Zoophily of Anopheles arabiensis and An. gambiae in Madagascar demonstrated by odour‐baited entry traps
- 1 March 2001
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Medical and Veterinary Entomology
- Vol. 15 (1) , 50-57
- https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2915.2001.00276.x
Abstract
In Madagascar we used odour‐baited entry traps (OBETs) for host choice tests of wild female anopheline mosquitoes (Diptera: Culicidae) at representative localities on the East and West sides of the island (villages Fenoarivo and Tsararano, respectively) and at the southern margin of the central plateau (Zazafotsy village, 800 m altitude). No insecticide house‐spraying operations have been undertaken at these villages. Odours from a man and a calf of similar mass, concealed in different tents, were drawn by fans into separate OBETs set side by side. Traps were alternated to compensate for position effects, and different pairs of individual baits were employed for successive replicates. Totals of 266 An. funestus Giles sensu stricto and 362 An. gambiae Giles sensu lato were collected in 48 trap nights during March–June 1999. For each mosquito species the ‘index of anthropophily’ was defined as the proportion of females caught in the human‐baited trap. For An. funestus this index was found to be consistently greater than 0.5 (value for random choice between traps/hosts), indicating that this species ‘preferred’ human to calf odour (index = 0.83). Conversely, the index of anthropophily for An. gambiae s.l. indicated they ‘chose’ calf in preference to human odour (index = 0.26). No significant differences of relative preference for calf or man were detected between villages; geographical variance accounted for < 8% of the total experimental variance. Molecular identifications of 181 specimens of the An. gambiae complex (≈ 50% of the samples) revealed only An. arabiensis Patton at Tsararano and Zazafotsy, but > 97% An. gambiae Giles sensu stricto at Fenoarivo, in accordance with prior knowledge of the differential distributions of these sibling species on the island. Predominant zoophily (i.e. intrinsic ‘preference’ for cattle odours) by both An. arabiensis and An. gambiae s.s. in Madagascar contrasts with their greater anthropophily in continental Africa.Keywords
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