under field conditions
title_full_unstemmed First report of the infection of insecticide-resistant malaria vector mosquitoes with an entomopathogenic fungus under field conditions
title_short First report of the infection of insecticide-resistant malaria vector mosquitoes with an entomopathogenic fungus under field conditions
title_sort first report of the infection of insecticide-resistant malaria vector mosquitoes with an entomopathogenic fungus under field conditions
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3045381/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21288359
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-10-24
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