Cargando…

A cross-sectional observational study investigating the association between sedges (swamp grasses, Cyperaceae) and the prevalence of immature malaria vectors in aquatic habitats along the shore of Lake Victoria, western Kenya

Background: Strategies that involve manipulations of the odour-orientation of gravid malaria vectors could lead to novel attract-and-kill interventions. Recent work has highlighted the potential involvement of graminoid plants in luring vectors to oviposition sites. This study aimed to analyse the a...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Bokore, Getachew E., Ouma, Paul, Onyango, Patrick O., Bukhari, Tullu, Fillinger, Ulrike
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: F1000 Research Limited 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7551511/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33093949
http://dx.doi.org/10.12688/f1000research.25673.2
_version_ 1783593201411555328
author Bokore, Getachew E.
Ouma, Paul
Onyango, Patrick O.
Bukhari, Tullu
Fillinger, Ulrike
author_facet Bokore, Getachew E.
Ouma, Paul
Onyango, Patrick O.
Bukhari, Tullu
Fillinger, Ulrike
author_sort Bokore, Getachew E.
collection PubMed
description Background: Strategies that involve manipulations of the odour-orientation of gravid malaria vectors could lead to novel attract-and-kill interventions. Recent work has highlighted the potential involvement of graminoid plants in luring vectors to oviposition sites. This study aimed to analyse the association between water-indicating graminoid plants (Cyperaceae, sedges), other abiotic and biotic factors and the presence and abundance of early instar Anopheles larvae in aquatic habitats as a proxy indicator for oviposition. Methods: A cross-sectional survey of 110 aquatic habitats along the shores of Lake Victoria was done during the rainy season. Habitats were sampled for mosquito larvae using the sweep-net method and habitat characteristics recorded. Results: Anopheles arabiensis was the dominant species identified from aquatic habitats. Larvae of the secondary malaria vectors such as Anopheles coustani, An. rufipes and An. maculipalpis were found only in habitats covered with graminoids, whereas An. arabiensis, An. ziemanni and An. pharoensis were found in both habitats with and without graminoid plants. The hypothesis that sedges might be positively associated with the presence and abundance of early instar Anopheles larvae could not be confirmed. The dominant graminoid plants in the habitats were Panicum repens, Cynodon dactylon in the Poaceae family and Cyperus rotundus in the Cyperaceae family. All of these habitats supported abundant immature vector populations. The presence of early instar larvae was significantly and positively associated with swamp habitat types (OR=22, 95% CI=6-86, P<0.001) and abundance of late Anopheles larvae (OR=359, CI=33-3941, P<0.001), and negatively associated with the presence of tadpoles (OR=0.1, CI=0.0.01-0.5, P=0.008). Conclusions: Early instar malaria vectors were abundant in habitats densely vegetated with graminoid plants in the study area but no specific preference could be detected for any species or family. In search for oviposition cues, it might be useful to screen for chemical volatiles released from all dominant plant species.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-7551511
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2020
publisher F1000 Research Limited
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-75515112020-10-21 A cross-sectional observational study investigating the association between sedges (swamp grasses, Cyperaceae) and the prevalence of immature malaria vectors in aquatic habitats along the shore of Lake Victoria, western Kenya Bokore, Getachew E. Ouma, Paul Onyango, Patrick O. Bukhari, Tullu Fillinger, Ulrike F1000Res Research Article Background: Strategies that involve manipulations of the odour-orientation of gravid malaria vectors could lead to novel attract-and-kill interventions. Recent work has highlighted the potential involvement of graminoid plants in luring vectors to oviposition sites. This study aimed to analyse the association between water-indicating graminoid plants (Cyperaceae, sedges), other abiotic and biotic factors and the presence and abundance of early instar Anopheles larvae in aquatic habitats as a proxy indicator for oviposition. Methods: A cross-sectional survey of 110 aquatic habitats along the shores of Lake Victoria was done during the rainy season. Habitats were sampled for mosquito larvae using the sweep-net method and habitat characteristics recorded. Results: Anopheles arabiensis was the dominant species identified from aquatic habitats. Larvae of the secondary malaria vectors such as Anopheles coustani, An. rufipes and An. maculipalpis were found only in habitats covered with graminoids, whereas An. arabiensis, An. ziemanni and An. pharoensis were found in both habitats with and without graminoid plants. The hypothesis that sedges might be positively associated with the presence and abundance of early instar Anopheles larvae could not be confirmed. The dominant graminoid plants in the habitats were Panicum repens, Cynodon dactylon in the Poaceae family and Cyperus rotundus in the Cyperaceae family. All of these habitats supported abundant immature vector populations. The presence of early instar larvae was significantly and positively associated with swamp habitat types (OR=22, 95% CI=6-86, P<0.001) and abundance of late Anopheles larvae (OR=359, CI=33-3941, P<0.001), and negatively associated with the presence of tadpoles (OR=0.1, CI=0.0.01-0.5, P=0.008). Conclusions: Early instar malaria vectors were abundant in habitats densely vegetated with graminoid plants in the study area but no specific preference could be detected for any species or family. In search for oviposition cues, it might be useful to screen for chemical volatiles released from all dominant plant species. F1000 Research Limited 2020-10-01 /pmc/articles/PMC7551511/ /pubmed/33093949 http://dx.doi.org/10.12688/f1000research.25673.2 Text en Copyright: © 2020 Bokore GE et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Licence, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Bokore, Getachew E.
Ouma, Paul
Onyango, Patrick O.
Bukhari, Tullu
Fillinger, Ulrike
A cross-sectional observational study investigating the association between sedges (swamp grasses, Cyperaceae) and the prevalence of immature malaria vectors in aquatic habitats along the shore of Lake Victoria, western Kenya
title A cross-sectional observational study investigating the association between sedges (swamp grasses, Cyperaceae) and the prevalence of immature malaria vectors in aquatic habitats along the shore of Lake Victoria, western Kenya
title_full A cross-sectional observational study investigating the association between sedges (swamp grasses, Cyperaceae) and the prevalence of immature malaria vectors in aquatic habitats along the shore of Lake Victoria, western Kenya
title_fullStr A cross-sectional observational study investigating the association between sedges (swamp grasses, Cyperaceae) and the prevalence of immature malaria vectors in aquatic habitats along the shore of Lake Victoria, western Kenya
title_full_unstemmed A cross-sectional observational study investigating the association between sedges (swamp grasses, Cyperaceae) and the prevalence of immature malaria vectors in aquatic habitats along the shore of Lake Victoria, western Kenya
title_short A cross-sectional observational study investigating the association between sedges (swamp grasses, Cyperaceae) and the prevalence of immature malaria vectors in aquatic habitats along the shore of Lake Victoria, western Kenya
title_sort cross-sectional observational study investigating the association between sedges (swamp grasses, cyperaceae) and the prevalence of immature malaria vectors in aquatic habitats along the shore of lake victoria, western kenya
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7551511/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33093949
http://dx.doi.org/10.12688/f1000research.25673.2
work_keys_str_mv AT bokoregetachewe acrosssectionalobservationalstudyinvestigatingtheassociationbetweensedgesswampgrassescyperaceaeandtheprevalenceofimmaturemalariavectorsinaquatichabitatsalongtheshoreoflakevictoriawesternkenya
AT oumapaul acrosssectionalobservationalstudyinvestigatingtheassociationbetweensedgesswampgrassescyperaceaeandtheprevalenceofimmaturemalariavectorsinaquatichabitatsalongtheshoreoflakevictoriawesternkenya
AT onyangopatricko acrosssectionalobservationalstudyinvestigatingtheassociationbetweensedgesswampgrassescyperaceaeandtheprevalenceofimmaturemalariavectorsinaquatichabitatsalongtheshoreoflakevictoriawesternkenya
AT bukharitullu acrosssectionalobservationalstudyinvestigatingtheassociationbetweensedgesswampgrassescyperaceaeandtheprevalenceofimmaturemalariavectorsinaquatichabitatsalongtheshoreoflakevictoriawesternkenya
AT fillingerulrike acrosssectionalobservationalstudyinvestigatingtheassociationbetweensedgesswampgrassescyperaceaeandtheprevalenceofimmaturemalariavectorsinaquatichabitatsalongtheshoreoflakevictoriawesternkenya
AT bokoregetachewe crosssectionalobservationalstudyinvestigatingtheassociationbetweensedgesswampgrassescyperaceaeandtheprevalenceofimmaturemalariavectorsinaquatichabitatsalongtheshoreoflakevictoriawesternkenya
AT oumapaul crosssectionalobservationalstudyinvestigatingtheassociationbetweensedgesswampgrassescyperaceaeandtheprevalenceofimmaturemalariavectorsinaquatichabitatsalongtheshoreoflakevictoriawesternkenya
AT onyangopatricko crosssectionalobservationalstudyinvestigatingtheassociationbetweensedgesswampgrassescyperaceaeandtheprevalenceofimmaturemalariavectorsinaquatichabitatsalongtheshoreoflakevictoriawesternkenya
AT bukharitullu crosssectionalobservationalstudyinvestigatingtheassociationbetweensedgesswampgrassescyperaceaeandtheprevalenceofimmaturemalariavectorsinaquatichabitatsalongtheshoreoflakevictoriawesternkenya
AT fillingerulrike crosssectionalobservationalstudyinvestigatingtheassociationbetweensedgesswampgrassescyperaceaeandtheprevalenceofimmaturemalariavectorsinaquatichabitatsalongtheshoreoflakevictoriawesternkenya