Catalogue Search | MBRL
Search Results Heading
Explore the vast range of titles available.
MBRLSearchResults
-
DisciplineDiscipline
-
Is Peer ReviewedIs Peer Reviewed
-
Item TypeItem Type
-
SubjectSubject
-
YearFrom:-To:
-
More FiltersMore FiltersSourceLanguage
Done
Filters
Reset
8
result(s) for
"Beisel, Uli"
Sort by:
Fine-scale heterogeneity and local amplification of West Nile virus in urban environments in Berlin
by
Voigt, Katrin
,
Ebers, Sophia
,
Patzina-Mehling, Corinna
in
45/77
,
631/158/858
,
631/326/596/1879
2026
Climate change can intensify mosquito-borne disease risks through rising temperatures and more frequent extreme weather events. To mitigate effects of climate change, cities are adopting nature-based solutions, such as urban greening and rainwater management, yet their implications for vector-borne diseases and host community composition remain poorly understood. West Nile virus (WNV), an emerging mosquito-borne human pathogen in Europe, is primarily transmitted between birds and mosquitoes. Using mosquito sampling at five sites within a one-square-kilometre area in Berlin, Germany, we examined how urban land cover, including climate-resilient infrastructure, influences local WNV amplification over two mosquito seasons in 2023 and 2024. We found seasonal WNV infection rates of up to 4.8% in mosquitoes and identified fine-scale heterogeneity in infection risk. Residential areas and cemeteries exhibited the highest minimum infection rates per month (up to 15 and 21, respectively), whereas natural conversation and sponge city sites showed significantly lower rates (up to 4 and 13, respectively). These patterns were not explained by mosquito abundance or species composition but by habitat characteristics and avian host community structure. Our findings reveal that urban land cover shapes WNV infection risk and suggest that incorporating biodiversity restoration into nature-based solutions may serve as strategy for sustainable climate-resilient urban planning.
Mosquito-borne infections such as West Nile Virus are emerging in Europe. Here, the authors investigate how West Nile Virus infection rates in mosquitoes vary in different urban environments in Berlin.
Journal Article
Risk of Aedes-borne diseases in and around the Tanzanian seaport of Tanga despite community members being more concerned about malaria
by
Ngowo, Halfan S.
,
Okumu, Fredros O.
,
Msaky, Dickson S.
in
Aedes
,
Aedes - physiology
,
Aedes aegypti
2024
Background
Increased global trade, while beneficial economically, can also increase the spread of vector-borne diseases, particularly those transmitted by
Aedes
mosquitoes spreading via trade routes. Given the heightened trade-induced activity at ports of entry, it is particularly crucial to assess the risk of mosquito-borne diseases in these settings. This study compared the risks of
Aedes
-borne disease in and around the eastern Tanzanian seaport of Tanga.
Methods
A 200 m × 200 m grid-based system was used to sample mosquitoes within the port area, and in surrounding areas at 2 km, 2.5 km, and 5 km away, between June and December 2023. We characterized mosquito breeding habitats, collected mosquito larvae using standard dippers and tested susceptibility of raised adult
Aedes aegypti
populations to different insecticides. Adult mosquitoes were collected using BG sentinel traps (daytime) and Centers for Disease Control (CDC) light traps (night-time). Additionally, more than 200 port users and neighboring residents were surveyed to assess their experiences with and perceptions of mosquito biting and disease risks.
Results
There were 2931 breeding sites, with (60.8%,
n
= 1782) positive for
Aedes
larvae. The percentage of water-holding containers infested with
Aedes
immatures, i.e., the container index (CI), was highest in the port area (66.2%), and lowest 5 km away (44.6%). The port area also had a greater proportion of temporary breeding sites (64.9%) than did the surrounding areas. The adult mosquito surveys revealed 20,449 mosquito species including:
Culex quinquefasciatus
(56.2%),
Mansonia uniformis
(38.6%),
Ae. aegypti
(5.1%),
Anopheles gambiae
(0.1%), and
Anopheles funestus
.
Ae. aegypti
were more abundant in the port area than in the surrounding areas (
P
< 0.001), whereas
Culex
sp., and
Mansonia
sp., were significantly outside (
P
< 0.001). Adult
Anopheles
sp., were found only in the port area, but
Anopheles
larvae were found both within and outside the port areas. Tests on
Ae. aegypti
sp., revealed susceptibility to bendiocarb and DDT, and resistance to permethrin. Awareness of mosquito-borne diseases among respondents was high for malaria (64.8%), but low for dengue (26.3%) and Chikungunya (1.7%). Most respondents reported being bothered by mosquitoes mostly at night (53.4%) or in the evening (40.7%). In addition to insecticidal bednets, which are used primarily against malaria, preventive measures for
Aedes
-borne diseases are limited.
Conclusions
This study identified significant potential risk of
Aedes species
, specifically
Ae. aegypti
sp., and associated diseases, but low perception of risk and inadequate personal protection measures in the study area. This low perception of risk highlights the need to improve public knowledge of the transmission and control of
Aedes
-borne diseases.
Graphical Abstract
Journal Article
Engaging scientists: An online survey exploring the experience of innovative biotechnological approaches to controlling vector-borne diseases
by
Reeves, R. Guy
,
Césard, Nicolas
,
Reis Castro, Luísa
in
arthropods
,
Awareness
,
Biomedical and Life Sciences
2015
:
Background
Pioneering technologies (e.g., nanotechnology, synthetic biology or climate engineering) are often associated with potential new risks and uncertainties that can become sources of controversy. The communication of information during their development and open exchanges between stakeholders is generally considered a key issue in their acceptance. While the attitudes of the public to novel technologies have been widely considered there has been relatively little investigation of the perceptions and awareness of scientists working on human or animal diseases transmitted by arthropods.
Methods
Consequently, we conducted a global survey on 1889 scientists working on aspects of vector-borne diseases, exploring, under the light of a variety of demographic and professional factors, their knowledge and awareness of an emerging biotechnology that has the potential to revolutionize the control of pest insect populations.
Results
Despite extensive media coverage of key developments (including releases of manipulated mosquitoes into human communities) this has in only one instance resulted in scientist awareness exceeding 50 % on a national or regional scale. We document that awareness of pioneering releases significantly relied on private communication sources that were not equally accessible to scientists from countries with endemic vector-borne diseases (dengue and malaria). In addition, we provide quantitative analysis of the perceptions and knowledge of specific biotechnological approaches to controlling vector-borne disease, which are likely to impact the way in which scientists around the world engage in the debate about their value.
Conclusions
Our results indicate that there is scope to strengthen already effective methods of communication, in addition to a strong demand by scientists (expressed by 79.9 % of respondents) to develop new, creative modes of public engagement.
Journal Article
The complexities of simple technologies: re-imagining the role of rapid diagnostic tests in malaria control efforts
by
Umlauf, René
,
Chandler, Clare I. R.
,
Hutchinson, Eleanor
in
Biomedical and Life Sciences
,
Biomedicine
,
Diagnosis
2016
Background
Malaria rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs) are assumed to be simple-to-use and mobile technologies that have the capacity to standardize parasitological diagnosis for malaria across a variety of clinical settings. In order to evaluate these tests, it is important to consider how such assumptions play out in practice, in everyday settings of clinics, health centres, drug stores and for community health volunteers.
Methods
This paper draws on qualitative research on RDTs conducted over the last nine years. In particular the study reports on four qualitative case studies on the use of RDTs from Uganda, Tanzania and Sierra Leone, including qualitative interviews, focus group discussions and participant observation.
Results
Results suggest that while RDTs may be simple to use as stand-alone technological tools, it is not trivial to make them work effectively in a variety of economically pressured health care settings. The studies show that to perform RDTs effectively might very well need exactly the infrastructure they were designed to substitute: the medical expertise, organizational capacity and diagnostic and treatment options of well-funded and functioning health systems.
Conclusions
These results underline that successful malaria diagnosis and treatment requires as much investment in general health infrastructure as it does in new technologies.
Journal Article
Neglected malarias: The frontlines and back alleys of global health
2011
Among the public health community, ‘all except malaria’ is often shorthand for neglected tropical diseases. The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation's
cause célèbre
, malaria receives a tremendous amount of funding, as well as scientific and policy attention. Malaria has, however, divergent biological, behavioural and socio-political guises; it is multiply implicated in the environments we inhabit and in the ways in which we inhabit them. The malaria that focuses our attention crops up in the back alleys of Dar es Salaam, brought into being by local labour and municipal governance – a version of malaria that, we argue, is increasingly excluded in current eradication campaigns. This article considers the cycles of public health amnesia, memory and neglect that construe the parasitological exchange between man and mosquito. It begins by exploring the political concerns and technical capacities that have transformed malaria into a global enemy. Combining these historical accounts with ethnographic material, we suggest how malaria is disentangled from or conflated with particular places. Ultimately, our aim is to reflect upon the relationship between scale of malaria control and its social consequence, attending to the actors and relations that fall outside of contemporary global public health policy.
Journal Article