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Impact of Sub-Lethal Exposure to Insecticides on Vector Control Lee Cohnstaedt and Sandra Allan USDA-ARS-CMAVE Triservices Meeting Feburary 2010 Lee Cohnstaedt and Sandra Allan USDA-ARS-CMAVE Triservices Meeting Feburary 2010
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Insecticide contact
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Pyrethroids
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If not dead, then what?
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Mosquito species
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Behavioral assays Entrance Air+ CO 2 *Capillary release attractant *CO 2 release 50ml/min Attractant *Infrared light was used illuminate nocturnally active mosquitoes. *Treatment level lethal dose 25
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Flight path analysis Untreated Cx. quinquefasciatus Deltamethrin treated Cx. quinquefasciatus
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Flight path analysis Untreated An. albimanus Permethrin treated An. albimanus
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Flight path analysis Treated Ae. aegypti Untreated Ae. aegypti
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Average flight velocity * *
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Time in flight * *
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Heading * *
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Blood feeding *
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Implications The sublethal affects of pyrethroids on a mosquito’s ability to detect and locate hosts may increase the efficacy of aerial and residual spraying treatments beyond their immediate killing impact.
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Personal protective measures Band Sleeve Phlebotomus papatasi
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TreatmentHandBandSleeve Bite protection Untreated20 (29%)11 (16%)37 (54%)--- Sleeve (permethrin)43 (26%)40 (24%)84 (50%)-28.5% Sleeve (permethrin) + Band (TL-I-73) 129 (27%)86 (18%)269 (56%)16.9% Band (TL-I-73)39 (49%)12 (15%)28 (35%)21.8% Sleeve (permethrin) + Band (UB-21) 27 (40%)12 (18%)28 (41%)94.1% Number of landings per 20 minutes Landing site
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Band Sleeve
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Implications Sand flies predominantly land on the sleeve before moving towards the exposed skin; therefore a lethal insecticidal barrier at the uniform-skin interface will reduce disease transmission.
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Acknowledgments Uli Bernier Matt Aubuchon Adrian Duehl Erin Vrzal Nathan Newlon
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