Abstract:
Nearly half a million deaths occur worldwide
annually due to mosquito-borne diseases. Mosquito control
has become the major strategy in controlling these diseases,
especially in the absence of effective vaccines for disease
prevention. At the beginning of the last century, mosquito
control was mainly done by personal protection methods and
larval control by application of petroleum oil and Paris green
powder to water bodies. A breakthrough in mosquito control
came in the 1940s with the introduction of synthetic neurotoxic
insecticides which could suppress mosquito populations rapidly
throughout the globe. However, a resurgence of populations
with resistance to these insecticides was witnessed within a
decade after their introduction. Environmental pollution caused
by synthetic insecticides also became a major concern. Novel
personal protection methods, community-level operations on
source reduction, insect growth regulators and polystyrene
beads for larval control, and biological control were introduced
as alternatives. Biological control was mainly by larval
predators such as fish, dragonfly nymphs, microcrustaceans
and Toxorhynchites larvae; bacterial larvicides such as Bti;
plant-based mosquitocides; and green-fabricated nanoparticles.
However, even today, mosquito control programmes heavily
depend on synthetic neurotoxic insecticides applied through
insecticide residual spraying (IRS), fogging, larviciding and
impregnated bed nets. Increased detoxification and target
site insensitivity, developed as major insecticide resistance
mechanisms, have been extensively studied in mosquitoes
assisting proper management of available insecticides for
which not many alternatives are available.
Despite all our efforts, an unprecedented global emergence
of mosquito-borne diseases is evident demanding novel
strategies for mosquito control. The introduction of transgenic
strains of mosquitoes to suppress or replace mosquito
populations reducing disease transmission has become the
latest effort. Population reduction has been achieved via
releasing mosquitoes with a dominant lethal gene (RIDL) and
by combining the conventional sterile insect technique (SIT)
with Wolbachia mediated incompatible insect technique (IIT).
Population replacement has been successful via releasing
Wolbachia infected mosquitoes that are refractory to pathogen
development and transmission. Advancement of gene- and
allelic- drive systems will soon allow us to effectively spread
refractory genes and insecticide susceptible alleles into
mosquito populations overriding normal inheritance.