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Entomological drivers of uneven malaria transmission in urban lowland areas in Bouaké, Côte d’Ivoire
by
Dahoui, Milossé M. C.
, Cornelie, Sylvie
, Zoh, Dounin D.
, Assouho, Konan F.
, Adou, Kouassi A.
, Moiroux, Nicolas
, Adja, Akré M.
, Koné, Aboubacar
, Coulibaly, Baba
, Niamien, Koffi L.
, Fournet, Florence
in
Animals
/ Anopheles
/ Anopheles - parasitology
/ Anopheles gambiae
/ Aquatic insects
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Biomedicine
/ Biting
/ Biting behavior
/ Cereal crops
/ Cities
/ Control
/ Cote d'Ivoire
/ Côte d’Ivoire
/ Disease transmission
/ Distribution
/ Ecology, environment
/ Entomology
/ Environmental aspects
/ Food security
/ Food supply
/ Health
/ Health aspects
/ Human diseases
/ Human health and pathology
/ Humans
/ Identification
/ Identification and classification
/ Infectious Diseases
/ Insect bites
/ Life Sciences
/ Lowlands
/ Malaria
/ Malaria - prevention & control
/ Malaria risk
/ Microbiology
/ Mosquito Vectors
/ Mosquitoes
/ Neighborhoods
/ Nucleotide sequence
/ Parasites
/ Parasitology
/ Population
/ Prevention
/ Public Health
/ Rice
/ Risk factors
/ Santé publique et épidémiologie
/ Seasons
/ Software
/ Tropical Medicine
/ Urban agriculture
/ Vector-borne diseases
/ Vectors
2023
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Entomological drivers of uneven malaria transmission in urban lowland areas in Bouaké, Côte d’Ivoire
by
Dahoui, Milossé M. C.
, Cornelie, Sylvie
, Zoh, Dounin D.
, Assouho, Konan F.
, Adou, Kouassi A.
, Moiroux, Nicolas
, Adja, Akré M.
, Koné, Aboubacar
, Coulibaly, Baba
, Niamien, Koffi L.
, Fournet, Florence
in
Animals
/ Anopheles
/ Anopheles - parasitology
/ Anopheles gambiae
/ Aquatic insects
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Biomedicine
/ Biting
/ Biting behavior
/ Cereal crops
/ Cities
/ Control
/ Cote d'Ivoire
/ Côte d’Ivoire
/ Disease transmission
/ Distribution
/ Ecology, environment
/ Entomology
/ Environmental aspects
/ Food security
/ Food supply
/ Health
/ Health aspects
/ Human diseases
/ Human health and pathology
/ Humans
/ Identification
/ Identification and classification
/ Infectious Diseases
/ Insect bites
/ Life Sciences
/ Lowlands
/ Malaria
/ Malaria - prevention & control
/ Malaria risk
/ Microbiology
/ Mosquito Vectors
/ Mosquitoes
/ Neighborhoods
/ Nucleotide sequence
/ Parasites
/ Parasitology
/ Population
/ Prevention
/ Public Health
/ Rice
/ Risk factors
/ Santé publique et épidémiologie
/ Seasons
/ Software
/ Tropical Medicine
/ Urban agriculture
/ Vector-borne diseases
/ Vectors
2023
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Entomological drivers of uneven malaria transmission in urban lowland areas in Bouaké, Côte d’Ivoire
by
Dahoui, Milossé M. C.
, Cornelie, Sylvie
, Zoh, Dounin D.
, Assouho, Konan F.
, Adou, Kouassi A.
, Moiroux, Nicolas
, Adja, Akré M.
, Koné, Aboubacar
, Coulibaly, Baba
, Niamien, Koffi L.
, Fournet, Florence
in
Animals
/ Anopheles
/ Anopheles - parasitology
/ Anopheles gambiae
/ Aquatic insects
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Biomedicine
/ Biting
/ Biting behavior
/ Cereal crops
/ Cities
/ Control
/ Cote d'Ivoire
/ Côte d’Ivoire
/ Disease transmission
/ Distribution
/ Ecology, environment
/ Entomology
/ Environmental aspects
/ Food security
/ Food supply
/ Health
/ Health aspects
/ Human diseases
/ Human health and pathology
/ Humans
/ Identification
/ Identification and classification
/ Infectious Diseases
/ Insect bites
/ Life Sciences
/ Lowlands
/ Malaria
/ Malaria - prevention & control
/ Malaria risk
/ Microbiology
/ Mosquito Vectors
/ Mosquitoes
/ Neighborhoods
/ Nucleotide sequence
/ Parasites
/ Parasitology
/ Population
/ Prevention
/ Public Health
/ Rice
/ Risk factors
/ Santé publique et épidémiologie
/ Seasons
/ Software
/ Tropical Medicine
/ Urban agriculture
/ Vector-borne diseases
/ Vectors
2023
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Entomological drivers of uneven malaria transmission in urban lowland areas in Bouaké, Côte d’Ivoire
Journal Article
Entomological drivers of uneven malaria transmission in urban lowland areas in Bouaké, Côte d’Ivoire
2023
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Overview
Background
The use of urban lowlands for agriculture contributes to the food security of city- dwellers, but promotes malaria transmission. The objective of the study was to characterize the entomological drivers of malaria transmission in two lowlands (N’Gattakro and Odiennekourani) in the city of Bouaké, Côte d’Ivoire.
Methods
The human landing catch technique was used to capture mosquitoes in houses located at the edge of two lowlands in Bouaké from February to December 2019. Cultivated surfaces were calculated monthly in both lowlands for each crop type (rice and market gardening) using images acquired by a drone. The different mosquito species were identified morphologically and by PCR analysis for the
Anopheles gambiae
complex.
Anopheles
infection by
Plasmodium
parasites was assessed by quantitative PCR. Mosquito diversity, biting behaviour and rhythmicity, and malaria transmission were determined in each lowland and compared.
Results
Anopheles gambiae
sensu lato (
s.l.
) was predominant in N’Gattakro and
Culex quinquefasciatus
in Odiennekourani. Four
Anopheles
species were identified:
An. gambiae s.l.
and
Anopheles funestus s.l.
in both lowlands,
Anopheles pharoensis
in N’Gattakro, and
Anopheles ziemanni
in Odiennekourani. Within the
An. gambiae
complex, three species were caught:
An. gambiae
sensu stricto (s.s.),
Anopheles coluzzii
, and
Anopheles arabiensis
for the first time in Côte d’Ivoire (30.1%, 69.9% and 0% in N’Gattakro, and 45.1%, 52.6% and 2.4% in Odiennekourani, respectively).
Anopheles gambiae s.l.
species exhibited a significant exophagic behaviour in N’Gattakro (77.1% of outdoor bites versus 52.2% in Odiennekourani). In N’Gattakro, 12.6% of captures occurred before bedtime (09.00 pm) and after waking up (05.00 am), 15.1% in Odiennekourani. The mean human biting rate was higher in N’Gattakro than in Odiennekourani (61.6 versus 15.5 bites per person per night). Overall,
Anopheles
infection rate was 0.68%, with 0.539 and 0.029 infected bites per person per night in N’Gattakro and Odiennekourani, respectively.
Conclusion
The risk of malaria in urban agricultural lowland areas is uneven. The role of agricultural developments and irrigation patterns in the production of larval habitat should be explored. The exophagic behaviour of
Anopheles
vectors raises the question of the residual transmission that needs to be assessed to implement appropriate control strategies.
Publisher
BioMed Central,BioMed Central Ltd,Springer Nature B.V,BMC
Subject
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