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Published in: Malaria Journal 1/2003

Open Access 01-12-2003 | Research

Is the Mbita trap a reliable tool for evaluating the density of anopheline vectors in the highlands of Madagascar?

Authors: Rémi Laganier, Fara M Randimby, Voahirana Rajaonarivelo, Vincent Robert

Published in: Malaria Journal | Issue 1/2003

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Abstract

Background

One method of collecting mosquitoes is to use human beings as bait. This is called human landing collection and is a reference method for evaluating mosquito density per person. The Mbita trap, described by Mathenge et al in the literature, consists of an entry-no return device whereby humans are used as bait but cannot be bitten. We compared the Mbita trap and human landing collection in field conditions to estimate mosquito density and malaria transmission.

Methods

Our study was carried out in the highlands of Madagascar in three traditional villages, for 28 nights distributed over six months, with a final comparison between 448 men-nights for human landing and 84 men-nights for Mbita trap, resulting in 6,881 and 85 collected mosquitoes, respectively.

Results

The number of mosquitoes collected was 15.4 per human-night and 1.0 per trap-night, i.e. an efficiency of 0.066 for Mbita trap vs. human landing. The number of anophelines was 10.30 per human-night and 0.55 per trap-night, i.e. an efficiency of 0.053. This efficiency was 0.10 for indoor Anopheles funestus, 0.24 for outdoor An. funestus, and 0.03 for Anopheles arabiensis. Large and unexplained variations in efficiency were observed between villages and months.

Conclusion

In the highlands of Madagascar with its unique, highly zoophilic malaria vectors, Mbita trap collection was poor and unreliable compared to human landing collections, which remains the reference method for evaluating mosquito density and malaria transmission. This conclusion, however, should not be extrapolated directly to other areas such as tropical Africa, where malaria vectors are consistently endophilic.
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Metadata
Title
Is the Mbita trap a reliable tool for evaluating the density of anopheline vectors in the highlands of Madagascar?
Authors
Rémi Laganier
Fara M Randimby
Voahirana Rajaonarivelo
Vincent Robert
Publication date
01-12-2003
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
Malaria Journal / Issue 1/2003
Electronic ISSN: 1475-2875
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-2-42

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