Arid
DOI10.1046/j.1365-2915.2001.00279.x
Impact of irrigation on malaria in Africa: paddies paradox
Ijumba, JN; Lindsay, SW
通讯作者Ijumba, JN
来源期刊MEDICAL AND VETERINARY ENTOMOLOGY
ISSN0269-283X
EISSN1365-2915
出版年2001
卷号15期号:1页码:1-11
英文摘要

The high population growth rate of the African continent has led to an increased demand for food and is in danger of outstripping agricultural production. In order to meet this need, many governments have sought ways of improving food production by initiating large-scale irrigation projects, involving reclamation of arid and semi-arid areas for the cultivation of crops. Although crop irrigation promises one solution to alleviating hunger and encourages economic growth, irrigation has often been blamed for aggravating disease in local communities. Malaria is one of the major tropical diseases associated with irrigation schemes, and changes in the transmission pattern of this disease following irrigation development have been a perennial subject of debate. It has often been assumed that high numbers of malaria vector Anopheles mosquitoes (Diptera: Culicidae) resulting from irrigation schemes lead inevitably to increased malaria in local communities. However. recent studies in Africa have revealed a more complex picture. Increased numbers of vectors following irrigation can lead to increased malaria in areas of unstable transmission, where people have little or no immunity to malaria parasites, such as the African highlands and desert fringes. But for most of sub-Saharan Africa, where malaria is stable, the introduction of crop irrigation has little impact on malaria transmission. indeed, there is growing evidence that for many sites there is less malaria in irrigated communities than surrounding areas. The explanation for this finding is still unresolved but, in some cases at least, can be attributed to displacement of the most endophilic and anthropophilic malaria vector Anopheles funestus Giles by An. arabiensis Patton with lower vectorial capacity, as the latter thrives more than the former in ricefields. Similarly, among members of the An. gambiae complex, some cytotypes of An. gambiae sensu stricto are more vectorial than others. For example, the Mopti form has high vectorial capacity and breeds perennially in irrigated sites, whereas the savanna form is often sympatric but more seasonal. Also we suggest that many communities near irrigation schemes benefit from the greater wealth created by these schemes. Consequently irrigation communities often have greater use of bednets, better access to improved healthcare and receive fewer infective bites compared with those outside such development schemes. Thus, in most cases, irrigation schemes in Africa do not appear to increase malaria risk, except in areas of unstable transmission. However, developers should take the opportunity to improve health-care facilities for local communities when planning irrigation schemes wherever they occur.


英文关键词Anopheles arabiensis An. funestus An. gambiae Oryza glaberrima O. sativa cytotypes irrigation malaria Mopti form rice savanna form sugar cane Africa
类型Review
语种英语
国家Tanzania ; England ; Denmark
收录类别SCI-E
WOS记录号WOS:000167821600001
WOS关键词ANOPHELES-GAMBIAE COMPLEX ; PLASMODIUM-FALCIPARUM ; RICE-FIELDS ; BURKINA-FASO ; WEST-AFRICA ; SAHELIAN AREA ; MOSQUITOS ; TRANSMISSION ; VALLEY ; EPIDEMIOLOGY
WOS类目Entomology ; Veterinary Sciences
WOS研究方向Entomology ; Veterinary Sciences
资源类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://119.78.100.177/qdio/handle/2XILL650/141456
作者单位(1)Trop Pesticides Res Inst, Arusha, Tanzania;(2)Univ Durham, Dept Biol Sci, Durham, England;(3)Danish Bilharziasis Lab, Charlottenlund, Denmark
推荐引用方式
GB/T 7714
Ijumba, JN,Lindsay, SW. Impact of irrigation on malaria in Africa: paddies paradox[J],2001,15(1):1-11.
APA Ijumba, JN,&Lindsay, SW.(2001).Impact of irrigation on malaria in Africa: paddies paradox.MEDICAL AND VETERINARY ENTOMOLOGY,15(1),1-11.
MLA Ijumba, JN,et al."Impact of irrigation on malaria in Africa: paddies paradox".MEDICAL AND VETERINARY ENTOMOLOGY 15.1(2001):1-11.
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