Public healthThe malaria mosquito is disappearing – researchers wonder why
The incidence of malaria in many African countries south of the Sahara is falling rapidly; a research group has discovered that the mosquito carrying the malaria parasite has practically disappeared from villages without organized mosquito control; there are several hypotheses about the cause of the decline, but without proper data researchers cannot say whether malaria is being eradicated or whether it is just resting up before returning with renewed vigor
Member of the malaria-spreading genus Plasmodium // Source: nationalpestexpertsus.com
The incidence of malaria in many African countries south of the Sahara is falling rapidly. A Danish-Tanzanian research group has discovered that the mosquito carrying the malaria parasite has practically disappeared from villages without organized mosquito control, and the researchers do not know why. There are several hypotheses but without proper data they cannot say whether malaria is being eradicated or whether it is just resting up before returning with renewed vigor.
“Many of our fellow malaria researchers think that the fall in countries such as Tanzania, Eritrea, Rwanda, Kenya and Zambia shows that all the control programs are working, particularly the use of mosquito nets,” says Associate Professor Dan Meyrowitsch from the Department of Health Services Research at the University of Copenhagen, and continues:
“That just isn’t the whole story. For more than ten years we have been collecting and counting the number of mosquitoes in Tanzanian villages. The number in our traps fell from 5300 in 2004 to just 14 in 2009, and these were from villages without mosquito nets.”
A University of Copenhagen release reports that Dan Meyrowitsch explains that the 99 percent fall in the malaria mosquito population during the end of the 1990s seems to be connected to a fall in precipitation. This may be due to global climate changes.
“From 2003 to 2009 the volume of precipitation was more stable, but the rain was more chaotic and fell outside the rainy season. And this may have disturbed the natural cycle of mosquito development,” he says.
“Of course it is great that the number of malaria-related fatalities among children has fallen drastically in the last five or six years, but we need to know why!”
Since the researchers can discount mosquito nets, the question is whether the mosquitoes have succumbed to disease, or communities have been using pesticides, or whether the fall is due to the chaotic new precipitation patterns.
“Unless we find the answer we will not be able to predict when the malaria mosquitoes will come back, and that could rapidly prove critical,” Meyrowitsch explains.
Many children and adults have not been exposed to malaria in the last five or six years, and so have lost or failed to develop immunity to the parasite.
When the mosquitoes suddenly come back this may mean dramatic malaria epidemics with many fatalities unless the population and the health authorities are ready for them.
The Danish research group comes from three departments at the University of Copenhagen: the Department of International Health, Immunology and Microbiology, the Department of Public Health, and the Department of Veterinary Disease Biology.
The study is funded by the EU, DBL - Center for Health Research and Development, and The Consultative Research Committee for Development Research, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Denmark. It was conducted in close cooperation with researchers from the National Institute for Medical Research in Tanzania.
— Read more in Dan W Meyrowitsch et al., “Is the current decline in malaria burden in sub-Saharan Africa due to a decrease in vector population?” Malaria Journal 10 (13 July 2011) (doi:10.1186/1475-2875-10-188)