Evaluation of improved coloured targets to control riverine tsetse in East Africa: A Bayesian approach
Roger D Santer,
Michael N Okal,
Johan Esterhuizen and
Steve J Torr
PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases, 2021, vol. 15, issue 6, 1-22
Abstract:
Background: Riverine tsetse (Glossina spp.) transmit Trypanosoma brucei gambiense which causes Gambian Human African Trypanosomiasis. Tiny Targets were developed for cost-effective riverine tsetse control, and comprise panels of insecticide-treated blue polyester fabric and black net that attract and kill tsetse. Versus typical blue polyesters, two putatively more attractive fabrics have been developed: Vestergaard ZeroFly blue, and violet. Violet was most attractive to savannah tsetse using large targets, but neither fabric has been tested for riverine tsetse using Tiny Targets. Methods: We measured numbers of G. f. fuscipes attracted to electrified Tiny Targets in Kenya and Uganda. We compared violets, Vestergaard blues, and a typical blue polyester, using three replicated Latin squares experiments. We then employed Bayesian statistical analyses to generate expected catches for future target deployments incorporating uncertainty in model parameters, and prior knowledge from previous experiments. Results: Expected catches for average future replicates of violet and Vestergaard blue targets were highly likely to exceed those for typical blue. Accounting for catch variability between replicates, it remained moderately probable (70–86% and 59–84%, respectively) that a given replicate of these targets would have a higher expected catch than typical blue on the same day at the same site. Meanwhile, expected catches for average violet replicates were, in general, moderately likely to exceed those for Vestergaard blue. However, the difference in medians was small, and accounting for catch variability, the probability that the expected catch for a violet replicate would exceed a Vestergaard blue equivalent was marginal (46–71%). Conclusion: Violet and Vestergaard ZeroFly blue are expected to outperform typical blue polyester in the Tiny Target configuration. Violet is unlikely to greatly outperform Vestergaard blue deployed in this way, but because violet is highly attractive to both riverine and savannah tsetse using different target designs, it may provide the more suitable general-purpose fabric. Author summary: Riverine tsetse flies transmit parasites that cause sleeping sickness, so Tiny Targets have been developed to control them. Tiny Targets comprise adjacent panels of insecticide-coated blue polyester fabric and black net, and they work because tsetse are attracted by the blue fabric, and are killed by the insecticide if they make contact. In order to improve Tiny Targets, new coloured polyester fabrics have been developed with the aim of attracting more tsetse. These include a blue fabric produced by Vestergaard S.A. and currently used to make Tiny Targets, and a violet fabric developed by modelling fly colour vision and effective against savannah tsetse. We recorded the numbers of tsetse attracted to Tiny Targets made from these fabrics, and a typical blue polyester. Based on our data, we predicted the performance of such Tiny Targets in future deployments. It is highly probable that both Vestergaard blue and violet fabrics will attract more tsetse than typical blue. The average catch at a violet Tiny Target is quite likely to exceed that at a Vestergaard blue one, but because the difference is small and catches variable, there is unlikely to be a meaningful performance difference between these fabrics when deployed this way.
Date: 2021
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:plo:pntd00:0009463
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0009463
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