Preliminary studies developing methods for the control of Chrysomya putoria, the African latrine fly, in pit latrines in The Gambia

T.C. Lindsay, M. Jawara, Umberto D'Alessandro, M. Pinder, S.W. Lindsay

    Research output: Contribution to journalA1: Web of Science-articlepeer-review

    Abstract

    OBJECTIVE: To explore ways of controlling Chrysomya putoria, the African latrine fly, in pit latrines. As pit latrines are a major source of these flies, eliminating these important breeding sites is likely to reduce village fly populations, and may reduce the spread of diarrhoeal pathogens. METHODS: We treated 24 latrines in a Gambian village: six each with (i) pyriproxyfen, an insect juvenile hormone mimic formulated as Sumilarv((R)) 0.5G, a 0.5% pyriproxyfen granule, (ii) expanded polystyrene beads (EPB), (iii) local soap or (iv) no treatment as controls. Flies were collected using exit traps placed over the drop holes, weekly for five weeks. In a separate study, we tested whether latrines also function as efficient flytraps using the faecal odours as attractants. We constructed six pit latrines each with a built-in flytrap and tested their catching efficiency compared to six fish-baited box traps positioned 10 m from the latrine. Focus group discussions conducted afterwards assessed the acceptability of the flytrap latrines. RESULTS: Numbers of emerging C. putoria were reduced by 96.0% (95% CIs: 94.5-97.2%) 4-5 weeks after treatment with pyriproxyfen; by 64.2% (95% CIs: 51.8-73.5%) after treatment with local soap; by 41.3% (95% CIs = 24.0-54.7%) after treatment with EPB 3-5 weeks after treatment. Flytraps placed on latrines collected C. putoria and were deemed acceptable to local communities. CONCLUSIONS: Sumilarv 0.5G shows promise as a chemical control agent, whilst odour-baited latrine traps may prove a useful method of non-chemical fly control. Both methods warrant further development to reduce fly production from pit latrines. A combination of interventions may prove effective for the control of latrine flies and the diseases they transmit.
    Original languageEnglish
    JournalTropical Medicine and International Health
    Volume18
    Issue number2
    Pages (from-to)159-165
    Number of pages7
    ISSN1360-2276
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2013

    Keywords

    • Diarrheal diseases
    • Vectors
    • Chrysomya putoria
    • Vector control
    • Breeding sites
    • Latrines
    • Sanitation
    • Insecticides
    • Pyriproxyfen
    • Expanded polystyrene beads
    • Soap
    • Specimen collection
    • Traps
    • Odour
    • Baits
    • Feces
    • Efficiency
    • Acceptability
    • Gambia
    • Africa-West

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