Abstract

BackgroundThe Aedes aegypti mosquito is the primary vector for several diseases. Its control requires a better understanding of the mosquitoes’ live cycle, including the spatial dynamics. Several models address this issue. However, they rely on many hard to measure parameters. This work presents a model describing the spatial population dynamics of Aedes aegypti mosquitoes using partial differential equations (PDEs) relying on a few parameters.MethodsWe show how to estimate model parameter values from the experimental data found in the literature using concepts from dynamical systems, genetic algorithm optimization and partial differential equations. We show that our model reproduces some analytical formulas relating the carrying capacity coefficient to experimentally measurable quantities as the maximum number of mobile female mosquitoes, the maximum number of eggs, or the maximum number of larvae. As an application of the presented methodology, we replicate one field experiment numerically and investigate the effect of different frequencies in the insecticide application in the urban environment.ResultsThe numerical results suggest that the insecticide application has a limited impact on the mosquitoes population and that the optimal application frequency is close to one week.ConclusionsModels based on partial differential equations provide an efficient tool for simulating mosquitoes’ spatial population dynamics. The reduced model can reproduce such dynamics on a sufficiently large scale.

Highlights

  • The Aedes aegypti (Linnaeus, 1762) mosquito is the main vector that transmits Dengue, Zika, Chikungunya, and Yellow Fever [1]

  • The numerical results suggest that the insecticide application has a limited impact on the mosquitoes population and that the optimal application frequency is close to one week

  • We present how to obtain most of these parameters from experimental data available in the literature using concepts from dynamical systems, genetic algorithm optimization, and partial differential equations

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Summary

Introduction

The Aedes aegypti (Linnaeus, 1762) mosquito is the main vector that transmits Dengue, Zika, Chikungunya, and Yellow Fever [1]. Its control requires a better understanding of the mosquitoes’ live cycle, including the spatial dynamics. This work presents a model describing the spatial population dynamics of Aedes aegypti mosquitoes using partial differential equations (PDEs) relying on a few parameters. Ae. aegypti and Ae. albopictus dispersion in an endemic urban dengue area in southeastern Brazil was analyzed in [23]. They fed adult females on rubidium chlorideenriched blood (RbCl) [24] and measured the dispersal by detecting Rb-labeled eggs in ovitraps. As will be explained it allows us to consider a significant amount of mosquitoes (90% in the current approach) stay in a specific area while the outliers travel further

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