Author(s) |
Jacups SP
Carter JM
Whelan PI
|
Publication Date |
2011-12
|
Abstract |
Background: The northern salt marsh mosquito
Aedes vlgllax (Skuse) is an established vector for Ross River and Barmah Forest viruses and is also an aggressive biter and an appreciable pest species. Many of Darwin's northern suburbs are adjacent to
a coastal wetland, which offers a breeding habitat for Aedes vigilax. Medical Entomology (ME) of the NT Department of Health and Families conducts EVS
trap surveillance and Integrated mosquito control measures for Aedes vigilax breeding in the wetlands of Darwin. One EVS trap, located In Karama, consistently reports some of the highest numbers of Aedes vigilax in all the swamp trap locations.
We sought to identify the most important
meteorological variables associated With peaks of >500 Aedes vigiax /trap/night. Improved prediction of peaks will enable early intervention, media warnings and should reduce public distress.
Furthermore, early prediction of peaks will assist planning of future mosquito surveys, control efforts, and hence maximise the efficiency of the unit.
Methods: we identified the maximum tide and
cumulative rainfall during the 9 - 13 day period prior to each EVS collection date. logistic regression models were applied, to determine explanatory variables fitted to weekly peaks of female Aedes vigilax mosquitoes >500 per trap.
This was modelled controlling for calendar month, year, meteorological variables and larval control efforts. Results: calendar months 9-11 had significantly
more peaks than January, with a trend for
significance (p=0.09) in December.
Discussion: to maximise the efficiency of adult salt-marsh mosquito control operations in Darwin, larval control should be implemented with increased emphasis after rain events during the build-up
months between September and November each
year. This study reiterates the importance of applying statistical methods to service provider programs, and thus enabling insights into solutions without the need for additional field experiments.
This method of evaluation may have applications for other mosquito surveillance and control programs in other areas.
|
Link | |
Publisher |
Mosquito Control Association of Australia
|
Series |
Bulletin of the Mosquito Control Association of Australia
Vol. 5, No. 2
|
Subject |
Darwin
Mosquitoes
Arboviruses
Disease vectors
Monitoring
Management
|
Title |
What is driving Aedes vigilax peaks in the Karama weekly mosquito trap in Darwin: tides or rainfall
|
Type of document |
Bulletin
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Entity Type |
Publication
|
Name | Size | format | Description | Link |
---|---|---|---|---|
What is driving Ae vigilax peaks in the Karama trap Mos Bites versionJan 2011.pdf | 2409.924 KB | application/pdf | View document | |