Abstract

BackgroundMalaria remains a pervasive public health problem in sub-Saharan West Africa. Here mosquito vector populations were explored across four sites in Mali and the Republic of Guinea (Guinea Conakry). The study samples the major ecological zones of malaria-endemic regions in West Africa within a relatively small distance.MethodsMosquito vectors were sampled from larval pools, adult indoor resting sites, and indoor and outdoor human-host seeking adults. Mosquitoes were collected at sites spanning 350 km that represented arid savannah, humid savannah, semi-forest and deep forest ecological zones, in areas where little was previously known about malaria vector populations. 1425 mosquito samples were analysed by molecular assays to determine species, genetic attributes, blood meal sources and Plasmodium infection status.ResultsAnopheles gambiae and Anopheles coluzzii were the major anophelines represented in all collections across the ecological zones, with A. coluzzii predominant in the arid savannah and A. gambiae in the more humid sites. The use of multiple collection methodologies across the sampling sites allows assessment of potential collection bias of the different methods. The L1014F kdr insecticide resistance mutation (kdr-w) is found at high frequency across all study sites. This mutation appears to have swept almost to fixation, from low frequencies 6 years earlier, despite the absence of widespread insecticide use for vector control. Rates of human feeding are very high across ecological zones, with only small fractions of animal derived blood meals in the arid and humid savannah. About 30 % of freshly blood-fed mosquitoes were positive for Plasmodium falciparum presence, while the rate of mosquitoes with established infections was an order of magnitude lower.ConclusionsThe study represents detailed vector characterization from an understudied area in West Africa with endemic malaria transmission. The deep forest study site includes the epicenter of the 2014 Ebola virus epidemic. With new malaria control interventions planned in Guinea, these data provide a baseline measure and an opportunity to assess the outcome of future interventions.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12936-016-1242-5) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Malaria remains a pervasive public health problem in sub-Saharan West Africa

  • Malaria control and surveillance were neglected during the Ebola epidemic, and resurgence of malaria transmission and other public health problems are expected as a result [7,8,9]

  • Study sites were located in the following ecological zones: arid savannah, humid savannah (Toumani Oulena), semi-forest (Koraboh), and deep forest (Koundara)

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Summary

Introduction

Malaria remains a pervasive public health problem in sub-Saharan West Africa. Mosquito vector populations were explored across four sites in Mali and the Republic of Guinea (Guinea Conakry). Malaria remains a prominent public health and financial burden across much of sub-Saharan African. Malaria intervention histories vary widely across Africa, and the Republic of Guinea (Guinea Conakry) has been relatively devoid of large-scale national malaria control efforts. Guinea was the presumed site of emergence of Ebola virus from an animal reservoir that led to the 2014 West African epidemic [5, 6]. Malaria control and surveillance were neglected during the Ebola epidemic, and resurgence of malaria transmission and other public health problems are expected as a result [7,8,9]

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