Abstract

BackgroundMosquito habitat-association studies are an important basis for disease control programmes and/or vector distribution models. However, studies do not explicitly account for incomplete detection during larval presence and abundance surveys, with potential for significant biases because of environmental influences on larval behaviour and sampling efficiency.MethodsData were used from a dip-sampling study for Anopheles larvae in Ethiopia to evaluate the effect of six factors previously associated with larval sampling (riparian vegetation, direct sunshine, algae, water depth, pH and temperature) on larval presence and detectability. Comparisons were made between: (i) a presence-absence logistic regression where samples were pooled at the site level and detectability ignored, (ii) a success versus trials binomial model, and (iii) a presence-detection mixture model that separately estimated presence and detection, and fitted different explanatory variables to these estimations.ResultsRiparian vegetation was consistently highlighted as important, strongly suggesting it explains larval presence (−). However, depending on how larval detectability was estimated, the other factors showed large variations in their statistical importance. The presence-detection mixture model provided strong evidence that larval detectability was influenced by sunshine and water temperature (+), with weaker evidence for algae (+) and water depth (−). For larval presence, there was also some evidence that water depth (−) and pH (+) influenced site occupation. The number of dip-samples needed to determine if larvae were likely present at a site was condition dependent: with sunshine and warm water requiring only two dips, while cooler water and cloud cover required 11.ConclusionsEnvironmental factors influence true larval presence and larval detectability differentially when sampling in field conditions. Researchers need to be more aware of the limitations and possible biases in different analytical approaches used to associate larval presence or abundance with local environmental conditions. These effects can be disentangled using data that are routinely collected (i.e., multiple dip samples at each site) by employing a modelling approach that separates presence from detectability.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12936-016-1308-4) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Mosquito habitat-association studies are an important basis for disease control programmes and/or vector distribution models

  • Habitat association studies have linked Anopheles mosquito larval presence or abundance to a suite of environmental factors related to the water body, such as depth [6,7,8], temperature [7, 9], algae [8, 10, 11], riparian vegetation and shading [1, 5, 10]

  • For the presence–absence model, there was strong evidence that riparian vegetation had a negative effect on larval presence (−) (Table 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Mosquito habitat-association studies are an important basis for disease control programmes and/or vector distribution models. Habitat association studies have linked Anopheles mosquito larval presence or abundance to a suite of environmental factors related to the water body, such as depth [6,7,8], temperature [7, 9], algae [8, 10, 11], riparian vegetation and shading [1, 5, 10]. Despite this there is still uncertainty regarding the importance of some factors because of the between-study variation in these patterns. How these and other factors translate into the probability of larvae being sampled, and the subsequent impact on the results of habitatassociation studies, has never been explored

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