Aedes larval bionomics and implications for dengue control in the paradigmatic Jaffna peninsula, northern Sri Lanka.
Sinnathamby Noble SurendranTibutius T P JayadasVaikunthavasan ThiruchenthooranSelvarajah RaveendranAnnathurai TharsanSharanga SanthirasegaramKokila SivabalakrishnanSuthakar KarunakaranBharathy PonnaiahLaksiri GomesGathsaurie N MalavigeRanjan RamasamyPublished in: Parasites & vectors (2021)
Aedes larval indices in populated areas of the peninsula showed a high potential for dengue epidemics. Unacceptable littering practices, failure to implement existing dengue control guidelines, vertical transmission of DENV in vector mosquitoes and preimaginal development in brackish water and open surface drains, as well as in domestic wells that provide potable water, are serious constraints to the current Aedes larval source reduction methods used to control dengue in the Jaffna peninsula. Similar shortcomings in arboviral disease control are likely present in other resource-constrained tropical coastal zones worldwide.