Effect of textile colour on vector mosquito host selection: a simulated field study in Mali, West Africa.

IF 9.1 2区 医学 Q1 INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Ursula Benz, Mohamad M Traore, Edita E Revay, Amadou S Traore, Alexey M Prozorov, Issa Traoré, Amy Junnila, Liwang Cui, Aidas Saldaitis, Aboubakr S Kone, Roman V Yakovlev, Younoussa Ziguime, Petrányi Gergely, Siriman Samake, Alou Keita, Günter C Müller, Thomas Weitzel, Camilla Rothe
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Abstract

Background: The effect of clothing colour on the biting rates of different vector mosquito species is not well understood. Studies under tropical field conditions are lacking. This study aimed to determine the influence of clothing colours on mosquito biting rates in rural and suburban settings in West Africa.

Methods: We performed a simulated field study in a suburban and a rural site in Mali using Mosquito-Magnet traps utilizing CO2 and other attractants, which were covered with black, white, and black/white striped textile sheets covers. These targets operated continuously for 10 consecutive days with bright nights (around full moon) and 10 consecutive days with dark nights (around new moon). Trapped mosquitoes were collected and catch rates counted hourly. Mosquitoes were morphologically identified to the species complex level (Anopheles gambiae s.l. and Culex pipiens s.l.) or species level (Aedes aegypti). A subset of Anopheles specimens were further identified by molecular methods.

Results: Under bright-night conditions, An. gambiae s.l. was significantly more attracted to black targets than to white and striped targets; during dark nights, no target preference was noted. During bright nights, Cx. pipiens s.l. was significantly more attracted to black and striped targets than to white targets; a similar trend was noted during dark nights (not significant). For day-active Ae. aegypti, striped targets were more attractive than the other targets and black were more attractive than white targets.

Conclusions: The study firstly demonstrated that under field conditions in Mali, West Africa, mosquito catch rates were influenced by different clothing colours, depending on mosquito species and light conditions. Overall, light colours were least attractive to host-seeking mosquitoes. Using white or other light-coloured clothing can potentially reduce bite exposure and risk of disease transmission in endemic tropical regions.

纺织品颜色对病媒蚊子宿主选择的影响:在西非马里进行的模拟实地研究。
背景:衣物颜色对不同病媒蚊子叮咬率的影响尚不十分清楚。目前还缺乏热带野外条件下的研究。本研究旨在确定衣服颜色对西非农村和郊区蚊子叮咬率的影响:我们在马里的一个郊区和一个农村地区进行了模拟实地研究,使用二氧化碳和其他引诱剂的蚊虫磁性诱捕器,诱捕器上覆盖有黑色、白色和黑/白条纹的纺织床单。这些目标连续运行了 10 天的明夜(满月前后)和 10 天的暗夜(新月前后)。每小时收集诱捕到的蚊子并计算捕获率。对蚊子进行形态鉴定,以确定蚊子的复合种水平(冈比亚按蚊和琵 琶库蚊)或物种水平(埃及伊蚊)。通过分子方法对部分按蚊标本进行了进一步鉴定:结果:在亮夜条件下,冈比亚伊蚊对黑色目标的吸引力明显高于对白色和条纹目标的吸引力;在暗夜条件下,对目标没有偏好。在明夜,蝰蛇(Cx. pipiens s.l.)对黑色和条纹目标的吸引力明显高于对白色目标的吸引力;在暗夜中也有类似的趋势(不显著)。对于白天活动的埃及伊蚊,条纹目标比其他目标更有吸引力,黑色目标比白色目标更有吸引力:这项研究首先表明,在西非马里的野外条件下,蚊子捕获率受不同衣服颜色的影响,取决于蚊子种类和光照条件。总体而言,浅色衣服对寻找宿主的蚊子吸引力最小。在热带地方病流行地区,使用白色或其他浅色衣服有可能减少蚊虫叮咬和疾病传播的风险。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of travel medicine
Journal of travel medicine 医学-医学:内科
CiteScore
20.90
自引率
5.10%
发文量
143
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Travel Medicine is a publication that focuses on travel medicine and its intersection with other disciplines. It publishes cutting-edge research, consensus papers, policy papers, and expert reviews. The journal is affiliated with the Asia Pacific Travel Health Society. The journal's main areas of interest include the prevention and management of travel-associated infections, non-communicable diseases, vaccines, malaria prevention and treatment, multi-drug resistant pathogens, and surveillance on all individuals crossing international borders. The Journal of Travel Medicine is indexed in multiple major indexing services, including Adis International Ltd., CABI, EBSCOhost, Elsevier BV, Gale, Journal Watch Infectious Diseases (Online), MetaPress, National Library of Medicine, OCLC, Ovid, ProQuest, Thomson Reuters, and the U.S. National Library of Medicine.
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