GLOBAL:
Mapping mosquito diseases
Mosquitoes that carry the dengue and chikungunya viruses are more
widespread than ever, believe scientists mapping the global spread of
the insects.
There are no treatments or vaccines for these diseases, so knowing
where the mosquitoes that transmit them occur and thrive can help focus
research and public health resources, scientists say.
A study, published in the journal eLife on June 30 focuses on two
species of mosquitoes, Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus, which carry
the dengue, yellow fever and chikungunya viruses.
These diseases can cause lasting problems, including damaging joints,
and are often deadly in children and the elderly.
To create the maps, the researchers used a computer model that
predicts if a place is suitable for the mosquitoes. While previous
studies were usually based on temperature alone, the new model considers
other factors, including minimum and maximum annual rainfall, satellite
data about vegetation and how rural or urban an area is.
“This is valuable, because temperature alone cannot discriminate
between areas where the species can and cannot persist,” says Meghnath
Dhimal, a researcher at the Nepal Health Research Council, who was not
involved in the study.
The researchers compared their model-based map against actual
mosquito records from various sources.
Their database includes about 20,000 occurrence records for Ae.
aegypti, and about 22,000 for Ae. albopictus, which, they say, makes it
the largest mosquito database ever produced.
The researchers found that the model predicts large mosquito
populations in some areas where actual records show a low mosquito
count. Public health authorities and researchers should target these
areas to ensure their records are correct, says Oliver Brady, an
epidemiologist at the University of Oxford, UK, one of the study’s
authors.
“It could be that no one looked there because there are no people
there or because it’s very hard to get to,” Brady says.
It could also be that data has been collected but remains unpublished
or inaccessible, or that researchers in these areas are not paying
enough attention to Aedes mosquitoes, Brady says. “There is an awful lot
of work [done on] malaria,” which is transmitted by Anopheles
mosquitoes, “but little with Aedes species that are important for a
large number of viral diseases,” he says.
Over recent decades, Ae. aegypti and Ae. albopictus have spread to
hilly and mountainous regions due to changing climates. But Dhimal
criticises the paper for not using data from nations such as Bhutan and
Nepal.
“These study findings may be relevant for the developed countries of
Europe and America, but they have little value to developing mountainous
countries,” Dhimal says. Predictions in these areas are uncertain,
mosquito records are sparse and the map’s resolution is too coarse to
accurately reflect mountainous terrain, he says.
But the researchers say the work is ongoing and that they rely on
suggestions and extra data from other scientists.
“We want people to point out where we have gaps in our database,”
Brady says.
The species are ever expanding and the team will update these maps to
include more data when it becomes available, he says.
-SciDevNet
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