Malaria vector diversity, transmission and insecticide resistance in Island communities along the Volta lake in Southern Ghana
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BMC Infectious Diseases
Abstract
Introduction Island communities along the Volta Lake in southern Ghana present unique challenges for malaria
control, characterized by high transmission rates, limited vector control measures and geographically isolated. This
study assessed the malaria vector diversity, seasonal abundance, transmission and insecticide resistance status of
malaria vectors in these communities to inform effective control strategies.
Methods Mosquitoes were collected from three Island communities (Tuanikope, Allorkpem and Pediatorkope) using
human landing catches, light traps and prokopack aspirators during the dry and rainy seasons. Morphological and
molecular techniques were used to identify mosquito species, determine blood meal sources and detect insecticide
resistance mutations. Sporozoite infections and entomological inoculation rates (EIRs) were also quantified.
Results A total of 25,092 mosquitoes from four genera were collected (Culicine = 88.14%, Anopheline = 8.94% and
Mansonia = 2.92%). The Anophelines predominantly comprised Anopheles gambiae s.l. (1,911/2,243, 85.20%) followed
by An. rufipes (249/2,243, 11.10%) and An. pharoensis (83/2,243, 3.70%). Indoor biting and resting densities were high
across sites and seasons, with sporozoite-positive mosquitoes more frequently found indoors. Blood meal analysis
revealed a strong anthropophilic feeding pattern (HBI = 80%). Annual EIRs ranged from 37.40 (ib/m/y) to 100.08
(ib/m/y). Low frequencies of insecticide resistance mutations (Vgsc-1014 F, Vgsc-1014 S, Ace-1 and Vgsc-1575Y) were
observed.
Conclusion The study findings indicate high indoor biting and resting densities of Anopheles mosquitoes. High
sporozoite rate along with low resistance mutation frequencies observed, emphasize the urgent need for continuous
resistance monitoring and the implementation of targeted vector control strategies in these hard-to-reach Island
communities.
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Research Article
