نتایج جستجو برای: aedes

تعداد نتایج: 10418  

Journal: :Journal of the American Mosquito Control Association 1991
S Sulaiman B Omar J Jeffery V Busparani

Three pyrethroids were evaluated in the laboratory against Aedes albopictus females by exposure to insecticide impregnated papers, and to 4th instar Ae. albopictus larvae as insecticide solutions. Lambda-cyhalothrin was found to be the most effective pyrethroid when tested against Aedes albopictus adult females and larvae compared with that of deltamethrin and permethrin.

2015
Benjamin R. Evans Andrea Gloria-Soria Lin Hou Carolyn McBride Mariangela Bonizzoni Hongyu Zhao Jeffrey R. Powell

The dengue and yellow fever mosquito, Aedes aegypti, contributes significantly to global disease burden. Genetic study of Aedes aegypti is essential to understanding its evolutionary history, competence as a disease vector, and the effects and efficacy of vector control methods. The prevalence of repeats and transposable elements in the Aedes aegypti genome complicates marker development and ma...

Journal: :Journal of vector ecology : journal of the Society for Vector Ecology 2008
Jinrapa Pothikasikorn Michael J Bangs Rapee Boonplueang Theeraphap Chareonviriyaphap

Ten different mosquito species representing five genera were allowed to feed on human blood containing microfilariae (5.5-6.5 mf/microl) of nocturnal subperiodic Wuchereria bancrofti from Kanchanaburi Province, Thailand. Aedes aegypti, Aedes albopictus, Aedes desmotes, Downsiomyia species (=Finlaya Niveus Group), Culex quinquefasciatus, Anopheles dirus A, An. maculatus, An. minimus, Armigeres s...

Journal: :Journal of medical entomology 2008
Michael J Turell Kenneth J Linthicum Lisa A Patrican F Glyn Davies Alladin Kairo Charles L Bailey

Outbreaks of Rift Valley fever (RVF) in Egypt, Yemen, and Saudi Arabia have indicated the potential for this disease to spread from its enzootic areas in sub-Saharan Africa. Because little is known about the potential for most African mosquito species to transmit RVF virus (family Bunyaviridae, genus Phlebovirus, RVFV), we conducted studies to determine the vector competence of selected African...

Journal: :The Southeast Asian journal of tropical medicine and public health 2005
R S Sharma S M Kaul Jotna Sokhay

Studies on the seasonal fluctuation of Aedes aegypti were undertaken in different localities of Delhi, during 2000. The Aedes aegypti population was found to be prevalent in all the localities in Delhi. Water coolers and tires were found to be the preferred breeding habitats of Aedes mosquitos in the city. Aedes aegypti, being hygroscopic, showed a phenomenon of annual pulsation. It tends to mo...

Journal: :Revista Crioula 2011

Journal: :Journal of vector borne diseases 2015
T A Hasini D G Jayathilake Mervyn B Wickramasinghe B G D Nissanka K de Silva

BACKGROUND & OBJECTIVES The Colombo City in Sri Lanka is experiencing tremendous development and construction of multiple storey buildings and high rise apartments. The change in housing types and microhabitats might have altered the flight and breeding behaviour of Aedes mosquito population. This study was carried out to determine the vertical dispersal and abundance of Aedes mosquitoes in mul...

Journal: :BMJ : British Medical Journal 2009
V Vanlerberghe M E Toledo M Rodríguez D Gomez A Baly J R Benitez P Van der Stuyft

OBJECTIVE To assess the effectiveness of an integrated community based environmental management strategy to control Aedes aegypti, the vector of dengue, compared with a routine strategy. Design Cluster randomised trial. Setting Guantanamo, Cuba. Participants 32 circumscriptions (around 2000 inhabitants each). Interventions The circumscriptions were randomly allocated to control clusters (n=16) ...

2017
Ian H Mendenhall Menchie Manuel Mahesh Moorthy Theodore T M Lee Dolyce H W Low Dorothée Missé Duane J Gubler Brett R Ellis Eng Eong Ooi Julien Pompon

BACKGROUND Dengue and chikungunya are global re-emerging mosquito-borne diseases. In Singapore, sustained vector control coupled with household improvements reduced domestic mosquito populations for the past 45 years, particularly the primary vector Aedes aegypti. However, while disease incidence was low for the first 30 years following vector control implementation, outbreaks have re-emerged i...

Journal: :Anais da Academia Brasileira de Ciencias 2009
Leda Regis Wayner V Souza André F Furtado Cláudio D Fonseca José C Silveira Paulo J Ribeiro Maria Alice V Melo-Santos Marilia S Carvalho Antonio M V Monteiro

Aedes aegypti is a very efficient disseminator of human pathogens. This condition is the result of evolutionary adaptations to frequent haematophagy, as well as to the colonization of countless types of habitats associated with environmental and cultural factors that favor the proliferation of this mosquito in urban ecosystems. Studies using sensitive methods of monitoring demonstrate that the ...

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