Abstract

The intensity of malaria transmission is measured by parous rate, daily survival rate, human blood meal frequency, sporozoite rate, and entomological inoculation rates. Female parous status is a key index of vector competence, adult vector longevity, recruitment rate of adult, and the length of a gonotrophic cycle. Hence, the present study was aimed to investigate the parous rate and the longevity of Anopheles mosquitoes in Bure District, Northwestern Ethiopia. Parous rate was estimated as the number of mosquitoes with parous ovaries divided by the number of females dissected multiplied by 100. Mosquito life expectancy (longevity as d) was estimated by. One way- ANOVA was applied to confirm the presence of parous rate difference in the villages (p < 0.05). A total of 952 unfed hosts-seeking Anopheles mosquitoes was dissected for parous rate determination. The overall parous rate of An. arabiensis in the district was 52.0%, and the highest parous rate was recorded in Shnebekuma than other villages (F 2, 33 = 6.974; p = 0.003). Similarly, the parous rate of An. cinereus showed significant variation among villages (F 2, 33 = 5.044, p = 0.012) and the highest rate (63.0%) was recorded in Bukta. The mean longevity of An. funestus, An. arabiensis, An. coustani, An. squamosus, An. pharoensis, and An. cinereus was 6.5 days, 4.6 days, 3.5 days, 3.7 days, 2.7 days, and 2.2 days, respectively. The longevity of each species was not sufficient to complete the life cycle of malaria parasite for malaria transmission throughout the year because P. falciparum requires from 12-14 day.

Highlights

  • Malaria disease is the leading health problem in Ethiopia [1, 2] because three-fourth (75%) of the total area of the country is malarious and more than two-third of the total population live below 2,000 m.a.s.l [3, 4]

  • The intensity of malaria transmission is measured by parous rates, daily survival rate, human blood meal frequency, sporozoite rate, and entomological inoculation rates [23,24,25,26]

  • The recorded mean monthly parous rate of An. arabiensis in our study indicates that this vector is not long lived and less efficient to transmit malaria, though Plasmodium infected An. arabiensis was obtained in the Bure district [46]

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Summary

Introduction

Malaria disease is the leading health problem in Ethiopia [1, 2] because three-fourth (75%) of the total area of the country is malarious and more than two-third (approximately 68%) of the total population live below 2,000 m.a.s.l [3, 4].

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