Litcius/Paper detail

Outdoor malaria vector species profile in dryland ecosystems of Kenya

Fiona Kinya, Clifford M. Mutero, Rosemary Sang, Eunice Owino, Gilbert Rotich, Edwin O. Ogola, Charles S. Wondji, Baldwyn Torto, David P. Tchouassi

2022Scientific Reports30 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Outdoor biting by anopheline mosquitoes is one of the contributors to residual malaria transmission, but the profile of vectors driving this phenomenon is not well understood. Here, we studied the bionomics and genetically characterized populations of An. gambiae and An. funestus complexes trapped outdoors in three selected dryland areas including Kerio Valley, Nguruman and Rabai in Kenya. We observed a higher abundance of Anopheles funestus group members (n = 639, 90.6%) compared to those of the An. gambiae complex (n = 66, 9.4%) with An. longipalpis C as the dominant vector species with a Plasmodium falciparum sporozoite rate (Pfsp) of 5.2% (19/362). The known malaria vectors including An. funestus s.s. (8.7%, 2/23), An. gambiae (14.3%, 2/14), An. rivulorum (14.1%, 9/64), An. arabiensis (1.9%, 1/52) occurred in low densities and displayed high Pfsp rates, which varied with the site. Additionally, six cryptic species found associated with the An. funestus group harbored Pf sporozoites (cumulative Pfsp rate = 7.2%, 13/181). We detected low frequency of resistant 119F-GSTe2 alleles in An. funestus s.s. (15.6%) and An. longipalpis C (3.1%) in Kerio Valley only. Evidence of outdoor activity, emergence of novel and divergent vectors and detection of mutations conferring metabolic resistance to pyrethroid/DDT could contribute to residual malaria transmission posing a threat to effective malaria control.

Topics & Concepts

MalariaAnopheles gambiaeBiologyVector (molecular biology)Plasmodium falciparumPyrethroidIndoor residual sprayingEcologyAnophelesAbundance (ecology)Veterinary medicineZoologyGeneticsPesticideImmunologyRecombinant DNAGeneMedicineArtemisininMalaria Research and ControlMosquito-borne diseases and controlParasite Biology and Host Interactions