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Deforestation and Malaria on the Amazon Frontier: Larval Clustering of Anopheles darlingi (Diptera: Culicidae) Determines Focal Distribution of Malaria

机译:亚马逊边境的森林砍伐和疟疾:达令按蚊(双翅目:Cu科)的幼虫聚集确定了疟疾的重点分布

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摘要

We performed bimonthly mosquito larval collections during 1 year, in an agricultural settlement in the Brazilian Amazon, as well as an analysis of malaria incidence in neighboring houses. Water collections located at forest fringes were more commonly positive for Anopheles darlingi larvae and Kulldorff spatial analysis pinpointed significant larval clusters at sites directly beneath forest fringes, which were called larval “hotspots.” Remote sensing identified 43 “potential” hotspots. Sampling of these areas revealed an 85.7% positivity rate for A. darlingi larvae. Malaria was correlated with shorter distances to potential hotpots and settlers living within 400 m of potential hotspots had a 2.60 higher risk of malaria. Recently arrived settlers, usually located closer to the tip of the triangularly shaped deforestation imprints of side roads, may be more exposed to malaria due to their proximity to the forest fringe. As deforestation progresses, transmission decreases. However, forest remnants inside deforested areas conferred an increased risk of malaria. We propose a model for explaining frontier malaria in the Amazon: because of adaptation of A. darlingi to the forest fringe ecotone, humans are exposed to an increased transmission risk when in proximity to these areas, especially when small dams are created on naturally running water collections.
机译:我们在1年内在巴西亚马逊的一个农业居住区进行了每两个月一次的蚊虫幼虫采集工作,并对相邻房屋中的疟疾发病率进行了分析。位于森林边缘的集水区对达氏按蚊幼虫更为普遍,Kulldorff空间分析在森林边缘正下方的地点确定了明显的幼虫群,这被称为幼虫“热点”。遥感确定了43个“潜在”热点。对这些区域进行采样显示,达林格氏幼虫的阳性率为85.7%。疟疾与距潜在热点的距离更短相关,居住在潜在热点400 m内的定居者患疟疾的风险高2.60。最近到达的定居者通常靠近边路的三角形毁林痕迹的尖端,由于它们靠近森林边缘,可能更容易受到疟疾的侵袭。随着森林砍伐的进行,传播减少。然而,森林砍伐地区内部的森林残留物增加了疟疾的风险。我们提出了一个解释亚马逊地区前沿疟疾的模型:由于达林奇犬适应森林边缘过渡带,人类在这些地区附近时尤其是在自然流水上建造小型水坝时,面临更大的传播风险集合。

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