Elsevier

Acta Tropica

Volume 172, August 2017, Pages 180-185
Acta Tropica

Effect of insecticide-treated bed nets on house-entry by malaria mosquitoes: The flight response recorded in a semi-field study in Kenya

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.actatropica.2017.05.008Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • House entry- and exit behaviour of mosquitoes was filmed in response to bed nets.

  • Pyrethroid-treated nets (ITNs) did not evoke a spatial-repellent effect.

  • Fewer house-leaving mosquitoes re-entered immediately when ITNs were present.

  • Detailed knowledge on the behaviour of vectors contributes to malaria control.

Abstract

Insecticide-treated nets are currently a major tool to reduce malaria transmission. Their level of repellency affects contact of the mosquito with the net, but may also influence the mosquito’s entry into the house. The response of host-seeking malaria mosquitoes approaching the eave of an experimental house was recorded within a large screen house. We compared entry- and exit rates in relation to the presence in the house of different insecticide-treated bed nets (ITNs) with an untreated net. Mosquitoes were lured towards the house by dispensing a synthetic host-odour blend from within the net in the house. Complementary WHO bioassays revealed that the treated nets caused high knock-down- and mortality responses to the Anopheles gambiae sensu stricto strain tested.

The proportion of mosquitoes that came into view of the cameras and subsequently entered the house did not differ between treated nets and the untreated net. Treated nets did not affect proportions of mosquitoes that exited the house and departed from view around the eave. However, the percentage of house-leaving and re-entering mosquitoes when an insecticide- treated net was present, was lower than in the presence of an untreated net.

Our results indicated that there was no spatial repellent effect from pyrethroid-treated nets that influences house-entry at eave level. It is argued that the toxic effect of treated bed nets resulted in a reduced number of mosquitoes re-entering the house, which could thereby affect malaria transmission in neighbouring, unprotected houses.

Graphical abstract

Effect of insecticide-treated bed nets on house-entry by malaria mosquitoes: The flight response recorded in a semi-field study in Kenya, Jeroen Spitzen, Teun Koelewijn, W. Richard Mukabana, Willem Takken, Acta Tropica.

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Keywords

Anopheles
Insecticide-treated nets
Mosquito flight
House-entry
Bed net
Insecticide

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1

Present address: School of Biological Sciences, University of Nairobi, P.O. Box 30197 GPO, Nairobi, Kenya.