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Windborne long-distance migration of malaria mosquitoes in the Sahel
by
Linton, Yvonne-Marie
, Krishna, Asha
, Lehmann, Tovi
, Florio, Jenna
, Strobach, Ehud
, Faiman, Roy
, Krajacich, Benjamin J.
, Ousman, Yossi
, Sanogo, Zana L.
, Huestis, Diana L.
, Talamas, Elijah
, Dao, Adama
, Reynolds, Don R.
, Donnelly, Martin J.
, Yaro, Alpha S.
, Veru, Laura
, Weetman, David
, Mitchell, Reed
, Diallo, Moussa
, Samake, Djibril
, Chapman, Jason W.
, Chamorro, Lourdes
in
631/158/2039
/ 631/601/1466
/ 692/699/255/1629
/ Africa
/ Altitude
/ Analysis
/ Animal migration
/ Animal Migration - physiology
/ Animals
/ Anopheles
/ Aquatic insects
/ Blood
/ Culicidae
/ Culicidae - parasitology
/ Culicidae - physiology
/ Disease transmission
/ Distribution
/ Female
/ Females
/ Geosphere
/ Ground level
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ Identification and classification
/ Influence
/ Insects
/ Letter
/ Malaria
/ Malaria - transmission
/ Migration
/ Mosquito Vectors - parasitology
/ Mosquito Vectors - physiology
/ Mosquitoes
/ multidisciplinary
/ Pathogens
/ Rainy season
/ Sampling
/ Science
/ Science (multidisciplinary)
/ Species
/ Surface water
/ Vector control
/ Vector-borne diseases
/ Vectors
/ Vectors (Biology)
/ Wind
/ Wind direction
/ Winds
2019
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Windborne long-distance migration of malaria mosquitoes in the Sahel
by
Linton, Yvonne-Marie
, Krishna, Asha
, Lehmann, Tovi
, Florio, Jenna
, Strobach, Ehud
, Faiman, Roy
, Krajacich, Benjamin J.
, Ousman, Yossi
, Sanogo, Zana L.
, Huestis, Diana L.
, Talamas, Elijah
, Dao, Adama
, Reynolds, Don R.
, Donnelly, Martin J.
, Yaro, Alpha S.
, Veru, Laura
, Weetman, David
, Mitchell, Reed
, Diallo, Moussa
, Samake, Djibril
, Chapman, Jason W.
, Chamorro, Lourdes
in
631/158/2039
/ 631/601/1466
/ 692/699/255/1629
/ Africa
/ Altitude
/ Analysis
/ Animal migration
/ Animal Migration - physiology
/ Animals
/ Anopheles
/ Aquatic insects
/ Blood
/ Culicidae
/ Culicidae - parasitology
/ Culicidae - physiology
/ Disease transmission
/ Distribution
/ Female
/ Females
/ Geosphere
/ Ground level
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ Identification and classification
/ Influence
/ Insects
/ Letter
/ Malaria
/ Malaria - transmission
/ Migration
/ Mosquito Vectors - parasitology
/ Mosquito Vectors - physiology
/ Mosquitoes
/ multidisciplinary
/ Pathogens
/ Rainy season
/ Sampling
/ Science
/ Science (multidisciplinary)
/ Species
/ Surface water
/ Vector control
/ Vector-borne diseases
/ Vectors
/ Vectors (Biology)
/ Wind
/ Wind direction
/ Winds
2019
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Windborne long-distance migration of malaria mosquitoes in the Sahel
by
Linton, Yvonne-Marie
, Krishna, Asha
, Lehmann, Tovi
, Florio, Jenna
, Strobach, Ehud
, Faiman, Roy
, Krajacich, Benjamin J.
, Ousman, Yossi
, Sanogo, Zana L.
, Huestis, Diana L.
, Talamas, Elijah
, Dao, Adama
, Reynolds, Don R.
, Donnelly, Martin J.
, Yaro, Alpha S.
, Veru, Laura
, Weetman, David
, Mitchell, Reed
, Diallo, Moussa
, Samake, Djibril
, Chapman, Jason W.
, Chamorro, Lourdes
in
631/158/2039
/ 631/601/1466
/ 692/699/255/1629
/ Africa
/ Altitude
/ Analysis
/ Animal migration
/ Animal Migration - physiology
/ Animals
/ Anopheles
/ Aquatic insects
/ Blood
/ Culicidae
/ Culicidae - parasitology
/ Culicidae - physiology
/ Disease transmission
/ Distribution
/ Female
/ Females
/ Geosphere
/ Ground level
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ Identification and classification
/ Influence
/ Insects
/ Letter
/ Malaria
/ Malaria - transmission
/ Migration
/ Mosquito Vectors - parasitology
/ Mosquito Vectors - physiology
/ Mosquitoes
/ multidisciplinary
/ Pathogens
/ Rainy season
/ Sampling
/ Science
/ Science (multidisciplinary)
/ Species
/ Surface water
/ Vector control
/ Vector-borne diseases
/ Vectors
/ Vectors (Biology)
/ Wind
/ Wind direction
/ Winds
2019
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Windborne long-distance migration of malaria mosquitoes in the Sahel
Journal Article
Windborne long-distance migration of malaria mosquitoes in the Sahel
2019
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Overview
Over the past two decades efforts to control malaria have halved the number of cases globally, yet burdens remain high in much of Africa and the elimination of malaria has not been achieved even in areas where extreme reductions have been sustained, such as South Africa
1
,
2
. Studies seeking to understand the paradoxical persistence of malaria in areas in which surface water is absent for 3–8 months of the year have suggested that some species of
Anopheles
mosquito use long-distance migration
3
. Here we confirm this hypothesis through aerial sampling of mosquitoes at 40–290 m above ground level and provide—to our knowledge—the first evidence of windborne migration of African malaria vectors, and consequently of the pathogens that they transmit. Ten species, including the primary malaria vector
Anopheles coluzzii
, were identified among 235 anopheline mosquitoes that were captured during 617 nocturnal aerial collections in the Sahel of Mali. Notably, females accounted for more than 80% of all of the mosquitoes that we collected. Of these, 90% had taken a blood meal before their migration, which implies that pathogens are probably transported over long distances by migrating females. The likelihood of capturing
Anopheles
species increased with altitude (the height of the sampling panel above ground level) and during the wet seasons, but variation between years and localities was minimal. Simulated trajectories of mosquito flights indicated that there would be mean nightly displacements of up to 300 km for 9-h flight durations. Annually, the estimated numbers of mosquitoes at altitude that cross a 100-km line perpendicular to the prevailing wind direction included 81,000
Anopheles gambiae
sensu stricto, 6 million
A. coluzzii
and 44 million
Anopheles squamosus
. These results provide compelling evidence that millions of malaria vectors that have previously fed on blood frequently migrate over hundreds of kilometres, and thus almost certainly spread malaria over these distances. The successful elimination of malaria may therefore depend on whether the sources of migrant vectors can be identified and controlled.
Aerial sampling in the Sahel of Mali reveals large numbers of windborne malaria mosquitoes that had recently fed on blood and could cover hundreds of kilometres in a single night.
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK,Nature Publishing Group
Subject
/ Africa
/ Altitude
/ Analysis
/ Animal Migration - physiology
/ Animals
/ Blood
/ Female
/ Females
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ Identification and classification
/ Insects
/ Letter
/ Malaria
/ Mosquito Vectors - parasitology
/ Mosquito Vectors - physiology
/ Sampling
/ Science
/ Species
/ Vectors
/ Wind
/ Winds
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