In this study session you are going to learn how you can make the environment unfavourable for mosquito breeding and how to kill the mosquito larvae in water collections. Using your knowledge from Study Session 5 about the distinguishing characteristics of anopheline larvae, we will teach you how to identify areas that are vector breeding habitats in the community, and how to organise and coordinate community participation in larval control measures. By cleaning and modifying the environment you can make it hard for the mosquitoes to complete their life cycle and be able to transmit malaria.
Larval control is one of the most important malaria prevention measures that can be planned and implemented at the community level. Larval control is any method that helps prevent vector breeding or kills the mosquito at its larval stage. There are other malaria prevention or vector control measures that are also very important and you will learn about them in Study Sessions 10 and 11.
When you have studied this session, you should be able to:
9.1 Define and use correctly all of the key words printed in bold. (SAQs 9.1, 9.4 and 9.5)
9.2 Describe how you would identify mosquito breeding habitats. (SAQs 9.2 and 9.3)
9.3 Describe environmental manipulation techniques for mosquito control. (SAQ 9.4)
9.4 Explain environmental modification measures that are useful for vector control. (SAQ 9.5)
9.5 Describe the principles of larviciding for malaria control. (SAQs 9.1 and 9.6)
9.6 Explain how the community can be mobilised to participate in larval control measures. (SAQ 9.7)
Remember the following key points about malaria transmission from previous study sessions:
The implications of these facts are that:
Measures that rely on using insect-killing insecticides against the adult (flying) mosquitoes inside houses (spraying and using insecticide-treated bed nets (ITNs), as described in Study Sessions 10 and 11), mean that the mosquitoes must be susceptible to the chemicals if the controls are to be successful. Moreover, they kill only the mosquitoes that enter houses to bite people. However, you learned in Study Session 5 that some mosquitoes can bite people outside houses and transmit malaria. So we are starting the three sessions on malaria prevention with larval control for the following reasons:
Mosquito species differ in their preferences for breeding habitats. The species that mainly transmit malaria in Ethiopia (Anopheles arabiensis) breed in clean and muddy water collections that are either man-made or naturally-occurring near houses; they do not breed in polluted water like in sanitation systems. Once the breeding sites are known, appropriate control measures may be simple and inexpensive. Most breeding sites in and near houses are easy to identify and simple methods are available to eliminate them. Community members can and should take action against any breeding by mosquitoes observed on or near their premises.
Larval control may be the only effective approach when mosquitoes bite outdoors and do not enter houses to feed or rest, or when the mosquitoes are not susceptible to the available insecticides. Insecticide resistance of malaria vectors is particularly important in the Ethiopian situation. An important additional advantage of larval control is that some of the measures provide long-lasting protection.
Environmental management for vector control refers to the planning, organisation, carrying out and monitoring of activities for the modification and/or manipulation of environmental factors, with the aim of preventing or minimising vector breeding and reducing human-vector-parasite contacts. If such measures result in long-lasting or permanent changes in land, water or vegetation, they are often referred to as environmental modification. When such measures have a temporary effect and need to be repeated, they are known as environmental manipulation.
In this study session, we will focus mainly on simple and effective environmental manipulation tools, which can be planned and implemented at the village level by mobilising the community and under your direct supervision. Some environmental modification methods could involve very complicated engineering designs of natural and man-made water systems to make them unfavourable for vector breeding, but these ambitious activities are beyond the objectives of the Health Extension Service.
The first step in planning environmental management activities is to identify the water collections where the potential vectors of malaria are breeding. You might plan to remove or destroy all potential breeding sites, whether they are sheltering mosquito larvae or not. However, this could be unrealistic if there are too many sites and your human and material resources are limited. Then you have to be selective and prioritise water collections according to the following criteria:
Why give priority to elimination of anopheline breeding sites?
Because anophelines are vectors of malaria; other types of mosquitoes are not.
Environmental modification includes drainage, filling, land levelling and transformation of impoundment margins (e.g. ditches to restrain livestock). Although these modification works are usually of a permanent nature, proper operation and adequate maintenance are essential for their effective functioning. The following are some of the environmental modification activities useful for mosquito control:
Mosquitoes do not need big swamps, ponds and big water bodies to lay their eggs and complete their life cycle. Very small water collections such as in hoof-prints, abandoned cans, jars and tyres can serve as mosquito breeding grounds. Therefore, small containers serving as breeding sites can be removed, destroyed or covered to deny access to mosquitoes.
Filling of mosquito breeding sites with soil, stones, rubble, ash or rubbish is the most permanent control measure available. It is most suitable for reducing breeding sites that do not require much filling material, such as small depressions, water holes, borrow-pits (a hole that has been excavated by people as a source of soil, stones or dirt), and abandoned ditches or pools. On a small scale, no special expertise is needed and communities can carry out the work with shovels, picks, carts and other simple equipment. The filling material should be obtained without creating new breeding sites. Waste materials can be used for most of the filling. If refuse is used, it should be compacted (pressed down hard) and covered with earth to prevent breeding by flies. Very large areas can sometimes be filled at little cost by making use of waste soil and stones left over from a construction project.
Proper drainage reduces mosquito breeding. The drainage of water can be accomplished by constructing open waterways and dykes with tidal gates, subsoil drainage and pumping. Leakages, obstructions and small pools or puddles of residual water in drainage ditches often afford suitable breeding sites for mosquitoes. The planning and construction of some drainage systems are complicated and require the expertise of engineers. However, some small-scale drainage works intended to control mosquitoes can be carried out by community members using simple equipment (Figure 9.1).
Open earth drainage ditches like those in Figure 9.2 are the simplest to construct. They are used to prevent the accumulation of excess rainwater in depressions in the ground and to dry out marshy areas, borrow-pits, ground pools and other accumulations of surface water. The ditches carry the water away to an appropriate, lower-lying outlet, such as a river, stream, pond, soak away pit or main drainage ditch. They should follow the natural flow of water along the surface.
As shown in Figure 9.2, a main ditch may have several lateral or secondary ditches to collect water that does not readily drain into the main ditch.
As shown in Figure 9.3, eucalyptus trees can be used for drying marshy areas and other plots of land with a high water table. Species that grow rapidly and use a lot of water are particularly suitable. The trees dry the land by allowing water to evaporate through their leaves. For optimum evaporation they should be planted with adequate spaces between them. An additional advantage of the trees is their commercial value.
Increasing the flow of streams, regulation of the water level in reservoirs, vegetation removal and shading are examples of environmental manipulation activities. The following are some of the environmental manipulation activities which are useful for mosquito control:
Potential breeding sites in relatively small enclosed habitats, such as drinking water storage containers, tyres and wells, should be made inaccessible to adult mosquitoes by covering them (e.g. as in Figure 9.4). Removable covers, such as mosquito-proof lids or wire mesh screening, can be fitted in some cases. Wells can be made mosquito-proof by closing them with slabs, an iron sheet or grass, and installing hand pumps.
Flushing (increasing water flow in streams) is employed in small streams where there is a continuous and abundant supply of water flowing slowly enough to permit mosquitoes to breed in quiet places along the margins. A periodic discharge of a large volume of water washes away the eggs, larvae and pupae from the edges, or strands them on the banks.
In order to collect the water needed for flushing, a small dam is constructed upstream of the area where breeding occurs. The dam site should be at a point where the stream or channel is narrow and the banks are high. The dam could have a hand-operated gate, to release the water at least once a week. The method requires some initial investment, but is long-lasting and requires little maintenance. Health Extension Practitioners can mobilise the community to construct a small dam and water release system wherever such a measure is feasible to control mosquito breeding in the village.
Where mosquitoes prefer breeding sites that are partly or fully exposed to sunlight, they can be controlled by planting shrubs and trees along the banks of streams and covering ponds with iron sheets or local materials (Figure 9.5). The main vector of malaria in Ethiopia, An. arabiensis, prefers to breed in sunlit water, so this intervention could be helpful.
Mosquitoes can be controlled by removing vegetation from water collections. The plants provide the developing larvae with a safe hiding place from predators (e.g. fish), as well as protection from wave movement and currents. In small breeding sites, such as borrow-pits and ponds, the vegetation can be removed manually, for example by the members of communities, using rakes and other simple equipment (Figure 9.6). This method may also be effective in removing resting places for adult mosquitoes. In addition, it promotes evaporation and the drying up of small accumulations of water and makes breeding sites more visible for control purposes.
Shorelines of streams, ditches and ponds can be made steeper to reduce the availability of shallow places suitable for breeding of mosquitoes, and to increase the speed of the flowing water.
In this section, we summarise the environmental control measures that will be most useful and appropriate in dealing with common mosquito breeding sites in Ethiopia.
The construction of roads often leads to the creation of water collections that serve as vector breeding grounds. It often prevents natural drainage of the land and may result in the formation of large ponds alongside the roads.
Control measures include:
Borrow-pits used to extract soil and stones for construction are very common in rural Ethiopia inside and outside villages. Older pits containing vegetation and freshly dug pits collecting rain water (Figure 9.7) can serve as very important vector breeding sites.
Control measures include:
Micro-ponds are the most common man-made structures in Ethiopia, and are used to harvest rain water for horticulture and small scale irrigation. There are several types of micro-ponds in use. Some are lined with plastic sheet to prevent seepage and some are covered to avoid evaporation. The plastic lining prevents vegetation growth, making it unfavourable for mosquito breeding; covering the ponds denies access to egg-laying mosquitoes. However, many micro-ponds are neither lined nor roofed and serve as very important vector breeding grounds. Moreover, the location of these ponds very close to houses makes them extremely dangerous sites in terms of malaria transmission.
Control measures include:
Mosquitoes breed in quiet places close to the banks of rivers and creeks where there is protection from currents by obstacles, protruding roots, plants and so on. Effective control of larvae is generally difficult because of the large areas to be covered. Careful study is required to find out the exact location of the breeding sites. During the dry season mosquitoes may breed in stagnant pools in river beds.
Control measures include:
Many development-linked activities (e.g. irrigation) lead to environmental changes and often inadvertently increase the risk of malaria transmission. Appropriate safeguards and actions to reduce the risk are required in the planning, construction, and maintenance phases of development projects. Irrigation canals should be lined and the vegetation cleared to discourage breeding in the canal edges and allow free flow of water. The intervals between releasing a gush of water from an upstream dam can be adjusted to ensure adequate periodic flushing of larvae from pools in the canal beds.
Larviciding refers to the use of chemicals or biological agents or toxins to kill mosquito larvae. Water collections that cannot be managed by environmental control measures can be dealt with by larvicides. Like environmental control measures, the success of larvicides will depend on the identification of mosquito breeding sites and their distribution in the area, followed by sustained weekly spraying of chemicals (Figure 9.9). Larvicides should be applied in conjunction with other environmental control measures.
A chemical called Temephos (sold under the trade name Abate) has been the most widely used mosquito larvicide worldwide and in Ethiopia. Temephos is highly active against the nervous system of mosquito larvae and other aquatic insects, and a relatively low dosage can kill them before they reach the adult stage. Its toxicity (ability to poison) fish, birds, humans and other mammals is very low. Its low toxicity to non-target organisms and low effective dosage make Temephos the most appropriate larvicide in many situations. It is recommended for the control of mosquito larvae in drinking-water and in areas where fish, birds and mammals may come into contact with it.
According to the current Ethiopian national strategy for vector control, health posts will be supplied with spray pumps and Temephos, and you are expected to mobilise the community to undertake larviciding when necessary. Unlike indoor residual spraying (described in Study Session 10), larviciding requires little technical skill and therefore you can train community members to spray Temephos into breeding sites under your supervision and technical support. The instructions are given in Box 9.1.
To ensure the prevention and control of malaria in your village, it is important that all temporary or permanent vector breeding sites are identified and dealt with through active participation of community members. This malaria control strategy becomes effective only when the mosquitoes are systematically interrupted from breeding and/or their population is substantially decreased.
In summary, methods to control larvae involve the following:
The control of breeding places must be carried out around human settlements in an area with a radius greater than the flight range of the target mosquito species. For many species this is about 1.5–2 km. Control measures that are not permanently effective have to be maintained throughout the period of the mosquito breeding season. The effort and expense needed to obtain effective larval control may vary with the size of the settlement and the type and number of breeding sites.
In areas where malaria is a risk, you have to organise and educate the community to undertake environmental management activities such as draining, filling of communal mosquito breeding sites, irrigation canal water management, and chemical larviciding, etc. These activities have to be well planned (Box 9.2), performed under your supervision and assisted by volunteer community health workers. In addition to the efforts through the Health Extension Programme, community level social and traditional structures such as women’s associations, youth associations, cooperatives, health committees, schools and religious and community leaders, will all play a major role in social mobilisation as well as empowerment of the community to implement community based activities.
Environmental management activities for vector control may require large numbers of human volunteers and their successful and sustained implementation can only be assured by active participation of the whole community. The vector control measures should be run at least once every week during the malaria transmission season. You have to educate and mobilise your community members to participate in the identification of the mosquito breeding sites and the environmental and other control measures to be undertaken. You will be responsible for coordinating the environmental management activities and leading the community on what to do, where to do it, when to do it and how to do it, in order to reduce the risk of malaria.
Malaria can also be prevented through protective measures in instances where conditions do not permit environmental control options, or the control measures are not enough to provide adequate protection. For example, use of mosquito repellents on the skin and clothes could have additional benefits and so could insecticide treated tents, blankets and fly-sheets. Selection of camping or residential sites could be important to avoid proximity to mosquito breeding grounds. Smoke from an open fire repels insects, especially in still air or poorly ventilated dwellings. The repellent effect of smoke may be increased by burning certain materials such as aromatic wood containing resins. Communities should be encouraged to use traditional and modern repellents for personal protection where it is applicable.
Similarly, due to the rapid expansion of commercial farming in the country and the location of these farms in high malaria risk areas, investors need to be advised on the importance of malaria prevention methods, including environmental management, site selection of residential areas/camps for their workers, mosquito repellents and other protection measures.
In Study Session 9, you have learned that:
Now that you have completed this study session, you can assess how well you have achieved its Learning Outcomes by answering these questions. Write your answers in your Study Diary and discuss them with your Tutor at the next Study Support Meeting. You can check your answers with the Notes on the Self-Assessment Questions at the end of this Module.
Which of the following statements about larviciding is false? In each case, explain what is incorrect.
A Larviciding means applying chemicals to kill adult vector mosquitoes.
B Temephos is a chemical used as a larvicide to kill larvae of vector mosquitoes.
C Temephos is sprayed onto water collections using spray pumps.
D Temephos can only be sprayed by trained experts/professionals.
E Larvicides are applied to all vector breeding sites, including those that can be removed by environmental management activities.
A is false. Larviciding is a method of killing mosquito larvae using chemicals or toxins; not the adults.
B is true. Temephos is a chemical widely used as larvicide in Ethiopia.
C is true. Temephos is sprayed to vector breeding water collections using spray pumps.
D is false. Temephos can be sprayed by HEWs or community health workers.
E is false. Larviciding is done in vector breeding sites that cannot be treated through environmental management measures.
You know that mosquitoes require water collections for breeding and different types of vector breeding grounds can serve as breeding habitats. From the list below, identify places that cannot be breeding grounds for the vectors that transmit malaria, and explain why.
Borrow-pits, micro-ponds, stream beds, irrigation canals, swamps, and road ditches can serve as water collection sites and thus vector breeding grounds. Houses and trees are not water collection places and cannot be vector breeding sites. Foul smelling polluted water is not good for breeding of malaria transmitting mosquitoes.
In most parts of Ethiopia, vector populations increase following the rainy season. What could be the reason for an increase in the vector population after the rains? What is the most important type of water collection that is very good for breeding and development of the main malaria vector in Ethiopia?
Rainfall creates several water collections that serve as vector breeding grounds. Small rain water pools are the most important breeding sites for the main vector of malaria in Ethiopia.
You have learned that environmental manipulation refers to making temporary changes to the environment to make it unfavourable for the vector to complete its life cycle in water. List three environmental manipulation techniques with this effect.
You may have thought of removing water plants from water collections, removing obstructions from streams, flushing, shading ponds and river banks, etc.
Environmental modification refers to making permanent changes to the environment to make it unfavourable for the vector to complete its life cycle in water. List two examples of environmental modification measures with this effect.
You may have thought of filling of pits and depressions, levelling uneven ground, shore lining, planting trees to drink up ground water, etc.
Imagine that you have a vector breeding site in your community that cannot be eliminated through environmental management methods and you have to use larviciding to kill the larvae. The surface area of the water in the breeding site is 960 square metres (m2). You have learned that 8 ml of the chemical Temephos mixed in 8 litres of water in one spray pump is enough to treat 320 m2 surface area of water in the breeding site.
You learned that most larval control activities are undertaken through community participation and you have to mobilise and convince the community to participate. What are the community organisations that can help you to mobilise local people to participate in larval control activities?
Women’s and youth associations, cooperatives, health committees, schools and religious leaders and community leaders, all may help you to mobilize local people to undertake larval control activities.