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Eliminating malaria vectors
- Source :
- Parasites & Vectors, Parasites & Vectors; Vol 6
- Publication Year :
- 2013
-
Abstract
- Malaria vectors which predominantly feed indoors upon humans have been locally eliminated from several settings with insecticide treated nets (ITNs), indoor residual spraying or larval source management. Recent dramatic declines of An. gambiae in east Africa with imperfect ITN coverage suggest mosquito populations can rapidly collapse when forced below realistically achievable, non-zero thresholds of density and supporting resource availability. Here we explain why insecticide-based mosquito elimination strategies are feasible, desirable and can be extended to a wider variety of species by expanding the vector control arsenal to cover a broader spectrum of the resources they need to survive. The greatest advantage of eliminating mosquitoes, rather than merely controlling them, is that this precludes local selection for behavioural or physiological resistance traits. The greatest challenges are therefore to achieve high biological coverage of targeted resources rapidly enough to prevent local emergence of resistance and to then continually exclude, monitor for and respond to re-invasion from external populations.
- Subjects :
- Insecticides
Plasmodium
Resource (biology)
Mosquito Control
qw_700
Natural resource economics
Elimination
030231 tropical medicine
Local selection
Resistance
Indoor residual spraying
Review
wa_110
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
Mosquito
qx_600
parasitic diseases
Control
Anopheles
East africa
Humans
Behaviour
Malaria vector
Insecticide treated nets
030304 developmental biology
Eradication
0303 health sciences
Resistance (ecology)
biology
Ecology
wa_240
biology.organism_classification
Vector control
wc_750
3. Good health
Malaria
Infectious Diseases
qx_650
qx_510
qx_135
Africa
Parasitology
qx_515
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 17563305
- Volume :
- 6
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Parasitesvectors
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....bd6d71243968dd21ee7be26b73805c2a