1 |
Kenya |
ITNs and LLINs |
An. funestus
|
An. arabiensis, An. gambiae s.s. |
Pyrethroid resistance confirmed |
An. funestus 4.5%, An. arabiensis 0.9%, An.gambiae s.s 8.6% |
Reduced effectiveness of the current interventions |
[52] |
2 |
Burkina Faso |
|
An. gambiae s.l. |
An. funestus s.l, An. nili
|
No pyrethroid detected. An. funestus in was highly resistant to dieldrin |
An. funestus (2.6% -9.7%) |
An. funestus had higher biting rates and high sporozoite rate compared to An.gambiae complex |
[53] |
3 |
Tanzania |
LLINs |
An. gambiae s.l. |
An. funestus s.l |
Pyrethroid resistance confirmed |
An. funestus (0.16% -1.47%) |
Resurgence of malaria transmission in Kilombero valley, Tanzania |
[10] |
4 |
Senegal |
LLINs |
An. funestus
|
- |
- |
An. funestus 1.28% |
An. funestus changed their host seeking behaviour following the introduction of LLINs, thus compromising effectiveness of LLINS. |
[54] |
5 |
Cameroon |
|
An. funestus s.s |
An. gambiae s.s |
- |
An. funestus 6.8%, An.gambiae s.s 0.6%- 4.1% |
An. funestus accounts for 88% of the transmission in this setting. |
[55] |