Field effectiveness of microbial larvicides on mosquito larvae in malaria areas of Botswana and Zimbabwe
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Date
Authors
Mpofu, Mulamuli
Becker, Piet J.
Mudambo, Kaka
De Jager, Christiaan
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
BioMed Central
Abstract
BACKGROUND : The successful control of malaria vectors requires the control of both the larval and adult stages. The
adult control methods through indoor residual spraying (IRS) and use of long-lasting insecticidal nets (LLINs) continue
to be widely used with some high measure of success. Larval control methods are also being used by a number of
National Malaria Control Programmes (NMCPs) with limited understanding of its contribution. Larval control might be
needed in some areas to move from malaria control to elimination. This experimental study was conducted to assess
the field effectiveness of winter larviciding on the larval stages of the mosquito in Botswana and Zimbabwe.
METHODS : Two villages were selected in each of the two countries, one as an intervention and the other as the
control. Water bodies in the intervention villages were treated using the commercial product VectoBac® WG (Valent
BioSciences Corporation, IL, USA) containing the active ingredient Bacillus thuringiensis var. israelensis (Bti), a WHO
recommended bio-larvicide, applied at a rate of 300 g per hectare. Random-effects Poisson regression was employed
during data analysis to compare intervention with control sites with respect to larval counts.
RESULTS : The average marginal effect of larviciding on the mosquito larvae taking interaction with time (period) into
account, was −1.94 (95% CI −2.42 to −1.46) with incidence rate ratio of 0.14, thus an 86% larval reduction attributable
to the intervention for both countries combined. There was a 92% and 65% effect for Botswana and Zimbabwe
respectively. The effect on the early larval and late stages was 77% (P < 0.001) and 91% (P < 0.001), respectively. Overall,
intervention larval sampling points had five more larvae than the control at baseline and 26 less after 16 weeks.
The effect on the different species also showed similar trends.
DISCUSSION/CONCLUSION : Larval control using Bti showed a high effect on the population of the mosquito larvae. The
reduction of the early and late larval stages can lead to reduced adult mosquito emergence and low adult mosquito
densities. Larviciding can be used to control mosquito vector population by suppressing the larval stages thereby
reducing adult emergence and malaria risk.
Description
Keywords
Larviciding, Microbial larvicides, Botswana, Zimbabwe, Malaria vector control, Indoor residual spraying (IRS), Long-lasting insecticidal nets (LLINs), National malaria control programmes (NMCPs)
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
Mpofu, M, Becker, P, Mudambo, K & De Jager, C 2016, 'Field effectiveness of microbial larvicides on mosquito larvae in malaria areas of Botswana and Zimbabwe', Malaria Journal, vol. 15, art. no. 586, pp. 1-8.