Cargando…

Comparative field evaluation of kelambu traps, barrier screens and barrier screens with eaves for longitudinal surveillance of adult Anopheles mosquitoes in Sulawesi, Indonesia

BACKGROUND: Sampling methodologies for mosquitoes that are capable of transmitting vector-borne infectious diseases provide critical information on entomological endpoints. Reliable and meaningful field data is vital to the understanding of basic vector biology as well as disease transmission. Vario...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Davidson, Jenna R., Wahid, Isra, Sudirman, Rusdiyah, Makuru, Victoria, Hasan, Hajar, Arfah, Andi Muhammad, Nur, Nirwana, Hidayat, Muhammad Yusuf, Hendershot, Allison L., Xiao, Honglin, Yu, Xiaoyu, Asih, Puji Budi Setia, Syafruddin, Din, Lobo, Neil F.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6693138/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31409374
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13071-019-3649-7
_version_ 1783443650788720640
author Davidson, Jenna R.
Wahid, Isra
Sudirman, Rusdiyah
Makuru, Victoria
Hasan, Hajar
Arfah, Andi Muhammad
Nur, Nirwana
Hidayat, Muhammad Yusuf
Hendershot, Allison L.
Xiao, Honglin
Yu, Xiaoyu
Asih, Puji Budi Setia
Syafruddin, Din
Lobo, Neil F.
author_facet Davidson, Jenna R.
Wahid, Isra
Sudirman, Rusdiyah
Makuru, Victoria
Hasan, Hajar
Arfah, Andi Muhammad
Nur, Nirwana
Hidayat, Muhammad Yusuf
Hendershot, Allison L.
Xiao, Honglin
Yu, Xiaoyu
Asih, Puji Budi Setia
Syafruddin, Din
Lobo, Neil F.
author_sort Davidson, Jenna R.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Sampling methodologies for mosquitoes that are capable of transmitting vector-borne infectious diseases provide critical information on entomological endpoints. Reliable and meaningful field data is vital to the understanding of basic vector biology as well as disease transmission. Various traps take advantage of different vector behaviors and are inevitably subject to sampling biases. This study represents the first comparison of kelambu traps (KT) to barrier screens (BS), barrier screens with eaves (BSE) and indoor and outdoor human landing catches (HLCs). METHODS: Two trap comparison studies were undertaken. In the first study, mosquitoes were collected in Karama over 26 trapping nights to evaluate the kelambu trap relative to indoor and outdoor HLCs. In the second study, mosquitoes were collected in Karama over 12 trapping nights to compare the kelambu trap, barrier screen, barrier screen with eaves and outdoor HLCs. The kelambu trap, barrier screen and barrier screen with eaves obstruct the flight of mosquitos. HLCs target host-seeking behaviors. RESULTS: There was no significant difference between indoor and outdoor HLCs for overall Anopheles mosquito abundance. All five of the molecularly identified Anopheles species collected by HLCs, An. aconitus, An. barbirostris, An. peditaeniatus, An. vagus and An. tessellatus, are reported as vectors of malaria in Indonesia. The kelambu trap (n = 2736) collected significantly more Anopheles mosquitoes than indoor HLCs (n = 1286; Z = 3.193, P = 0.004), but not the outdoor HLCs (n = 1580; Z = 2.325, P = 0.053). All traps collected statistically similar abundances for the primary species, An. barbirostris. However, both comparison studies found significantly higher abundances for the kelambu trap for several secondary species compared to all other traps: An. nigerriumus, An. parangensis, An. tessellatus and An. vagus. The kelambu trap retained the highest species richness and Gini-Simpson’s diversity index for both comparison studies. CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrates that the kelambu trap collects overall Anopheles abundance and species-specific abundances at statistically similar or higher rates than HLCs in Sulawesi, Indonesia. Therefore, the kelambu trap should be considered as an exposure-free alternative to HLCs for research questions regarding Anopheles species in this malaria endemic region.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6693138
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2019
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-66931382019-08-16 Comparative field evaluation of kelambu traps, barrier screens and barrier screens with eaves for longitudinal surveillance of adult Anopheles mosquitoes in Sulawesi, Indonesia Davidson, Jenna R. Wahid, Isra Sudirman, Rusdiyah Makuru, Victoria Hasan, Hajar Arfah, Andi Muhammad Nur, Nirwana Hidayat, Muhammad Yusuf Hendershot, Allison L. Xiao, Honglin Yu, Xiaoyu Asih, Puji Budi Setia Syafruddin, Din Lobo, Neil F. Parasit Vectors Research BACKGROUND: Sampling methodologies for mosquitoes that are capable of transmitting vector-borne infectious diseases provide critical information on entomological endpoints. Reliable and meaningful field data is vital to the understanding of basic vector biology as well as disease transmission. Various traps take advantage of different vector behaviors and are inevitably subject to sampling biases. This study represents the first comparison of kelambu traps (KT) to barrier screens (BS), barrier screens with eaves (BSE) and indoor and outdoor human landing catches (HLCs). METHODS: Two trap comparison studies were undertaken. In the first study, mosquitoes were collected in Karama over 26 trapping nights to evaluate the kelambu trap relative to indoor and outdoor HLCs. In the second study, mosquitoes were collected in Karama over 12 trapping nights to compare the kelambu trap, barrier screen, barrier screen with eaves and outdoor HLCs. The kelambu trap, barrier screen and barrier screen with eaves obstruct the flight of mosquitos. HLCs target host-seeking behaviors. RESULTS: There was no significant difference between indoor and outdoor HLCs for overall Anopheles mosquito abundance. All five of the molecularly identified Anopheles species collected by HLCs, An. aconitus, An. barbirostris, An. peditaeniatus, An. vagus and An. tessellatus, are reported as vectors of malaria in Indonesia. The kelambu trap (n = 2736) collected significantly more Anopheles mosquitoes than indoor HLCs (n = 1286; Z = 3.193, P = 0.004), but not the outdoor HLCs (n = 1580; Z = 2.325, P = 0.053). All traps collected statistically similar abundances for the primary species, An. barbirostris. However, both comparison studies found significantly higher abundances for the kelambu trap for several secondary species compared to all other traps: An. nigerriumus, An. parangensis, An. tessellatus and An. vagus. The kelambu trap retained the highest species richness and Gini-Simpson’s diversity index for both comparison studies. CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrates that the kelambu trap collects overall Anopheles abundance and species-specific abundances at statistically similar or higher rates than HLCs in Sulawesi, Indonesia. Therefore, the kelambu trap should be considered as an exposure-free alternative to HLCs for research questions regarding Anopheles species in this malaria endemic region. BioMed Central 2019-08-13 /pmc/articles/PMC6693138/ /pubmed/31409374 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13071-019-3649-7 Text en © The Author(s) 2019 Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Research
Davidson, Jenna R.
Wahid, Isra
Sudirman, Rusdiyah
Makuru, Victoria
Hasan, Hajar
Arfah, Andi Muhammad
Nur, Nirwana
Hidayat, Muhammad Yusuf
Hendershot, Allison L.
Xiao, Honglin
Yu, Xiaoyu
Asih, Puji Budi Setia
Syafruddin, Din
Lobo, Neil F.
Comparative field evaluation of kelambu traps, barrier screens and barrier screens with eaves for longitudinal surveillance of adult Anopheles mosquitoes in Sulawesi, Indonesia
title Comparative field evaluation of kelambu traps, barrier screens and barrier screens with eaves for longitudinal surveillance of adult Anopheles mosquitoes in Sulawesi, Indonesia
title_full Comparative field evaluation of kelambu traps, barrier screens and barrier screens with eaves for longitudinal surveillance of adult Anopheles mosquitoes in Sulawesi, Indonesia
title_fullStr Comparative field evaluation of kelambu traps, barrier screens and barrier screens with eaves for longitudinal surveillance of adult Anopheles mosquitoes in Sulawesi, Indonesia
title_full_unstemmed Comparative field evaluation of kelambu traps, barrier screens and barrier screens with eaves for longitudinal surveillance of adult Anopheles mosquitoes in Sulawesi, Indonesia
title_short Comparative field evaluation of kelambu traps, barrier screens and barrier screens with eaves for longitudinal surveillance of adult Anopheles mosquitoes in Sulawesi, Indonesia
title_sort comparative field evaluation of kelambu traps, barrier screens and barrier screens with eaves for longitudinal surveillance of adult anopheles mosquitoes in sulawesi, indonesia
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6693138/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31409374
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13071-019-3649-7
work_keys_str_mv AT davidsonjennar comparativefieldevaluationofkelambutrapsbarrierscreensandbarrierscreenswitheavesforlongitudinalsurveillanceofadultanophelesmosquitoesinsulawesiindonesia
AT wahidisra comparativefieldevaluationofkelambutrapsbarrierscreensandbarrierscreenswitheavesforlongitudinalsurveillanceofadultanophelesmosquitoesinsulawesiindonesia
AT sudirmanrusdiyah comparativefieldevaluationofkelambutrapsbarrierscreensandbarrierscreenswitheavesforlongitudinalsurveillanceofadultanophelesmosquitoesinsulawesiindonesia
AT makuruvictoria comparativefieldevaluationofkelambutrapsbarrierscreensandbarrierscreenswitheavesforlongitudinalsurveillanceofadultanophelesmosquitoesinsulawesiindonesia
AT hasanhajar comparativefieldevaluationofkelambutrapsbarrierscreensandbarrierscreenswitheavesforlongitudinalsurveillanceofadultanophelesmosquitoesinsulawesiindonesia
AT arfahandimuhammad comparativefieldevaluationofkelambutrapsbarrierscreensandbarrierscreenswitheavesforlongitudinalsurveillanceofadultanophelesmosquitoesinsulawesiindonesia
AT nurnirwana comparativefieldevaluationofkelambutrapsbarrierscreensandbarrierscreenswitheavesforlongitudinalsurveillanceofadultanophelesmosquitoesinsulawesiindonesia
AT hidayatmuhammadyusuf comparativefieldevaluationofkelambutrapsbarrierscreensandbarrierscreenswitheavesforlongitudinalsurveillanceofadultanophelesmosquitoesinsulawesiindonesia
AT hendershotallisonl comparativefieldevaluationofkelambutrapsbarrierscreensandbarrierscreenswitheavesforlongitudinalsurveillanceofadultanophelesmosquitoesinsulawesiindonesia
AT xiaohonglin comparativefieldevaluationofkelambutrapsbarrierscreensandbarrierscreenswitheavesforlongitudinalsurveillanceofadultanophelesmosquitoesinsulawesiindonesia
AT yuxiaoyu comparativefieldevaluationofkelambutrapsbarrierscreensandbarrierscreenswitheavesforlongitudinalsurveillanceofadultanophelesmosquitoesinsulawesiindonesia
AT asihpujibudisetia comparativefieldevaluationofkelambutrapsbarrierscreensandbarrierscreenswitheavesforlongitudinalsurveillanceofadultanophelesmosquitoesinsulawesiindonesia
AT syafruddindin comparativefieldevaluationofkelambutrapsbarrierscreensandbarrierscreenswitheavesforlongitudinalsurveillanceofadultanophelesmosquitoesinsulawesiindonesia
AT loboneilf comparativefieldevaluationofkelambutrapsbarrierscreensandbarrierscreenswitheavesforlongitudinalsurveillanceofadultanophelesmosquitoesinsulawesiindonesia