Insect vectors of Leishmania: distribution, physiology and their control

Leishmaniasis is a deadly vector-borne disease that causes significant morbidity and mortality in Africa, Asia, Latin America and Mediterranean regions. The causative agent of leishmaniasis is transmitted from man to man by a tiny insect called sandfly. Approximately, 600 species of sandflies are kn...

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Main Authors: Umakant Sharma, Sarman Singh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications 2008-11-01
Series:Journal of Vector Borne Diseases
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mrcindia.org/journal/issues/454255.pdf
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spelling doaj-992661622763420baf0b632e552656a82020-11-24T23:10:45ZengWolters Kluwer Medknow PublicationsJournal of Vector Borne Diseases0972-90622008-11-01454255272Insect vectors of Leishmania: distribution, physiology and their controlUmakant SharmaSarman SinghLeishmaniasis is a deadly vector-borne disease that causes significant morbidity and mortality in Africa, Asia, Latin America and Mediterranean regions. The causative agent of leishmaniasis is transmitted from man to man by a tiny insect called sandfly. Approximately, 600 species of sandflies are known but only 10% of these act as disease vectors. Further, only 30 species of these are important from public health point. Fauna of Indian sub-zone is represented by 46 species, of these, 11 belong to Phlebotomine species and 35 to Sergentomyia species. Phlebotomus argentipes is the proven vector of kala-azar or visceral leishmaniasis in India. This review gives an insight into the insect vectors of human leishmaniasis, their geographical distribution, recent taxonomic classification, habitat, and different control measures including indoor residual spraying (IRS), insecticide-treated bednets (ITNs), environmental management, biological control, and emerging resistance to DDT. Role of satellite remote sensing for early prediction of the disease by identifying the sandflygenic conditions cannot be undermined. The article also underlines the importance of synthetic pheromones which can be used in near future for the control of these vectors.http://www.mrcindia.org/journal/issues/454255.pdfGeographic distributionLeishmaniaLutzomiaPhlebotomussandflytaxonomyvector control
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Umakant Sharma
Sarman Singh
spellingShingle Umakant Sharma
Sarman Singh
Insect vectors of Leishmania: distribution, physiology and their control
Journal of Vector Borne Diseases
Geographic distribution
Leishmania
Lutzomia
Phlebotomus
sandfly
taxonomy
vector control
author_facet Umakant Sharma
Sarman Singh
author_sort Umakant Sharma
title Insect vectors of Leishmania: distribution, physiology and their control
title_short Insect vectors of Leishmania: distribution, physiology and their control
title_full Insect vectors of Leishmania: distribution, physiology and their control
title_fullStr Insect vectors of Leishmania: distribution, physiology and their control
title_full_unstemmed Insect vectors of Leishmania: distribution, physiology and their control
title_sort insect vectors of leishmania: distribution, physiology and their control
publisher Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications
series Journal of Vector Borne Diseases
issn 0972-9062
publishDate 2008-11-01
description Leishmaniasis is a deadly vector-borne disease that causes significant morbidity and mortality in Africa, Asia, Latin America and Mediterranean regions. The causative agent of leishmaniasis is transmitted from man to man by a tiny insect called sandfly. Approximately, 600 species of sandflies are known but only 10% of these act as disease vectors. Further, only 30 species of these are important from public health point. Fauna of Indian sub-zone is represented by 46 species, of these, 11 belong to Phlebotomine species and 35 to Sergentomyia species. Phlebotomus argentipes is the proven vector of kala-azar or visceral leishmaniasis in India. This review gives an insight into the insect vectors of human leishmaniasis, their geographical distribution, recent taxonomic classification, habitat, and different control measures including indoor residual spraying (IRS), insecticide-treated bednets (ITNs), environmental management, biological control, and emerging resistance to DDT. Role of satellite remote sensing for early prediction of the disease by identifying the sandflygenic conditions cannot be undermined. The article also underlines the importance of synthetic pheromones which can be used in near future for the control of these vectors.
topic Geographic distribution
Leishmania
Lutzomia
Phlebotomus
sandfly
taxonomy
vector control
url http://www.mrcindia.org/journal/issues/454255.pdf
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