Abstract

Background: Mosquito behaviours including the degree to which they bite inside houses or outside is a crucial determinant of human exposure to malaria. Whilst seasonality in mosquito vector abundance is well documented, much less is known about the impact of climate on mosquito behaviour. We investigated how variations in household microclimate affect outdoor-biting by malaria vectors, Anopheles arabiensis and Anopheles funestus. Methods: Mosquitoes were sampled indoors and outdoors weekly using human landing catches at eight households in four villages in south-eastern Tanzania, resulting in 616 trap-nights over 12 months. Daily temperature, relative humidity and rainfall were recorded. Generalized additive mixed models (GAMMs) were used to test associations between mosquito abundance and the microclimatic conditions. Generalized linear mixed models (GLMMs) were used to investigate the influence of microclimatic conditions on the tendency of vectors to bite outdoors (proportion of outdoor biting). Results: An. arabiensis abundance peaked during high rainfall months (February-May), whilst An. funestus density remained stable into the dry season (May-August) . Across the range of observed household temperatures, a rise of 1 ºC marginally increased nightly An. arabiensis abundance (~11%), but more prominently increased An. funestus abundance (~66%). The abundance of An. arabiensis and An. funestus showed strong positive associations with time-lagged rainfall (2-3 and 3-4 weeks before sampling). The degree of outdoor biting in An. arabiensis was significantly associated with the relative temperature difference between indoor and outdoor environments, with exophily increasing as temperature inside houses became relatively warmer. The exophily of An. funestus did not vary with temperature differences. Conclusions: This study demonstrates that malaria vector An. arabiensis shifts the location of its biting from indoors to outdoors in association with relative differences in microclimatic conditions. These environmental impacts could give rise to seasonal variation in mosquito biting behaviour and degree of protection provided by indoor-based vector control strategies.

Highlights

  • Malaria control is entering a crucial stage in sub-Saharan Africa, with significant investments and gains being made[1]

  • In many persistent malaria transmission settings, a considerable amount of transmission is potentially maintained by malaria vectors that predominantly bite outdoors[6], or are physiologically resistant to the insecticides used for Long-Lasting Insecticide Nets (LLINs) and IRS7

  • Of the An. gambiae s.l. samples tested by polymerase chain reaction (PCR), the majority were confirmed as An. arabiensis (99.9%), and only one mosquito was found to be An. quadriannulatus (0.1%)

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Summary

Introduction

Malaria control is entering a crucial stage in sub-Saharan Africa, with significant investments and gains being made[1]. For example Anopheles arabiensis and Anopheles funestus have been observed to bite early in the evening or early morning when people are outdoors and unprotected by LLINs or IRS8–11 Targeting these vectors of persistent transmission is one of the steps towards malaria elimination. Conclusions: This study demonstrates that malaria vector An. arabiensis shifts the location of its biting from indoors to outdoors in association with relative differences in microclimatic conditions. These environmental impacts could give rise to seasonal variation in mosquito biting behaviour and degree of protection provided by indoor-based vector control strategies

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