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Malaria vector feeding, peak biting time and resting place preference behaviors in line with Indoor based intervention tools and its implication: scenario from selected sentinel sites of Ethiopia

In Ethiopia, malaria incidence has significantly reduced in the past decade through the combined use of conventional vector control approaches and treatment using antimalarial drugs. However, the sustainability of this achievement is threatened by the shift in biting and resting behaviors and emerge...

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Autores principales: Bedasso, Alemnesh Hailemariam, Gutto, Abebe Asale, Waldetensai, Abate, Eukubay, Araya, Bokore, Getachew Eticha, Kinde, Solomon, Gemechu, Fekadu, Debebe, Yared, Aklilu, Mesfin, Tasew, Geremew, Massebo, Fekadu, Teshome, Abebe, Kebede, Tilahun, Abdulatif, Bedri, Sisay, Achamyelesh, Solomon, Hiwot, Kweka, Eliningaya J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9791363/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36578426
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2022.e12178
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author Bedasso, Alemnesh Hailemariam
Gutto, Abebe Asale
Waldetensai, Abate
Eukubay, Araya
Bokore, Getachew Eticha
Kinde, Solomon
Gemechu, Fekadu
Debebe, Yared
Aklilu, Mesfin
Tasew, Geremew
Massebo, Fekadu
Teshome, Abebe
Kebede, Tilahun
Abdulatif, Bedri
Sisay, Achamyelesh
Solomon, Hiwot
Kweka, Eliningaya J.
author_facet Bedasso, Alemnesh Hailemariam
Gutto, Abebe Asale
Waldetensai, Abate
Eukubay, Araya
Bokore, Getachew Eticha
Kinde, Solomon
Gemechu, Fekadu
Debebe, Yared
Aklilu, Mesfin
Tasew, Geremew
Massebo, Fekadu
Teshome, Abebe
Kebede, Tilahun
Abdulatif, Bedri
Sisay, Achamyelesh
Solomon, Hiwot
Kweka, Eliningaya J.
author_sort Bedasso, Alemnesh Hailemariam
collection PubMed
description In Ethiopia, malaria incidence has significantly reduced in the past decade through the combined use of conventional vector control approaches and treatment using antimalarial drugs. However, the sustainability of this achievement is threatened by the shift in biting and resting behaviors and emergence of insecticide resistance by the primary malaria vector. Therefore, continuous monitoring of the behaviour of malaria mosquitoes in different sentinel sites is crucial to design effective prevention and control methods in the local context. Entomological investigations were conducted in three sentinel sites for five consecutive months during the major malaria transmission season. The species composition, population dynamics, biting and resting behaviours of malaria vectors were determined using center for disease control and prevention (CDC) light trap, human landing catch (HLC), pyrethrum spray catch (PSC) and Pitfall shelter collection (PFS). Accordingly, 10 households for CDC, 10 households for PSC, 10 households for PFS and 5 households for HLC from each site were randomly enrolled for mosquito collection. A total of 8,297 anopheline mosquitoes were collected from the three sites, out of which 4,525 (54.5 %) were An. gambiae, s.l. 2,028 (24.4 %) were An. pharoensis, 160 (1.9 %) were An. funestus and the rest 1,584 (19 %) were other anophelines (An. coustani, An. cinerus and An. tenebrosus). No significant variation (P = 0.476) was observed between indoor (25.2/trap-night and outdoor collections (20.1/trap-night). Six hundred seventy six (43.3%) of An. gambiae s.l. (primary vector) were collected between 18:00 and 22:00 h. Biting activity declined between 00:00 and 02:00 h. The national malaria control program should pay close attention to the shifting behavior of vector mosquitoes as the observed outdoor feeding tendency of the vector population could pose challenges to the indoor intervention tools IRS and LLINs.
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spelling pubmed-97913632022-12-27 Malaria vector feeding, peak biting time and resting place preference behaviors in line with Indoor based intervention tools and its implication: scenario from selected sentinel sites of Ethiopia Bedasso, Alemnesh Hailemariam Gutto, Abebe Asale Waldetensai, Abate Eukubay, Araya Bokore, Getachew Eticha Kinde, Solomon Gemechu, Fekadu Debebe, Yared Aklilu, Mesfin Tasew, Geremew Massebo, Fekadu Teshome, Abebe Kebede, Tilahun Abdulatif, Bedri Sisay, Achamyelesh Solomon, Hiwot Kweka, Eliningaya J. Heliyon Research Article In Ethiopia, malaria incidence has significantly reduced in the past decade through the combined use of conventional vector control approaches and treatment using antimalarial drugs. However, the sustainability of this achievement is threatened by the shift in biting and resting behaviors and emergence of insecticide resistance by the primary malaria vector. Therefore, continuous monitoring of the behaviour of malaria mosquitoes in different sentinel sites is crucial to design effective prevention and control methods in the local context. Entomological investigations were conducted in three sentinel sites for five consecutive months during the major malaria transmission season. The species composition, population dynamics, biting and resting behaviours of malaria vectors were determined using center for disease control and prevention (CDC) light trap, human landing catch (HLC), pyrethrum spray catch (PSC) and Pitfall shelter collection (PFS). Accordingly, 10 households for CDC, 10 households for PSC, 10 households for PFS and 5 households for HLC from each site were randomly enrolled for mosquito collection. A total of 8,297 anopheline mosquitoes were collected from the three sites, out of which 4,525 (54.5 %) were An. gambiae, s.l. 2,028 (24.4 %) were An. pharoensis, 160 (1.9 %) were An. funestus and the rest 1,584 (19 %) were other anophelines (An. coustani, An. cinerus and An. tenebrosus). No significant variation (P = 0.476) was observed between indoor (25.2/trap-night and outdoor collections (20.1/trap-night). Six hundred seventy six (43.3%) of An. gambiae s.l. (primary vector) were collected between 18:00 and 22:00 h. Biting activity declined between 00:00 and 02:00 h. The national malaria control program should pay close attention to the shifting behavior of vector mosquitoes as the observed outdoor feeding tendency of the vector population could pose challenges to the indoor intervention tools IRS and LLINs. Elsevier 2022-12-08 /pmc/articles/PMC9791363/ /pubmed/36578426 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2022.e12178 Text en © 2022 The Author(s) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Research Article
Bedasso, Alemnesh Hailemariam
Gutto, Abebe Asale
Waldetensai, Abate
Eukubay, Araya
Bokore, Getachew Eticha
Kinde, Solomon
Gemechu, Fekadu
Debebe, Yared
Aklilu, Mesfin
Tasew, Geremew
Massebo, Fekadu
Teshome, Abebe
Kebede, Tilahun
Abdulatif, Bedri
Sisay, Achamyelesh
Solomon, Hiwot
Kweka, Eliningaya J.
Malaria vector feeding, peak biting time and resting place preference behaviors in line with Indoor based intervention tools and its implication: scenario from selected sentinel sites of Ethiopia
title Malaria vector feeding, peak biting time and resting place preference behaviors in line with Indoor based intervention tools and its implication: scenario from selected sentinel sites of Ethiopia
title_full Malaria vector feeding, peak biting time and resting place preference behaviors in line with Indoor based intervention tools and its implication: scenario from selected sentinel sites of Ethiopia
title_fullStr Malaria vector feeding, peak biting time and resting place preference behaviors in line with Indoor based intervention tools and its implication: scenario from selected sentinel sites of Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed Malaria vector feeding, peak biting time and resting place preference behaviors in line with Indoor based intervention tools and its implication: scenario from selected sentinel sites of Ethiopia
title_short Malaria vector feeding, peak biting time and resting place preference behaviors in line with Indoor based intervention tools and its implication: scenario from selected sentinel sites of Ethiopia
title_sort malaria vector feeding, peak biting time and resting place preference behaviors in line with indoor based intervention tools and its implication: scenario from selected sentinel sites of ethiopia
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9791363/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36578426
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2022.e12178
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