Species of the Anopheles gambiae complex and chromosomal polymorphism in a rice-growing area of the Rusizi valley (Republic of Burundi)

M Coosemans, V Petrarca, M Barutwanayo, M Coluzzi

    Research output: Contribution to journalA2: International peer reviewed article (not A1-type)peer-review

    Abstract

    Chromosome studies on samples of the Anopheles gambiae complex were carried out in a village of the rice-growing area of the Rusizi Valley (Burundi). A large predominance of An. arabiensis was observed throughout the year. Anopheles gambiae was also present but represented about 4% only of the indoor resting An. gambiae s.l. The finding of human blood-fed specimens in animal shelters suggests partial exophily. Abdominal appearance observations indicated a gonotrophic dissociation during the dry season. Both An. arabiensis and An. gambiae showed a low degree of inversion polymorphism, in agreement with the general picture shown in East Africa. The most frequent karyotypes are typical of wet savannas
    Original languageEnglish
    JournalParassitologia
    Volume31
    Pages (from-to)113-122
    ISSN0048-2951
    Publication statusPublished - 1989

    Keywords

    • B780-tropical-medicine
    • Anopheles gambiae
    • Entomology
    • Genetics
    • Chromosomes
    • Polymorphism
    • Anopheles arabiensis
    • Burundi
    • Rusizi
    • Africa-Central

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