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Featured researches published by Yaya Kassogué.


American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2010

Aestivation of the African Malaria Mosquito, Anopheles gambiae in the Sahel

Tovi Lehmann; Adama Dao; Alpha S. Yaro; Abdoulaye Adamou; Yaya Kassogué; Moussa Diallo; Traoré Sékou; Cecilia Coscaron-Arias

The African malaria mosquito, Anopheles gambiae, inhabits diverse environments including dry savannas, where surface waters required for larval development are absent for 4–8 months per year. Under such conditions, An. gambiae virtually disappears. Whether populations survive the long dry season by aestivation (a dormant state promoting extended longevity during the summer) or are reestablished by migrants from distant locations where larval sites persist has remained an enigma for over 60 years. Resolving this question is important, because fragile dry season populations may be more susceptible to control. Here, we show unequivocally that An. gambiae aestivates based on a demographic study and a mark release–recapture experiment spanning the period from the end of one wet season to the beginning of the next. During the dry season, An. gambiae was barely detectable in Sahelian villages of Mali. Five days after the first rain, before a new generation of adults could be produced, mosquito abundance surged 10-fold, implying that most mosquitoes were concealed locally until the rain. Four days after the first rain, a marked female An. gambiae s.s. was recaptured. Initially captured, marked, and released at the end of the previous wet season, she has survived the 7-month-long dry season. These results provide evidence that An. gambiae persists throughout the dry season by aestivation and open new questions for mosquito and parasite research. Improved malaria control by targeting aestivating mosquitoes using existing or novel strategies may be possible.


Malaria Journal | 2011

The contribution of aestivating mosquitoes to the persistence of Anopheles gambiae in the Sahel

Abdoulaye Adamou; Adama Dao; Seydou Timbiné; Yaya Kassogué; Alpha S. Yaro; Moussa Diallo; Sekou F. Traore; Diana L. Huestis; Tovi Lehmann

BackgroundPersistence of African anophelines throughout the long dry season (4-8 months) when no surface waters are available remains one of the enduring mysteries of medical entomology. Recent studies demonstrated that aestivation (summer diapause) is one mechanism that allows the African malaria mosquito, Anopheles gambiae, to persist in the Sahel. However, migration from distant localities - where reproduction continues year-round - might also be involved.MethodsTo assess the contribution of aestivating adults to the buildup of populations in the subsequent wet season, two villages subjected to weekly pyrethrum sprays throughout the dry season were compared with two nearby villages, which were only monitored. If aestivating adults are the main source of the subsequent wet-season population, then the subsequent wet-season density in the treated villages will be lower than in the control villages. Moreover, since virtually only M-form An. gambiae are found during the dry season, the reduction should be specific to the M form, whereas no such difference is predicted for S-form An. gambiae or Anopheles arabiensis. On the other hand, if migrants arriving with the first rain are the main source, no differences between treated and control villages are expected across all members of the An. gambiae complex.ResultsThe wet-season density of the M form in treated villages was 30% lower than that in the control (P < 10-4, permutation test), whereas no significant differences were detected in the S form or An. arabiensis.ConclusionsThese results support the hypothesis that the M form persist in the arid Sahel primarily by aestivation, whereas the S form and An. arabiensis rely on migration from distant locations. Implications for malaria control are discussed.


The Journal of Experimental Biology | 2011

Variation in metabolic rate of Anopheles gambiae and A. arabiensis in a Sahelian village

Diana L. Huestis; Alpha S. Yaro; Adama I. Traoré; Abdoulaye Adamou; Yaya Kassogué; Moussa Diallo; Seydou Timbiné; Adama Dao; Tovi Lehmann

SUMMARY In the Sahel, the Anopheles gambiae complex consists of Anopheles arabiensis and the M and S molecular forms of A. gambiae sensu stricto. However, the composition of these malaria vectors varies spatially and temporally throughout the region and is thought to be linked to environmental factors such as rainfall, larval site characteristics and duration of the dry season. To examine possible physiological divergence between these taxa, we measured metabolic rates of mosquitoes during the wet season in a Sahelian village in Mali. To our knowledge, this study provides the first measurements of metabolic rates of A. gambiae and A. arabiensis in the field. The mean metabolic rate of A. arabiensis was higher than that of M-form A. gambiae when accounting for the effects of female gonotrophic status, temperature and flight activity. However, after accounting for their difference in body size, no significant difference in metabolic rate was found between these two species (whilst all other factors were found to be significant). Thus, body size may be a key character that has diverged in response to ecological differences between these two species. Alternatively, these species may display additional differences in metabolic rate only during the dry season. Overall, our results indicate that changes in behavior and feeding activity provide an effective mechanism for mosquitoes to reduce their metabolic rate, and provide insight into the possible strategies employed by aestivating individuals during the dry season. We hypothesize that female mosquitoes switch to sugar feeding while in dormancy because of elevated metabolism associated with blood digestion.


Journal of Insect Physiology | 2012

Dry season reproductive depression of Anopheles gambiae in the Sahel

Alpha S. Yaro; Adama I. Traoré; Diana L. Huestis; Abdoulaye Adamou; Seydou Timbiné; Yaya Kassogué; Moussa Diallo; Adama Dao; Sekou F. Traore; Tovi Lehmann

The African malaria mosquito, Anopheles gambiae, is widespread south of the Sahara including in dry savannahs and semi-arid environments where no surface water exists for several months a year. Adults of the M form of An. gambiae persist through the long dry season, when no surface waters are available, by increasing their maximal survival from 4 weeks to 7 months. Dry season diapause (aestivation) presumably underlies this extended survival. Diapause in adult insects is intrinsically linked to depressed reproduction. To determine if reproduction of the Sahelian M form is depressed during the dry season, we assessed seasonal changes in oviposition, egg batch size, and egg development, as well as insemination rate and blood feeding in wild caught mosquitoes. Results from xeric Sahelian and riparian populations were compared. Oviposition response in the Sahelian M form dropped from 70% during the wet season to 20% during the dry season while the mean egg batch size among those that laid eggs fell from 173 to 101. Correspondingly, the fraction of females that exhibited gonotrophic dissociation increased over the dry season from 5% to 45%, while a similar fraction of the population retained developed eggs despite having access to water. This depression in reproduction the Sahelian M form was not caused by a reduced insemination rate. Seasonal variation in these reproductive parameters of the riparian M form population was less extreme and the duration of reproductive depression was shorter. Blood feeding responses did not change with the season in either population. Depressed reproduction during the dry season in the Sahelian M form of An. gambiae provides additional evidence for aestivation and illuminates the physiological processes involved. The differences between the Sahelian and riparian population suggest an adaptive cline in aestivation phenotypes between populations only 130 km apart.


Journal of Medical Entomology | 2008

Assessment of Alternative Mating Strategies in Anopheles gambiae: Does Mating Occur Indoors?

Adama Dao; Abdoulaye Adamou; Alpha S. Yaro; Hamidou Maïga; Yaya Kassogué; Sekou F. Traore; Tovi Lehmann

Abstract Mating in Anopheles gambiae has been observed only in outdoor swarms. Here we evaluate whether mating also occurs indoors. Mark-release-recapture of virgin males and females in natural houses showed that mating occurred over a single day even when mosquitoes can leave the house through exit traps and without adaptation to laboratory conditions. In these experiments, insemination rate in the M molecular form of An. gambiae (and An. arabiensis) was higher than that of the S form (15 versus 6%). Under these conditions, smaller females of the M form mated more frequently than larger females of that form. Sampling mosquitoes throughout the day showed that both sexes enter houses around sunrise and leave around sunset, staying indoors together from dawn to dusk. In an area dominated by the M form, the daily rate of insemination in samples from exit traps was ≈5% higher than in those from entry traps, implying that mating occurred indoors. Importantly, frequency of cross mating between the molecular forms was as high as that between members of the same form, indicating that, indoors, assortative mating breaks down. Altogether, these results suggest that indoor mating is an alternative mating strategy of the M molecular form of An. gambiae. Because naturally occurring mating couples have not yet been observed indoors, this conclusion awaits validation.


The Journal of Experimental Biology | 2012

Seasonal variation in metabolic rate, flight activity and body size of Anopheles gambiae in the Sahel

Diana L. Huestis; Alpha S. Yaro; Adama I. Traoré; Kathryne L. Dieter; Juliette I. Nwagbara; Aleah C. Bowie; Abdoulaye Adamou; Yaya Kassogué; Moussa Diallo; Seydou Timbiné; Adama Dao; Tovi Lehmann

SUMMARY Malaria in Africa is vectored primarily by the Anopheles gambiae complex. Although the mechanisms of population persistence during the dry season are not yet known, targeting dry season mosquitoes could provide opportunities for vector control. In the Sahel, it appears likely that M-form A. gambiae survive by aestivation (entering a dormant state). To assess the role of eco-physiological changes associated with dry season survival, we measured body size, flight activity and metabolic rate of wild-caught mosquitoes throughout 1 year in a Sahelian locality, far from permanent water sources, and at a riparian location adjacent to the Niger River. We found significant seasonal variation in body size at both the Sahelian and riparian sites, although the magnitude of the variation was greater in the Sahel. For flight activity, significant seasonality was only observed in the Sahel, with increased flight activity in the wet season when compared with that just prior to and throughout the dry season. Whole-organism metabolic rate was affected by numerous biotic and abiotic factors, and a significant seasonal component was found at both locations. However, assay temperature accounted completely for seasonality at the riparian location, while significant seasonal variation remained after accounting for all measured variables in the Sahel. Interestingly, we did not find that mean metabolic rate was lowest during the dry season at either location, contrary to our expectation that mosquitoes would conserve energy and increase longevity by reducing metabolism during this time. These results indicate that mosquitoes may use mechanisms besides reduced metabolic rate to enable survival during the Sahelian dry season.


Journal of Medical Entomology | 2010

Reproduction-Longevity Trade-Off in Anopheles gambiae (Diptera: Culicidae)

Adama Dao; Yaya Kassogué; Abdoulaye Adamou; Moussa Diallo; Alpha S. Yaro; Sekou F. Traore; Tovi Lehmann

ABSTRACT Reduced survival and future reproduction due to of current reproduction is a trade-off known as the cost of reproduction. Surprisingly, only a few studies have assessed the cost of reproduction in arthropod disease vectors, despite its effect on longevity, and thus on vectorial capacity. We evaluated the cost of reproduction on survival of Anopheles gambiae Giles by comparing mosquitoes that were denied exposure to the other sex, hereafter named virgins, and those that were allowed exposure to the other sex and mating, hereafter named mated. Merely 6 d of exposure to females with mating activity reduced male survival from a median of 17 d in virgins to 15 d in mated, indicating that male mating cost is substantial. The increase in mortality of mated males began several days after the exposure to females ended, indicating that mating is not associated with immediate mortality risk. Notably, body size was negatively correlated with male mortality in mated males, but not in virgins. The rate of insemination declined after 4 d of exposure to females, indicating that male mating capacity is limited and further supporting the hypothesis that mating is costly for males. Consistent with previous studies, female survival on sugar alone (median = 16 d) was shorter than on blood and sugar (median = 19 d), regardless if she was mated or virgin. Overall, survival of mated females was lower than that of virgins on a diet of blood and sugar, but no difference was found on a diet of sugar only. However, the cost of reproduction in females remains ambiguous because the difference in survival between virgin and mated females was driven by the difference between virgin (median = 19 d) and uninseminated females exposed to males (median = 17 d), rather than between virgin and inseminated females (median = 19 d). Accordingly, sperm and seminal fluid, egg development, and oviposition have negligible cost in terms of female survival. Only exposure to males without insemination decreased female survival, Nonetheless, if exposure to males under natural conditions is also associated with reduced survival, it might explain why females remain monogamous.


Journal of Medical Entomology | 2014

Seasonal Variation in Spatial Distributions of Anopheles gambiae in a Sahelian Village: Evidence for Aestivation

Tovi Lehmann; A. Dao; A. S. Yaro; M. Diallo; Seydou Timbiné; Diana L. Huestis; Abdoulaye Adamou; Yaya Kassogué; Adama I. Traoré

ABSTRACT Changes in spatial distribution of mosquitoes over time in a Sahelian village were studied to understand the sources of the mosquitoes during the dry season when no larval sites are found. At that time, the sources of Anopheles gambiae Giles may be local shelters used by aestivating mosquitoes or migrants from distant populations. The mosquito distribution was more aggregated during the dry season, when few houses had densities 7- to 24-fold higher than expected. The high-density houses during the dry season differed from those of the wet season. Most high-density houses during the dry season changed between years, yet their vicinity was rather stable. Scan statistics confirmed the presence of one or two adjacent hotspots in the dry season, usually found on one edge of the village. These hotspots shifted between the early and late dry season. During the wet season, the hotspots were relatively stable near the main larval site. The locations of the hotspots in the wet season and early and late dry season were similar between years. Season-specific, stable, and focal hotspots are inconsistent with the predictions based on the arrival of migrants from distant localities during the dry season, but are consistent with the predictions based on local shelters used by aestivating mosquitoes. Targeting hotspots in Sahelian villages for vector control may not be effective because the degree of aggregation is moderate, the hotspots are not easily predicted, and they are not the sources of the population. However, targeting the dry-season shelters may be highly cost-effective, once they can be identified and predicted.


Malaria Journal | 2014

Phenotypic divergence among the members of the African malaria mosquitoes and strategies of persistence throughout the dry season

Tovi Lehmann; Adama Dao; Alpha S Yaro; Diana L. Huestis; Moussa Diallo; Seydou Timbiné; Yaya Kassogué; Alpha Adamou; Adama I. Traoré; Djibril Samaké

Genetic heterogeneity in the African malaria mosquito, Anopheles gambiae, led to the recognition of chromosomal forms over 30 years ago by Prof Coluzzi and colleagues, who proposed that divergence between these populations was extensive and related to adaptation to mesic vs arid habitats as well as to particular types of larval habitats. Re-defined as “molecular forms,” genetic divergence among these populations has been elaborated by cutting-edge molecular studies, providing support for their status as distinct evolutionary units as well as against it, and fueling a lively debate that recently culminated in the elevation of the M and S forms to species, as A. coluzzii and A. gambiae, respectively. However, beyond geographical and seasonal observations, phenotypic differences between the forms have received far less attention. Surprisingly, minimal differences were found in adult body size, reproductive output, wet-season longevity, susceptibility to Plasmodium, desiccation resistance, and high-temperature tolerance; together, these results appear to undercut the implications of genetic divergence. Yet, evidence for differential predator-mediated developmental success of larvae supported adaptive divergence to distinct larval habitats, while additional studies showed that reproductive isolation across most of their ranges is maintained primarily by swarm segregation and possibly by within-swarm recognition based on flight pattern, sound, or chemical cues. More recently, studies have revealed striking divergence in dry-season persistence strategies between Sahelian populations of these species. Accordingly, A. coluzzii persists through the dry season in situ, by a form of dormancy (aestivation), whereas A. gambiae recolonizes the area by wind-assisted long-distance migration. These results reveal profound ecological (behavioral and physiological) divergence between these populations, lending substantial support for their status as distinct species. Additionally, they affirm Prof Coluzzi’s insights about the evolutionary forces that have led to their speciation. Although these findings provide strong clues as to the process of speciation in this complex, important gaps in this understanding remain, and hold promise for fresh scientific insights and for malaria control.


Evolutionary Applications | 2017

Tracing the origin of the early wet‐season Anopheles coluzzii in the Sahel

Tovi Lehmann; David Weetman; Diana L. Huestis; Alpha S. Yaro; Yaya Kassogué; Moussa Diallo; Martin J. Donnelly; Adama Dao

In arid environments, the source of the malaria mosquito populations that re‐establish soon after first rains remains a puzzle and alternative explanations have been proposed. Using genetic data, we evaluated whether the early rainy season (RS) population of Anopheles coluzzii is descended from the preceding late RS generation at the same locality, consistent with dry season (DS) dormancy (aestivation), or from migrants from distant locations. Distinct predictions derived from these two hypotheses were assessed, based on variation in 738 SNPs in eleven A. coluzzii samples, including seven samples spanning 2 years in a Sahelian village. As predicted by the “local origin under aestivation hypothesis,” temporal samples from the late RS and those collected after the first rain of the following RS were clustered together, while larger genetic distances were found among samples spanning the RS. Likewise, multilocus genotype composition of samples from the end of the RS was similar across samples until the following RS, unlike samples that spanned the RS. Consistent with reproductive arrest during the DS, no genetic drift was detected between samples taken over that period, despite encompassing extreme population minima, whereas it was detected between samples spanning the RS. Accordingly, the variance in allele frequency increased with time over the RS, but not over the DS. However, not all the results agreed with aestivation. Large genetic distances separated samples taken a year apart, and during the first year, within‐sample genetic diversity declined and increased back during the late RS, suggesting a bottleneck followed by migration. The decline of genetic diversity followed by a mass distribution of insecticide‐treated nets was accompanied by a reduced mosquito density and a rise in the mutation conferring resistance to pyrethroids, indicating a bottleneck due to insecticidal selection. Overall, our results support aestivation in A. coluzzii during the DS that is accompanied by long‐distance migration in the late RS.

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Tovi Lehmann

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Abdoulaye Adamou

University of the Sciences

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Diana L. Huestis

National Institutes of Health

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Seydou Timbiné

University of the Sciences

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Adama I. Traoré

University of the Sciences

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Kathryne L. Dieter

National Institutes of Health

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