Prediction of mosquito species and population age structure using mid-infrared spectroscopy and supervised machine learning

Author:

González Jiménez MarioORCID,Babayan Simon A.,Khazaeli Pegah,Doyle Margaret,Walton FinlayORCID,Reedy ElliottORCID,Glew Thomas,Viana MafaldaORCID,Ranford-Cartwright LisaORCID,Niang AbdoulayeORCID,Siria Doreen J.,Okumu Fredros O.ORCID,Diabaté Abdoulaye,Ferguson Heather M.ORCID,Baldini FrancescoORCID,Wynne KlaasORCID

Abstract

Despite the global efforts made in the fight against malaria, the disease is resurging. One of the main causes is the resistance that Anopheles mosquitoes, vectors of the disease, have developed to insecticides. Anopheles must survive for at least 10 days to possibly transmit malaria. Therefore, to evaluate and improve malaria vector control interventions, it is imperative to monitor and accurately estimate the age distribution of mosquito populations as well as their population sizes. Here, we demonstrate a machine-learning based approach that uses mid-infrared spectra of mosquitoes to characterise simultaneously both age and species identity of females of the African malaria vector species Anopheles gambiae and An. arabiensis. mid-infrared spectroscopy-based prediction of mosquito age structures was statistically indistinguishable from true modelled distributions. The accuracy of classifying mosquitoes by species was 82.6%. The method has a negligible cost per mosquito, does not require highly trained personnel, is rapid, and so can be easily applied in both laboratory and field settings. Our results indicate this method is a promising alternative to current mosquito species and age-grading approaches, with further improvements to accuracy and expansion for use with other mosquito vectors possible through collection of larger mid-infrared spectroscopy data sets.

Funder

Medical Research Council

Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council

AXA Research Fund

Wellcome Trust

EMBO

Publisher

F1000 Research Ltd

Subject

General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,Medicine (miscellaneous)

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