Abstract

BackgroundMalaria in The Gambia is highly seasonal, with transmission occurring as Anopheles gambiae s.l. populations expand during and immediately after a single annual rainy season that lasts from June to October. There has been very limited investigation of the ecology of vectors during the dry season, when numbers are very limited and distributions may be restricted.MethodsWeekly adult mosquito collections (pyrethrum spray, light trap, and search collections from rooms, as well as light trap collections from animal shelters, abandoned wells and grain stores), and artificial sentinel breeding site surveys were performed in four villages near the upper tidal and partially saline part of the Gambia River in the last four months of an annual dry season (March to June). Mosquito species were identified by morphological and DNA analysis, and ELISA assays were performed to test for Plasmodium falciparum sporozoites and human blood meal components.ResultsAdults of An. gambiae s.l. were collected throughout the period, numbers increasing towards the end of the dry season when humidity was increasing. Adult collections were dominated by An. melas (86%), with An. gambiae s.s. (10%) and An. arabiensis (3%) also present throughout. Most females collected in room search and spray collections contained blood meals, but most from light traps were unfed. None of the females tested (n = 1709) contained sporozoites. Larvae (mostly An. gambiae s.s.) were recovered from artificial sentinel breeding sites in the two villages that had freshwater pools. These two villages had the highest proportions of An. gambiae s.s. adults, and experienced the most substantial increase in proportions of An. gambiae s.s. after the onset of rains.ConclusionDuring the dry season population minimum, An. melas was the predominant vector species, but differences among villages in availability of fresh-water breeding sites correlate with egg laying activity and relative numbers of An. gambiae s.s. adults, and with the increase in this species immediately after the beginning of the rains. Local variation in dry season vector persistence is thus likely to influence spatial heterogeneity of transmission intensity in the early part of the rainy season.

Highlights

  • Malaria in The Gambia is highly seasonal, with transmission occurring as Anopheles gambiae s.l. populations expand during and immediately after a single annual rainy season that lasts from June to October

  • Malaria transmission in The Gambia occurs mainly within a few months of each year, due to a single rainy season from June to October which creates breeding sites for three members of the Anopheles gambiae complex (An. gambiae s.s. and An. arabiensis that breed in fresh water, and An. melas that breeds in partially saline water around the tidal part of the River Gambia and its tributaries) [1]

  • The nearby village of Dielmo is adjacent to a large freshwater breeding site that persists throughout the dry season, allowing An. gambiae, An. arabiensis, and Anopheles funestus to contribute to perennial transmission [8], a situation that has not been seen in any site in The Gambia

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Summary

Introduction

Malaria in The Gambia is highly seasonal, with transmission occurring as Anopheles gambiae s.l. populations expand during and immediately after a single annual rainy season that lasts from June to October. Malaria transmission in The Gambia occurs mainly within a few months of each year, due to a single rainy season from June to October which creates breeding sites for three members of the Anopheles gambiae complex (An. gambiae s.s. and An. arabiensis that breed in fresh water, and An. melas that breeds in partially saline water around the tidal part of the River Gambia and its tributaries) [1]. The nearby village of Dielmo is adjacent to a large freshwater breeding site that persists throughout the dry season, allowing An. gambiae, An. arabiensis, and Anopheles funestus to contribute to perennial transmission [8], a situation that has not been seen in any site in The Gambia. In surveys of Barkedji village in the drier Sahelian area of northern Senegal, An. arabiensis predominated and persisted longer than An. gambiae s.s. after the rains had terminated, but neither were found in the late dry season [9]

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