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Species Diversity of Anopheles Mosquitoes and Plasmodium vivax Infection Rates, Gyeonggi Province, Republic of Korea During 2020

Cited 2 time in Web of Science Cited 2 time in Scopus
Authors

Lee, So Youn; Kim, Heung Chul; Klein, Terry A.; Ryu, Jihun; Won, Min Hyeok; Choi, Jae Won; Kim, Myung Soon; Chong, Sung Tae; Lee, Si Hyeock; Kim, Young Ho; Kim, Ju Hyeon; Choi, Kwang Shik

Issue Date
2022-09
Publisher
Entomological Society of America
Citation
Journal of Medical Entomology, Vol.59 No.5, pp.1778-1786
Abstract
There are currently >300 malaria cases reported annually in the Republic of Korea (ROK), with most cases attributed to exposure in northern Gangwon and Gyeonggi provinces near the demilitarized zone (DMZ). The species diversity and malaria infection rate were determined for a sample of Anopheles mosquitoes collected from May to early November 2020 for six sites in a malaria high-risk area in/near the DMZ and two malaria low-risk areas in southern Gyeonggi province using Mosquito Magnet traps in the ROK. A total of 1864 Anopheles spp. were identified to species by PCR. Overall, An. kleini (31.4%, 510/1622) was the most frequently species assayed, followed by An. pullus (25.5%, 413/1622), An. sineroides (23.9%, 387/1622), and An. sinensis (10.2%, 165/1622), while the other four species only accunted for 9.1% (147/1622) collected in/near the DMZ. Only three species, An. pullus, An. sinensis, and An. sineroides were collected at Humphreys US Army Garrison (USAG) (235 individuals), while only An. sinensis was collected at Yongsan USAG (7 individuals). A total of 36 Anopheles specimens belonging to five species collected in/near the DMZ were positive for Plasmodium vivax by PCR. Anopheles kleini (9) was the most frequent species positive for P. vivax, followed by An. belenrae (8), An. pullus (8), An. sinensis (5), An. sineroides (5), and a member of the Anopheles Lindesayi Complex in the ROK (1). This is the first report of P. vivax in a member of the An. Lindesayi Complex in the ROK. These findings can assist in guiding future malaria vector management in the ROK.
ISSN
0022-2585
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/186616
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1093/jme/tjac086
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