Anopheles arabiensis and An. gambiae chromosomal inversion polymorphism, feeding and resting behaviour in relation to insecticide house‐spraying in Tanzania
- 1 July 1995
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Medical and Veterinary Entomology
- Vol. 9 (3) , 316-324
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2915.1995.tb00140.x
Abstract
Differential responses of the mosquitoes Anopheles arabiensis and An. gambiae sensu stricto to house‐spraying with DDT or lambda‐cyhalothrin were evaluated in relation to chromosomal inversion polymorphism, feeding and resting behaviour of these malaria vectors in Tanzania. Blood‐fed mosquitoes from pit traps outdoors, exit traps on windows and indoor‐resting catches were identified cytogenetically and the chromosomal inversion frequencies compared between samples and species. Their outdoor‐resting behaviour was assessed by a mark–release–recapture experiment and by determining the proportion of freshly blood‐fed individuals in exit traps. The source of bloodmeals was analysed by an ELISA method. Endophagic females of An. arabiensis were more likely than those of An. gambiae to exit from a house on the night of blood‐feeding. Only in one out of three villages was there evidence that chromosomally distinct individuals within a species had different preferences for resting sites. There were indications, but not conclusive evidence, that mosquitoes caught indoors or outdoors had a tendency to return to the same type of resting site. In villages sprayed with either insecticide, the mean age of the vector populations was greatly reduced, compared with those in the unsprayed villages. An. arabiensis females exited from DDT sprayed houses after blood‐feeding, whereas with lambda‐cyhalothrin those exiting were mostly unfed and there was a decline in the human blood index. The excitorepellency of DDT was perceived as a disadvantage, whereas lambda‐cyhalothrin apparently had more impact on malaria transmission by An. arabiensis.Keywords
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