Factors affecting the vectorial competence of Anopheles gambiae: a question of scale

Malaria transmission in Africa is without doubt governed by the existence of a group of highly efficient vectors, of which Anopheles gambiae Giles sensu stricto is predominant. The endophilic and anthropophagic behaviours of this mosquito create an intimate association between the human reservoir and insect vectors of malaria. In this paper several mosquito-related and environmental factors that modulate the transmission intensity of malaria in Africa are discussed, in order to illustrate the plasticity of the vectors’ responses to malaria interventions. The An. gambiae group of species serves as an example of the highly complex interactions between humans, malaria parasites and mosquitoes. Larval and adult characteristics are described that affect the geographic distribution, phenology and longevity of the mosquito vectors. It is shown that spatial and temporal variations in the environment have considerably more effect on these characteristics than is commonly assumed. It is suggested that epidemiological studies pay greater attention to such variations, in particular when estimating the entomological inoculation rate and vectorial competence. When considering the use of transgenic mosquitoes for malaria control, these effects should be studied in order to understand how local variations in vector ecology might affect the outcome of a transgenic release

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Takken, W., Lindsay, S.W.
Format: Part of book or chapter of book biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Kluwer Academic Publishers
Subjects:animal behaviour, anopheles gambiae, culicidae, ecology, inoculation, malaria, transmission, vector competence, vectorial capacity, diergedrag, ecologie, inoculatie, transmissie, vectorcompetentie, vectoriële capaciteit,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/factors-affecting-the-vectorial-competence-of-anopheles-gambiae-a
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spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-3274512024-09-23 Takken, W. Lindsay, S.W. Part of book or chapter of book Ecological aspects for application of genetically modified mosquitoes ISBN: 9781402015847 Factors affecting the vectorial competence of Anopheles gambiae: a question of scale 2003 Malaria transmission in Africa is without doubt governed by the existence of a group of highly efficient vectors, of which Anopheles gambiae Giles sensu stricto is predominant. The endophilic and anthropophagic behaviours of this mosquito create an intimate association between the human reservoir and insect vectors of malaria. In this paper several mosquito-related and environmental factors that modulate the transmission intensity of malaria in Africa are discussed, in order to illustrate the plasticity of the vectors’ responses to malaria interventions. The An. gambiae group of species serves as an example of the highly complex interactions between humans, malaria parasites and mosquitoes. Larval and adult characteristics are described that affect the geographic distribution, phenology and longevity of the mosquito vectors. It is shown that spatial and temporal variations in the environment have considerably more effect on these characteristics than is commonly assumed. It is suggested that epidemiological studies pay greater attention to such variations, in particular when estimating the entomological inoculation rate and vectorial competence. When considering the use of transgenic mosquitoes for malaria control, these effects should be studied in order to understand how local variations in vector ecology might affect the outcome of a transgenic release en Kluwer Academic Publishers application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/factors-affecting-the-vectorial-competence-of-anopheles-gambiae-a https://edepot.wur.nl/136906 animal behaviour anopheles gambiae culicidae ecology inoculation malaria transmission vector competence vectorial capacity anopheles gambiae culicidae diergedrag ecologie inoculatie malaria transmissie vectorcompetentie vectoriële capaciteit Wageningen University & Research
institution WUR NL
collection DSpace
country Países bajos
countrycode NL
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-wur-nl
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname WUR Library Netherlands
language English
topic animal behaviour
anopheles gambiae
culicidae
ecology
inoculation
malaria
transmission
vector competence
vectorial capacity
anopheles gambiae
culicidae
diergedrag
ecologie
inoculatie
malaria
transmissie
vectorcompetentie
vectoriële capaciteit
animal behaviour
anopheles gambiae
culicidae
ecology
inoculation
malaria
transmission
vector competence
vectorial capacity
anopheles gambiae
culicidae
diergedrag
ecologie
inoculatie
malaria
transmissie
vectorcompetentie
vectoriële capaciteit
spellingShingle animal behaviour
anopheles gambiae
culicidae
ecology
inoculation
malaria
transmission
vector competence
vectorial capacity
anopheles gambiae
culicidae
diergedrag
ecologie
inoculatie
malaria
transmissie
vectorcompetentie
vectoriële capaciteit
animal behaviour
anopheles gambiae
culicidae
ecology
inoculation
malaria
transmission
vector competence
vectorial capacity
anopheles gambiae
culicidae
diergedrag
ecologie
inoculatie
malaria
transmissie
vectorcompetentie
vectoriële capaciteit
Takken, W.
Lindsay, S.W.
Factors affecting the vectorial competence of Anopheles gambiae: a question of scale
description Malaria transmission in Africa is without doubt governed by the existence of a group of highly efficient vectors, of which Anopheles gambiae Giles sensu stricto is predominant. The endophilic and anthropophagic behaviours of this mosquito create an intimate association between the human reservoir and insect vectors of malaria. In this paper several mosquito-related and environmental factors that modulate the transmission intensity of malaria in Africa are discussed, in order to illustrate the plasticity of the vectors’ responses to malaria interventions. The An. gambiae group of species serves as an example of the highly complex interactions between humans, malaria parasites and mosquitoes. Larval and adult characteristics are described that affect the geographic distribution, phenology and longevity of the mosquito vectors. It is shown that spatial and temporal variations in the environment have considerably more effect on these characteristics than is commonly assumed. It is suggested that epidemiological studies pay greater attention to such variations, in particular when estimating the entomological inoculation rate and vectorial competence. When considering the use of transgenic mosquitoes for malaria control, these effects should be studied in order to understand how local variations in vector ecology might affect the outcome of a transgenic release
format Part of book or chapter of book
topic_facet animal behaviour
anopheles gambiae
culicidae
ecology
inoculation
malaria
transmission
vector competence
vectorial capacity
anopheles gambiae
culicidae
diergedrag
ecologie
inoculatie
malaria
transmissie
vectorcompetentie
vectoriële capaciteit
author Takken, W.
Lindsay, S.W.
author_facet Takken, W.
Lindsay, S.W.
author_sort Takken, W.
title Factors affecting the vectorial competence of Anopheles gambiae: a question of scale
title_short Factors affecting the vectorial competence of Anopheles gambiae: a question of scale
title_full Factors affecting the vectorial competence of Anopheles gambiae: a question of scale
title_fullStr Factors affecting the vectorial competence of Anopheles gambiae: a question of scale
title_full_unstemmed Factors affecting the vectorial competence of Anopheles gambiae: a question of scale
title_sort factors affecting the vectorial competence of anopheles gambiae: a question of scale
publisher Kluwer Academic Publishers
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/factors-affecting-the-vectorial-competence-of-anopheles-gambiae-a
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