The State of the Art of Lethal Oviposition Trap-Based Mass Interventions for Arboviral Control
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Mass Lethal Ovitrapping Interventions
2.1. LO Mass-Trapping in Brazil and Thailand
2.2. LO Mass-Trapping in Australia
2.3. Mass Deployment of SOs in Brazil
3. Large-Scale Mass-Trapping Interventions
3.1. Multi-Year Trapping Intervention in Brazil
3.2. Large Autocidal Gravid Ovitrap-Based success in Puerto Rico
3.3. Epidemiological Support for Mass-Trapping Interventions in Puerto Rico
4. The Need for Community Engagement and Participation
Source Reduction Campaigns Minimize Competition from Alternative Oviposition Sites
5. Recommendations, Conclusions and Future Directions
- Conduct source reduction campaigns before implementing mass-trapping intervention to remove competing containers. These efforts should involve collaboration and coordination among all groups involved, especially the residents.
- Involve homeowners in the maintenance/servicing of traps to achieve short-term success and long-term sustainability. Motivating homeowners to purchase their own traps, particularly in developed countries, and possibly at subsidized rates, may enhance participation in community-based mosquito control, including source reduction (step 1).
- Aim for a minimum of >80% coverage (i.e., number of houses with traps) within intervention areas. Due to the limited data available, this is a “best guess” estimate based on the success of the AGO interventions (81%–85% coverage) in Puerto Rico [56,57], which resulted in a positive epidemiological outcome [58]. However, this value will likely depend on variables such as the type and size of the trap deployed and the density and type of housing in the intervention location. As such, further field trials are needed to determine the optimal coverage percentage across trap and location types.
- Optimize the number of traps per yard based on the size of the property, trap size and placement, and number of competing water-holding containers. Again, undertaking source reduction campaigns, while unlikely to overcome the spatial variability in target populations created by cryptic breeding sites, will reduce and, to an extent, even out competition from secondary breeding sources across residences. This will help operators optimise trap interventions based on easy-to-assess metrics such as property and trap size, all the while helping to reduce the target population prior to the intervention.
- Use large autocidal gravid traps, such as the AGO and the GAT, to maximise visual and olfactory attraction to achieve optimal suppression, while limiting the number of traps deployed. Economies of scale will inexorably bring the price of the traps down as more programs start buying them in bulk. To this point, initial investments and ongoing operational costs will need to match or reduce operational costs relative to traditional vector control strategies such as space spraying to be attractive to public health programs. The annual per-household costs of various dengue vector control interventions have been estimated to cost between $1.89 and $31.75 [71,72,73]. Although there is no available costing data for mass-trapping interventions, the long service intervals (2–4 weeks or longer) and ability to reuse the traps for multiple seasons, combined with emphasis on community involvement to reduce staffing, will likely help trap-based interventions to match or reduce these costs. However, further research is needed involving long-term interventions before cost estimates can be provided.
- Avoid the use of organophosphate and synthetic pyrethroid insecticides, as insecticide resistance is increasing in urban Aedes. The use of edible canola oil makes GATs appealing to the public who find them “safe” to use (Fonseca, D.M., unpublished data [41]).
- While the design of most lethal oviposition traps prevents adult emergence from dropped eggs from escaping, treat infusions with S-methoprene or long-release Bti formulations to further minimize the likelihood that traps may become productive larval habitats. Bti is particularly well suited for community-based interventions as many formulations are commercially available and do not require specialized applicator licenses or permits. These products can also be provided by a local public health agency and simply added to trap infusions at each service interval to maintain efficacy.
- Use natural grass or hay infusions as the olfactory lure to attract gravid Ae. aegypti. The infusions can last for up to 2 months or longer (see Mackay [39] or Barrera [56]). This can be tasked to residents who can simply change water and add hay or other organic material provided by the control program. The infusion material can also be sourced locally from their own yards (e.g., dead leaves, grass clippings) at no cost. Of note, field surveys by Johnson et al. [74] suggest that aromatic infusions may be unnecessary as they found no difference in the number of gravid Ae. albopictus females captured in GATs baited with (hay or fish food) and without (water or empty) aromatic infusions. This finding is supported by Trexler et al. [75], who found that the initial female attraction to the trap may be overwhelmingly associated with the water rather than an olfactory attractant produced by the infusion. If extendable to other species and locations, the omission of aromatic infusions would greatly extend and simplify trap servicing, reducing costs and reliance on homeowners to maintain infusions, and possibly increasing participation by homeowners opposed to having “smelly” traps around the house. These observations undoubtedly warrant further investigation, but until more data is available, the recommendation remains for the inclusion of aromatic infusions.
- Use a mapping strategy (e.g., GIS) during trap placement so traps can be easily found. This will be a useful tool to ensure that traps are accounted for even if a bottom–up approach is used in which residents are encouraged to purchase their own traps. For example, a serial number or barcode could be assigned to individual traps and reported to the corresponding public health program overseeing the intervention. This identifier could then be linked to the residential address, allowing the agency to periodically check to ensure that the traps are being properly maintained, as well as track missing traps.
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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Standard Lethal Ovitraps | ||||||||
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Author | General Trap Design | Killing Agent | Length of Intervention/Study Location | Number of Traps per Residence | Reduction Achieved | % Residences Covered | Other Interventions Involved | Epidemiological Outcome |
Perich et al. [30] | Black 473 mL cup baited with 10% hay (w/v) infusion | 11 × 2.5 cm ovistrip treated with deltamethrin | 3 months; Areia Branca and Nilopolis, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil | 10 | Female adult abundance reduced 47% at one site; % containers positive for Ae. aegypti larvae reduced 49% and 80%; Mean pupae per house reduced 97% and 91% | Not specified | None | Did not measure |
Sithiprasasna et al. [33] | Black 473 mL cup baited with 10% hay (w/v) infusion | 11 × 2.5 cm ovistrip treated with deltamethrin | Two studies; each 12 months in length; Ratchaburi Province, Thailand | 10 | First study (1999): No reduction Second study (2000): 47% reduction in female adult abundance; 49% reduction in containers with Ae. aegypti larvae; 56% reduction in containers with Ae. aegypti pupae | Not specified | None | Did not measure |
Rapley et al. [46] | 1.2 L black bucket set with 1 L of water and a 0.5-g alfalfa pellet | 13.5 × 5 cm ovistrip treated with bifenthrin | 4 weeks/site; Cairns, Queensland, Australia | 4 | Wet season: 87% reduction in sticky ovitrap collections; reductions in BG-Sentinel (BGS) collections not specified | 75% Dry season; 71% Wet season | Larval control: source reduction and treatment of potential breeding sites with S-methoprene | Did not measure |
Rapley et al. [46] | Biodegradable ovitrap: 1.2 L volume set with 1 L of water and a 0.5-g alfalfa pellet | 13.5 × 5 cm ovistrip treated with bifenthrin | 4 weeks/site; Cairns, Queensland, Australia | 4 | Reduction observed in 1 out of 3 sites; % reduction not specified | 93% Wet season | Larval control: source reduction and treatment of potential breeding sites with S-methoprene | Did not measure |
Regis et al. [54] | Modified 2 L bottles painted black | Bacillus thuringiensis israelensis (Bti)-treated water; egg strips incinerated upon collection | 24 months; Ipojuca and Santa Cruz do Capibaribe; Pernambuco, Brazil | 5 | 90% and 77% in egg density in two separate study sites | Not specified; 8400 ovitraps installed during intervention | larvivorous fish and adult aspiration | Did not measure |
Sticky Ovitraps (adhesive sticky cards/panels) | ||||||||
Degener et al. [51] | MosquiTRAP: 700 mL black plastic cylinder filled with 300 mL water | Black adhesive card. Card contained AtrAedes® oviposition attractant | 17 months: Manaus, Amazonas, Brazil | 3 | No, observed an increase in trap counts in intervention sites | 51.1% | None | No difference in dengue virus (DENV) IgM seropositivity between intervention and control sites |
Large (>5 L) Autocidal Gravid Ovitraps | ||||||||
Barrera et al. [56] | AGO: 19 L black bucket and 3.8 L black cylindrical entrance; baited with hay infusion (10 L water +10 g hay) | Black adhesive card placed on inside of trap entrance | 12 months; La Margarita, Puerto Rico | 3–4 | 53% reduction in BGS collections; 70% reduction in sentinel AGO traps | 81% | Source reduction, larviciding and oviciding (physical destruction of eggs) prior to trap deployment | Did not measure |
Barrera et al. [57] | AGO | Black adhesive card placed on inside of trap entrance | 24 months; La Margarita, Puerto Rico 12 months; Villodas, Puerto Rico | 3 | La Margarita: 79% reduction in sentinel AGO collections; Villodas: 88% reduction in sentinel AGO collections | 85% | Source reduction, larviciding and oviciding (physical destruction of eggs) prior to trap deployment | Did not measure |
Lorenzi et al. [58] | AGO | Black adhesive card placed on inside of trap entrance | Continuation of study by Barrera et al. [57]: 1 year prior to introduction of chikungunya and CHIKV IgG serosurvey | 3 | Not specified, but same study areas as Barrera 2014a,b | 85% | Same as Barrera et al. [56,57] | Yes, 52% reduction in chikungunya virus (CHIKV) IgG antibody prevalence in intervention areas (risk ratio = 0.52, 95% CI = 0.38–0.71). 62% of households and 64% of eligible participants surveyed. |
Cornel et al. [59] | AGO | Black adhesive card placed on inside of trap entrance | 6 weeks; Clovis, CA, USA | 1 | No, % reduction not specified. Small slopes of regression in weeks 3–8 in intervention site (BGS = −0.0047 and AGO = −0.0035) indicate reduction due to AGOs was minimal | Not specified; 144 residences in a single intervention area | None | Did not measure |
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Johnson, B.J.; Ritchie, S.A.; Fonseca, D.M. The State of the Art of Lethal Oviposition Trap-Based Mass Interventions for Arboviral Control. Insects 2017, 8, 5. https://doi.org/10.3390/insects8010005
Johnson BJ, Ritchie SA, Fonseca DM. The State of the Art of Lethal Oviposition Trap-Based Mass Interventions for Arboviral Control. Insects. 2017; 8(1):5. https://doi.org/10.3390/insects8010005
Chicago/Turabian StyleJohnson, Brian J., Scott A. Ritchie, and Dina M. Fonseca. 2017. "The State of the Art of Lethal Oviposition Trap-Based Mass Interventions for Arboviral Control" Insects 8, no. 1: 5. https://doi.org/10.3390/insects8010005
APA StyleJohnson, B. J., Ritchie, S. A., & Fonseca, D. M. (2017). The State of the Art of Lethal Oviposition Trap-Based Mass Interventions for Arboviral Control. Insects, 8(1), 5. https://doi.org/10.3390/insects8010005