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Method for the Reduction of mosquitoes vectors of West Nile virus and Dengue fever Gerardo Ulíbarri, PhD Sept. 2013 What are mosquitoes good for? • Food for other animals/insects • As Larva or adulto mosquitoe • Good virus/parasite wells • Vectors of viruses/ parasites Some of the illnesses that mosquitoes can transmit to humans • Yellow Fever (Aedes aegypti) • Dengue Fever (Aedes albopictus/aegypti) • Malaria (Anopheles gambiae) • West Nile virus (Culex pipiens) • Lymphatic filariasis (elephantiasis) • River blindness Some of the illnesses that mosquitoes can transmit to animals Encefalitis Equina del Este (Aedes vexans) Encefalitis Equina del Oeste (Culex/Culiseta) Malaria aviar (Culex quinquefasciatus) Virus del Oeste del Nilo (Culex spp) 3561 different species of mosquitoes around the world http://www.mosquitocatalog.org/default.aspx México 224 Continental United States 166 Canada 74 Walter Reed Biosystematics Unit (WRBU), Division of Entomology, Walter Reed Army Institute of Research (WRAIR), Silver Spring, Maryland, USA. 3561 different species of mosquitoes around the world Anopheles spp. Aedes / Ochlerotatus spp. Culex spp. 478 206 789 México Anopheles spp. Aedes / Ochlerotatus spp. Culex spp. 26 25 58 The mosquito reproductive cycle http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Culex_mosquito_life_cycle_es.svg • Mosquitoes undergo metamorphological changes • Only females need blood to develop their eggs • Three days after biting, the female can lay from 3-300 eggs • In 48 hours larva can emerge from the eggs • Larva needs air to survive • Adults emerge after 2 days in pupa state El ciclo de reproducción del mosco http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Culex_mosquito_life_cycle_es.svg • It needs from 4-6 days to go from egg to adult, dependent on Temperature • Larva can survive in only 1 cm of water • Eggs of some species can survive for years in drought • Some eggs can support very low temperatures • There are mosquitoes that prefer humans (antropophilic) to other animals for blood. Methods used to control or reduce mosquitoes 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical 9 Methods used to control or reduce mosquitoes 1) Biological: Uses natural predators of the mosquito Mosquito Fish (Gambusia affinis) Bacteria: Bacillus thurigiensis israelensis (Bti) Bacillus sphaericus Dragon Fly Genetically modified mosquitoes Life history variation of invasive mosquitofish (Gambusia holbrooki) along a salinity gradient. C Alcaraz, E Garcıa-Berthou. BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION 139 (2007) 83–92. Bacillus sphaericus as a mosquito pathogen: properties of the organism and its toxins. P Baumann, M A Clark, L Baumann, and A H Broadwell. Microbiol Rev. 1991 September; 55(3): 425–436. 10 Insects and animals that feed on mosquitoes 11 Methods used to control or reduce mosquitoes 1) Physical: Layer of oil in water surface Water container coverts Adult Traps Carbon dioxide, water steam and heat Photonic fence (micro laser) Lethal Ovitraps (use insecticide) Bed nets Clean Patio 12 http://www.educasocial.com.uy/demo/mod/file/download.php?file_guid=1039 13 Methods used to control or reduce mosquitoes 1) Chemistry: pesticides Organochlorinated Organo-phosphates Carbamates Piretotroids Neurotoxicity: prolonged activation of Sodium channels causing depolarization sustained depolarization in neurones, producing muscular spams. Teratogenicity: abnormal fetus development DDT: Inhibits shell formation in bird eggs. -DDT dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane Carbaryl Malathion Permetrine 14 Methods used to monitor the presence of mosquitoes vectors of disease How is it determined when is the right moment to spray pesticides 15 CDC Light traps (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) (www.cdc.gov/) CDC Light Traps •Traps only adult mosquites and other inects •Mainly females •Uses light and CO2 to attract the insects •Problems •There is no selectivity •High cost of operation •~$15 dollars per night /per 16 trap Larval deep www.keysmosquito.org/larvicides_treatments.html •Problems •Every pond ahs to be verified independently www.ocvcd.org/mosquitoes2.php •High operative cost (labor) 17 Human Bait news.cals.wisc.edu/newsDisplay.asp?id=1771 ... •Problems •Only anthropophagic mosquitoes are trapped www.trevorwilliams.info/Mosquitoes_blackflies •Dilemma with the ethic of using humans as bait 18 Gravid y Ovitraps www.ocvcd.org/mosquitoes2.php •Problems •Very selective. Attraction depends on solution used •Only attracts gravid females www.fehd.gov.hk/.../2002/calendar-photo5.html •Problems •Very selective, Attraction depends on the solution used 19 •Only collects eggs/larvae West Nile virus-The North America Problem 20 Culex spp – Main vectors of the West Nile virus http://www.madrimasd.org/blogs/virusemergentes/2012/10/el-avance-de-los-flavivirus-emergentes-y-reemergentes/ 21 22 www.usgs.gov/125/articles/images/wnv_map.jpg http://www.cdc.gov/westnile/resources/pdfs/cummulative/99_2012_CasesAndDeathsClinicalPresentationHumanCases.pdf West Nile virus infections 10000 9000 8000 7000 6000 5000 4000 3000 2000 1000 0 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 US 62 21 66 4156 9862 2539 3000 4269 3630 1356 720 1021 712 1590 Canada 414 1481 25 225 151 2215 36 13 5 101 62 24 Mosquito Behaviour Mosquito behaviour is mainly influenced by a series of olfactory stimuli. 25 W Takken, and B G Knols. (1999). Annu. Rev. Entomol. 44, 131-157. Odorant Binding Proteins (OBP) • Water-soluble globular proteins with exposed hydrophilic groups • Located in the lymphatic space surrounding the sensory neurons • Transport the hydrophobic odorant molecules through the aqueous lymph to the odorant receptors. Proteina tipo-G acoplada a receptores (G-PCR) • Seven transmembrane helical proteins • Residing on the dendritic membrane of the olfactory sensory neurons • Activated when bound to OBP which in turn activates the olfaction signal Receptor del olor 7 (Or‐7) • Identificado y caracterizado en varias especies de mosquitos: Anopheles gambiae (AgOr7), Aedes aegypti (AaOr7), Culex quinquefasciatus (CqOr7) • CqOr7 fue identificado en Marzo de 2006 por el equipo del Dr. Zwiebel, el mismo grupo que secuencio el genoma del mosco Anofeles. (Xia and Zwiebel, 2006). Xia, Y. & Zwiebel, L. J. Insect Biochem Mol Biol 36, 169‐76 (2006) 28 Modified Ovitrap Bacteral fermentation H 2O http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VwIqGbhq4T8 Mosquito laying eggs, eggs hatching (#311) nature1upclose· 29 Culex egg rafts on modified ovitrap 30 Modified Ovitrap Egg Raft www.qac.org Pupa Larva 31 Field studies We have found up to 89 rafts in one night study (~26,000 eggs) What is the secret? Initially, the mosquitoes are attracted to the ovitrap by the natural concoction. The apical part (superior) of each egg contains a chemical compound which serves a signaling to oviposition to new comers (attractant) for the Culex spp. 34 34 S u d b u r y O v i t r a p Day Temperature (oC) Relative Humidity (%) # of Egg Raft / Day Max. Mean Min. 1 24.4 18.45 12.5 87.42 41 2 27.9 22.15 16.4 73.96 146 3 30.3 24 17.7 70.88 52 4 31.6 25.05 18.5 59.54 67 5 31.4 24.85 18.3 66.21 33 6 31.4 25.05 18.7 62.08 30 14 29.4 22.9 16.4 90.25 47 15 22.8 19.7 16.6 70.58 30 16 25.5 21.7 17.9 91.38 103 17 29.3 23.2 17.1 77.29 116 18 21.7 18.3 14.9 70.21 165 19 22.2 17.85 13.5 80.33 65 20 27.5 22.8 18.1 89.88 52 21 33.2 27.2 21.2 81.38 119 Total 2007 Average 91 S u d b u r y Average eggs in a raft (Sudbury) = 270 (Culex pipiens/restuans) O v i t r a p An average of 25,804 eggs per day In the first field study 2007 rafts were collected in 21 days = 541,890 eggs Using only 3 modified ovitraps 2007 Field study 150 modified ovitraps were used in 12 different sites Field study was run from 1st of June to the 30 of August • 11196 rafts were colected in 90 days • 870 rafts per week • 3,358,800 eggs destroyed! 37 If one estiamtes a 20% of the eggs hatching producing females capable of laying eggs; In the first two weeks they will produce: (870)(2)(270)=469,800 x 0.2= 93,960 females If each lays eggs once; 25,369,200 eggs potentially produced In Only Two weeks But, does this really cause a reduction of mosquitoes? CDC Light Trap 44 N Artificial Breeding Ovitrampa modificada Pools 1 4 7 4 10 2 5 4 4 8 11 3 4 6 9 4 12 4 39 40 Comparative study between a test site using modified ovitraps and two control sites without ovitraps, in Sudbury 100 Adult Culex mosquitoes per trapping event 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Sudbury control 1 9 4 24 10 78 74 89 52 44 Long Lake 2 1 3 5 1 2 2 0 0 0 Collection of adult mosquitoes was done using the standard CDC light traps on each site 41 O O H O erythro‐6‐Acetoxy‐5‐hexadecanolide Attractiveness Ovitrap B.R. Laurence and J.A. Pickett J. Chem. Soc, Chem. Commun. 1982 p. 59-60 Dump solution fehd.gov.hk Rafts Bacterial fermentation Time ABP Attractiveness O Filter solution Rafts Bacterial fermentation Time 42 Do the modified ovitraps work as well with other species? A female mosquito (Anopheles gambiae) feeding Photo courtesy Centers for Disease Control & Prevention, photographer Jim Gathany (http://home.howstuffworks.com/mosquito-magnet1.htm) Aedes aegypti (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aedes) Dengue Regional Information: Number of Cases-2013 http://www.paho.org/hq/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=264&Itemid=363&lang=en Estado del estudio en Pentatlán, Gro, México. Inicio : primera semana de Febrero hasta Ultima semana de Agosto 2013 (30 semanas de estudio) Modified Ovitrampa Aedes eggs on a paper pellon Photo of Aedes mosquitoe eggs on paper pellon Semana Atrayente Control Huevo destruido 1 4575 1048 5623 17 3763 723 4486 2 6643 481 7124 18 3005 621 3626 3 7076 785 7861 19 2695 690 3385 4 6515 665 7180 20 3552 713 4265 5 5617 776 6393 21 2802 624 3426 6 4502 896 5398 22 4799 806 5605 9000 7 4001 503 4504 23 4134 820 4954 8 5744 602 6346 24 4640 876 5516 9 8870 704 9574 25 4921 910 5831 11 4769 494 5263 27 4599 1094 5693 12 2622 368 2990 28 4184 808 4992 13 2425 553 2978 29 4763 855 5618 14 3887 668 4555 30 3959 889 4848 15 4653 430 5083 16 4664 606 5270 31 7304 1013 8317 32 7119 1220 8339 Total Atractant= 40 ovitrampas Control = 10 ovitrampas Atrayente Control 8000 Total eggs collected 10 7570 1180 8750 26 5217 1151 6368 155,589 24,572 180,161 7000 6000 5000 4000 3000 2000 1000 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 Week Total number of Aedes mosquito eggs collected during the field study in Petatlán, Gro 31 Semana 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Atrayente/ovitrampa 131 190 202 186 160 129 108 144 222 189 119 66 61 97 116 117 Control/ovitrampa 70 32 52 44 52 60 75 105 70 118 49 37 55 67 43 61 Semana 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 Atrayente/ovitrampa 94 75 67 89 70 120 103 116 123 130 115 105 119 99 183 178 Control/ovitrampa 72 62 69 71 62 81 82 88 91 115 109 81 86 89 101 122 Average eggs collected per ovirap during the study (32 weeks) 250 Control/ovitrap Attractant 126 Eggs collected per ovitrap Attractant/ovitrap Control 74 200 150 100 50 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 Week Total number of Aedes mosquito eggs collected during the field study in Petatlán, Gro 30 31 Semana/mes Control / ovitrampa En lugar del estudio Atrayente / ovitrampa En lugar ajeno al estudio Tercera Cuarta Primera Segunda Tercera Junio Junio Julio Julio Julio 18 3 0 20 Cuarta Julio Primera Agosto Segunda Agosto Tercera Agosto Cuarta Agosto Quinta Agosto 13 17 11 2 8 18 12 29 79 104 97 71 63 37 120 Eggs collected per ovitrap 100 80 60 Control / ovitrampa en lugar del estudio 40 Atrayente / ovitrampa en lugar ajeno al estudio 20 0 Week In Red-Egg couunt using traditional ovitraps with attractant solution (Downtown Petatlan) In Blue-egg count using traditional ovitraps, where the modified ovitraps were located. E F M A M J J A S O N D Atrayente/ovitrampa‐Gua 71 273 308 877 744 1135 1555 371 350 300 256 240 Control/ovitrampa‐Gua 37 109 172 276 137 245 407 164 205 206 113 103 Atrayente/ovitrampa‐Pet 709 568 596 485 231 462 568 Control/ovitrampa‐Pet 199 291 60 298 202 341 480 Atrayente/ovitrampa‐Gua 1800 Control/ovitrampa‐Gua Atrayente/ovitrampa‐Pet Control/ovitrampa‐Pet 1600 1400 1200 1000 800 600 400 200 0 E F M A M J J A S O N D Comparative Field studies between Petatlán, Gro, México in 2013 (Green)and a field study in Zayaxche, Guatemala en 2010 (Blue). Observe that the count does not go up during the rainy season in Mexico (July-Sept). Conclusion: • The modified ovitraps reduce the presence of the adult Culex spp. mosquito vector of the West Nile virus in above 80% when a Culex-specific attractant solution is used. The solution that has been used is based on a known bacterial/yeast fermentation of natural plants and a few other attractant ingredients. • The modified ovitraps maintain low the population of the Aedes spp. mosquitoes, vectors of the dengue virus, even during the rainy season. The difference of adult mosquitoes between the site with modified ovitraps and a site with no ovitraps is approx. of 60-70% (to be verified). The attractant solution has been develop exclusively for the Aedes type of mosquitoes. • Modified ovitraps are being studied with different attractant solution in Zayaxche, Peten, Guatemala against the malaria mosquitoes by the team of Jacobo Rojas y Valentín Salazar from the local Health Unit.