Entomological studies on the impact of a small-scale irrigation scheme on malaria transmission around Ziway, Ethiopia

To evaluate the impact of a small-scale irrigation scheme on the level of malaria transmission in a semi-arid area, entomological studies were conducted in Zeway area, Central Ethiopia. Larval and adult anophelines were sampled during the dry and short-rainy seasons from irrigated and non-irrigated...

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Autores principales: Kibret, S., Petros, B., Boelee, Eline, Tekie, H.
Formato: Conference Paper
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/38268
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author Kibret, S.
Petros, B.
Boelee, Eline
Tekie, H.
author_browse Boelee, Eline
Kibret, S.
Petros, B.
Tekie, H.
author_facet Kibret, S.
Petros, B.
Boelee, Eline
Tekie, H.
author_sort Kibret, S.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description To evaluate the impact of a small-scale irrigation scheme on the level of malaria transmission in a semi-arid area, entomological studies were conducted in Zeway area, Central Ethiopia. Larval and adult anophelines were sampled during the dry and short-rainy seasons from irrigated and non-irrigated villages. Overall, significantly higher density of Anopheles larvae were found during the dry season in the irrigated village (Mean = 38.3 larvae/100 dips) than the non-irrigated village (7.4 larvae/100 dips). Canal leakage pools, irrigated fields and irrigation canals were the major sources of Anopheles mosquitoes. Larval and adult Anopheles pharoensis and An. arabiensis, principal malaria vectors in Ethiopia, were more abundant in the irrigated village than the non-irrigated village throughout the study period. Hourly light trap catches revealed that peak indoor and outdoor biting activities of An. arabiensis and An. pharoensis occurred during the early period of the night before the local inhabitants retire to bed. The majority of blood-engorged An. arabiensis (0.78) and An. pharoensis (0.69) had fed on humans, suggesting that their highly anthropophilic nature in Zeway area. Plasmodium falciparum infection rates of 1.02% and 0.54% were determined for An. arabiensis and An. pharoensis, respectively, in the irrigated village. This study demonstrated that due to poorly maintained irrigation structures, the irrigation scheme created conducive breeding grounds for malaria vector species, particularly during the dry season. Consequently, the period of malaria transmission might possibly extend from seasonal to year-round, involving the dry season. Proper water management coupled with environmental management such as source reduction could reduce vector abundance and hence malaria transmission in the irrigation schemes.
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spelling CGSpace382682025-11-07T08:33:06Z Entomological studies on the impact of a small-scale irrigation scheme on malaria transmission around Ziway, Ethiopia Kibret, S. Petros, B. Boelee, Eline Tekie, H. malaria anopheles pharoensis anopheles arabiensis entomology surveys irrigation schemes small scale systems To evaluate the impact of a small-scale irrigation scheme on the level of malaria transmission in a semi-arid area, entomological studies were conducted in Zeway area, Central Ethiopia. Larval and adult anophelines were sampled during the dry and short-rainy seasons from irrigated and non-irrigated villages. Overall, significantly higher density of Anopheles larvae were found during the dry season in the irrigated village (Mean = 38.3 larvae/100 dips) than the non-irrigated village (7.4 larvae/100 dips). Canal leakage pools, irrigated fields and irrigation canals were the major sources of Anopheles mosquitoes. Larval and adult Anopheles pharoensis and An. arabiensis, principal malaria vectors in Ethiopia, were more abundant in the irrigated village than the non-irrigated village throughout the study period. Hourly light trap catches revealed that peak indoor and outdoor biting activities of An. arabiensis and An. pharoensis occurred during the early period of the night before the local inhabitants retire to bed. The majority of blood-engorged An. arabiensis (0.78) and An. pharoensis (0.69) had fed on humans, suggesting that their highly anthropophilic nature in Zeway area. Plasmodium falciparum infection rates of 1.02% and 0.54% were determined for An. arabiensis and An. pharoensis, respectively, in the irrigated village. This study demonstrated that due to poorly maintained irrigation structures, the irrigation scheme created conducive breeding grounds for malaria vector species, particularly during the dry season. Consequently, the period of malaria transmission might possibly extend from seasonal to year-round, involving the dry season. Proper water management coupled with environmental management such as source reduction could reduce vector abundance and hence malaria transmission in the irrigation schemes. 2008 2014-06-13T11:41:04Z 2014-06-13T11:41:04Z Conference Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/38268 en Open Access application/pdf Kibret, S.; Petros, B.; Boelee, Eline; Tekie, H. 2008. Entomological studies on the impact of a small-scale irrigation scheme on malaria transmission around Ziway, Ethiopia. In Awulachew, Seleshi Bekele; Loulseged, Makonnen; Yilma, Aster Denekew (Comps.). Impact of irrigation on poverty and environment in Ethiopia: draft proceedings of the symposium and exhibition, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, 27-29 November 2007. Colombo, Sri Lanka: International Water Management Institute (IWMI). pp.418-438.
spellingShingle malaria
anopheles pharoensis
anopheles arabiensis
entomology
surveys
irrigation schemes
small scale systems
Kibret, S.
Petros, B.
Boelee, Eline
Tekie, H.
Entomological studies on the impact of a small-scale irrigation scheme on malaria transmission around Ziway, Ethiopia
title Entomological studies on the impact of a small-scale irrigation scheme on malaria transmission around Ziway, Ethiopia
title_full Entomological studies on the impact of a small-scale irrigation scheme on malaria transmission around Ziway, Ethiopia
title_fullStr Entomological studies on the impact of a small-scale irrigation scheme on malaria transmission around Ziway, Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed Entomological studies on the impact of a small-scale irrigation scheme on malaria transmission around Ziway, Ethiopia
title_short Entomological studies on the impact of a small-scale irrigation scheme on malaria transmission around Ziway, Ethiopia
title_sort entomological studies on the impact of a small scale irrigation scheme on malaria transmission around ziway ethiopia
topic malaria
anopheles pharoensis
anopheles arabiensis
entomology
surveys
irrigation schemes
small scale systems
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/38268
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