Abstract:
The major mosquito vectors of human diseases have co-evolved with humans over a long period of time. However,
the rapid growth in human population and the associated expansion in agricultural activity and greater urbanisation
have created ecological changes that have had a marked impact on biology of mosquito vectors. Adaptation of the
vectors of malaria and important arbovial diseases over a much shorter time scale to the new types of preimaginal
habitats recently created by human population growth and activity is highlighted here in the context of its potential
for increasing disease transmission rates. Possible measures that can reduce the effects on the transmission of
mosquito-borne diseases are also outlined.