Comparative toxicity of larvicides and growth inhibitors on Aedes aegypti from select areas in Jamaica

Author:

Francis Sheena123ORCID,Crawford Jervis3,McKenzie Sashell3,Campbell Towanna3,Wright Danisha13,Hamilton Trevann3,Huntley-Jones Sherine4,Spence Simone5,Belemvire Allison6,Alavi Kristen7,Gutierrez Carolina Torres8ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Natural Products Institute, University of the West Indies, Mona, Jamaica

2. Abt Associates, 70 Half-Way Tree Road, Kingston, Jamaica

3. Zika AIRS Project Jamaica, 70 Half-Way Tree Road, Kingston, Jamaica

4. Vector Control Unit, Ministry of Health and Wellness, Kingston, Jamaica

5. Health Promotions and Protection, Ministry of Health and Wellness, Kingston, Jamaica

6. United States Agency for International Development (USAID), Bureau for Global Health, Office of Infectious Disease, Malaria Division, Arlington, TX, USA

7. United States Agency for International Development (USAID), Washington, DC, USA

8. International Development Division (IDD), Abt Associates, Rockville, MD 20852, USA

Abstract

Insecticide resistance has become problematic in tropical and subtropical regions, where Aedes mosquitoes and Aedes -borne arboviral diseases thrive. With the recent occurrence of chikungunya and the Zika virus in Jamaica, the Ministry of Health and Wellness, Jamaica, partnered with the United States Agency for International Development to implement multiple intervention activities to reduce the Aedes aegypti populations in seven parishes across the island and to assess the susceptibility of collected samples to various concentrations of temephos, Bacillus thuringiensis subsp. israelensis, (Bti), diflubenzuron and methoprene. Of the insecticides tested, only temephos has been used in routine larviciding activities in the island. The results showed that only temephos at concentrations 0.625 ppm and Bti at concentrations 6–8 ppm were effective at causing 98–100% mortality of local Ae. aegypti at 24 h exposure. Surprisingly, the growth inhibitors diflubenzuron and methoprene had minimal effect at preventing adult emergence in Ae. aegypti larvae in the populations tested. The results demonstrate the need for insecticide resistance testing as a routine part of vector control monitoring activies in order to determine useful tools that may be incorporated to reduce the abundance of Ae. aegypti .

Funder

United States Agency for International Development

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference34 articles.

1. Spatial distribution of insecticide resistance in Caribbean populations of Aedes aegypti and its significance

2. Seroprevalence of dengue virus antibodies in healthy Jamaicans

3. PAHO/WHO. 2017 Zika—epidemiological report Jamaica . Washington DC: PAHO/WHO.

4. Emergence of zika virus epidemic and the national response in Jamaica;Webster-Kerr K;West Indian Medical Journal.,2016

5. Success in controlling a major outbreak of malaria because of Plasmodium falciparum in Jamaica

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