1. Drastic reduction of populations ofSimulium sirbanum(Diptera: Simuliidae) in central Sierra Leone after 5 years of larviciding operations by the Onchocerciasis Control Programme
- Author
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D. Quillevere, Pierre Guillet, A. Akpoboua, Jean-Marc Hougard, A. P. P. Sib, K. Doucouré, Yiriba Bissan, C. Back, I. Sesay, P. Poudiougo, and Y. Coulibaly
- Subjects
Wet season ,Time Factors ,030231 tropical medicine ,Simulium sirbanum ,Onchocerciasis ,Insect Control ,Population density ,World health ,Sierra Leone ,Sierra leone ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,030225 pediatrics ,parasitic diseases ,Dry season ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Simuliidae ,Ivermectin ,Ecology ,medicine.disease ,Insect Vectors ,Infectious Diseases ,Geography ,Larva ,Vector (epidemiology) ,Female ,Parasitology - Abstract
The major vectors of the blinding form of human onchocerciasis in West Africa are two blackfly species, Simulium sirbanum and Simulium damnosum s.s. (Diptera: Simuliidae), identified at the adult stage as the 'savanna group' of the Simulium damnosum complex. In 1988, in the central part of Sierra Leone, the average daily biting rate (females/man/day) by savanna blackflies (mostly S. sirbanum) during the peak of the dry season (April-May) was 59.9, making up 69.1% of total captures on average. There was evidence of a strong long-range immigration of adult females of S. sirbanum through eastern Guinea in the dry season, with a reverse movement towards Guinea in the rainy season. Therefore, in 1989, the World Health Organization's Onchocerciasis Control Programme (OCP) extended its vector control operations from central West Africa to rivers of central and northern Sierra Leone, and to rivers of eastern Guinea. Four years of efficient larviciding drastically reduced adult populations of S. sirbanum in Sierra Leone. In the peak of the dry seasons of 1993 and 1994, the average biting rate by savanna blackflies in central Sierra Leone had dropped to 1.0, making up only 4.3% of total captures on average. Yearly biting rates by S. sirbanum in central Sierra Leone were therefore reduced to 2% of their pre-intervention levels. Based on larval samples, the S. sirbanum has been replaced by two forest species, S. leonense in the south and S. squamosum in the north. Since 1992, it has been possible to calculate accurate transmission rates for blinding onchocerciasis, based on DNA-probe identifications. From 1993, the risk of transmission has not only been reduced by vector control but also by mass distribution of ivermectin to rural communities. In terms of control strategy, the authors conclude that larviciding operations could be alleviated in central Sierra Leone without increasing the risk of blinding onchocerciasis transmission, as long as the migration of S. sirbanum through eastern Guinea and northern Sierra Leone is prevented.
- Published
- 1995