Abstract:
The malaria vector Anopheles stephensi is found in wide tracts of Asia and the Middle
East. The discovery of its presence for the first time in the island of Sri Lanka in 2017,
poses a threat of malaria resurgence in a country which had eliminated the disease in
2013. Morphological and genetic characterization showed that the efficient Indian urban
vector form An. stephensi sensu stricto or type form, has recently expanded its range to
Jaffna and Mannar in northern Sri Lanka that are in proximity to Tamil Nadu state in South
India. Comparison of the DNA sequences of the cytochrome oxidase subunit 1 gene in
An. stephensi in Jaffna and Mannar in Sri Lanka and Tamil Nadu and Puducherry states
in South India showed that a haplotype that is due to a sequence change from valine
to methionine in the cytochrome oxidase subunit 1 present in the Jaffna and Mannar
populations has not been documented so far in Tamil Nadu/Puducherry populations.
The Jaffna An. stephensi were closer to Tamil Nadu/Puducherry populations and differed
significantly from the Mannar populations. The genetic findings cannot differentiate
between separate arrivals of the Jaffna and Mannar An. stephensi from Tamil Nadu or
a single arrival and dispersion to the two locations accompanied by micro-evolutionary
changes. Anopheles stephensi was observed to undergo preimaginal development in
fresh and brackish water domestic wells and over ground cement water storage tanks
in the coastal urban environment of Jaffna and Mannar. Anopheles stephensi in Jaffna
was resistant to the common insecticides deltamethrin, dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane
and Malathion. Its preimaginal development in wells and water tanks was susceptible to
predation by the larvivorous guppy fish Poecilia reticulata. The arrival, establishment, and
spread of An. stephensi in northern Sri Lanka are analyzed in relation to anthropogenic
factors that favor its range expansion. The implications of the findings for global public
health challenges posed by malaria and other mosquito-borne diseases are discussed.