Abstract

BackgroundUnderstanding how mosquitoes respond to long lasting insecticide treated nets (LLINs) is fundamental to sustaining the effectiveness of this essential control tool. We report on studies with a tracking system to investigate behaviour of wild anophelines at an LLIN, in an experimental hut at a rural site in Mwanza, Tanzania.MethodsGroups of adult female mosquitoes (n = 10 per replicate) reared from larvae of a local population, identified as predominantly (95%) Anopheles arabiensis, were released in the hut. An infrared video tracking system recorded flight and net contact activity over 1 h as the mosquitoes attempted to reach a supine human volunteer within a bed net (either a deltamethrin-treated LLIN or an untreated control net). A range of activities, including flight path, position in relation to the bed net and duration of net contact, were quantified and compared between treatments.ResultsThe total time that female An. arabiensis spent in flight around LLINs was significantly lower than at untreated nets [F(1,10) = 9.26, p = 0.012], primarily due to a substantial reduction in the time mosquitoes spent in persistent ‘bouncing’ flight [F(1,10) = 18.48, p = 0.002]. Most activity occurred at the net roof but significantly less so with LLINs (56.8% of total) than untreated nets [85.0%; Χ2 (15) = 234.69, p < 0.001]. Activity levels at the bed net directly above the host torso were significantly higher with untreated nets (74.2%) than LLINs [38.4%; Χ2 (15) = 33.54, p = 0.004]. ‘Visiting’ and ‘bouncing’ rates were highest above the volunteer’s chest in untreated nets (39.9 and 50.4%, respectively) and LLINs [29.9 and 42.4%; Χ2 (13) = 89.91, p < 0.001; Χ2 (9) = 45.73, p < 0.001]. Highest resting rates were above the torso in untreated nets [77%; Χ2 (9) = 63.12, p < 0.001], but in LLINs only 33.2% of resting occurred here [Χ2 (9) = 27.59, p = 0.001], with resting times spread between the short vertical side of the net adjacent to the volunteer’s head (21.8%) and feet (16.2%). Duration of net contact by a single mosquito was estimated at 204–290 s on untreated nets and 46–82 s on LLINs. While latency to net contact was similar in both treatments, the reduction in activity over 60 min was significantly more rapid for LLINs [F(1,10) = 6.81, p = 0.026], reiterating an ‘attract and kill’ rather than a repellent mode of action.ConclusionsThe study has demonstrated the potential for detailed investigations of behaviour of wild mosquito populations under field conditions. The results validate the findings of earlier laboratory studies on mosquito activity at LLINs, and reinforce the key role of multiple brief contacts at the net roof as the critical LLIN mode of action.

Highlights

  • Understanding how mosquitoes respond to long lasting insecticide treated nets (LLINs) is fundamental to sustaining the effectiveness of this essential control tool

  • The effectiveness of long lasting insecticide-treated nets (LLINs) in malaria prevention [1], and their contribution to reductions in malaria incidence and morbidity in Africa [2], underscore their central role in current and planned malaria prevention and elimination programmes [3,4,5]. Even as such achievements are being reported, the future of LLINs is under threat from behavioural and physiological changes in mosquito populations; behavioural resistance, such as shifts to feeding outdoors or on animals, could reduce mosquito exposure to LLINs, and the emergence and rapid spread of resistance to the pyrethroid insecticides used on LLINs could decrease the impact of nets [6,7,8]

  • Behaviour at LLINs was similar to untreated nets inasmuch as insecticide treatment did not repel mosquitoes prior to net contact, the duration of contact was significantly lower at the LLIN

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Summary

Introduction

Understanding how mosquitoes respond to long lasting insecticide treated nets (LLINs) is fundamental to sustaining the effectiveness of this essential control tool. The effectiveness of long lasting insecticide-treated nets (LLINs) in malaria prevention [1], and their contribution to reductions in malaria incidence and morbidity in Africa [2], underscore their central role in current and planned malaria prevention and elimination programmes [3,4,5] Even as such achievements are being reported, the future of LLINs is under threat from behavioural and physiological changes in mosquito populations; behavioural resistance, such as shifts to feeding outdoors or on animals, could reduce mosquito exposure to LLINs, and the emergence and rapid spread of resistance to the pyrethroid insecticides used on LLINs could decrease the impact of nets [6,7,8].

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