Field Effectiveness of Drones to Identify Potential Aedes aegypti Breeding Sites in Household Environments from Tapachula, a Dengue-Endemic City in Southern Mexico

Valdez Delgado, Kenia Mayela y Moo Llanes, David y Danis Lozano, Rogelio y Cisneros Vázquez, Luis Alberto y Flores Suárez, Adriana Elizabeth y Ponce García, Gustavo y Medina de la Garza, Carlos Eduardo y Díaz González, Esteban Eduardo y Fernández Salas, Ildefonso (2021) Field Effectiveness of Drones to Identify Potential Aedes aegypti Breeding Sites in Household Environments from Tapachula, a Dengue-Endemic City in Southern Mexico. Insects, 12. pp. 1-12. ISSN 2075-4450

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Resumen

Aedes aegypti control programs require more sensitive tools in order to survey domestic and peridomestic larval habitats for dengue and other arbovirus prevention areas. As a consequence of the COVID-19 pandemic, field technicians have faced a new occupational hazard during their work activities in dengue surveillance and control. Safer strategies to monitor larval populations, in addition to minimum householder contact, are undoubtedly urgently needed. Drones can be part of the solution in urban and rural areas that are dengue-endemic. Throughout this study, the proportion of larvae breeding sites found in the roofs and backyards of houses were assessed using drone images. Concurrently, the traditional ground field technician’s surveillance was utilized to sample the same house groups. The results were analyzed in order to compare the effectiveness of both field surveillance approaches. Aerial images of 216 houses from El Vergel village in Tapachula, Chiapas, Mexico, at a height of 30 m, were obtained using a drone. Each household was sampled indoors and outdoors by vector control personnel targeting all the containers that potentially served as Aedes aegypti breeding sites. The main results were that the drone could find 1 container per 2.8 found by ground surveillance; however, containers that were inaccessible by technicians in roofs and backyards, such as plastic buckets and tubs, disposable plastic containers and flowerpots were more often detected by drones than traditional ground surveillance. This new technological approach would undoubtedly improve the surveillance of Aedes aegypti in household environments, and better vector control activities would therefore be achieved in dengue-endemic countries.

Tipo de elemento: Article
Palabras claves no controlados: Aedes aegypti, dron, criaderos, vigilancia de mosquitos, Tapachula
Materias: R Medicina > RA Aspectos Públicos de la Medicina
Divisiones: Ciencias Biológicas
Usuario depositante: Editor Repositorio
Creadores:
CreadorEmailORCID
Valdez Delgado, Kenia MayelaNO ESPECIFICADONO ESPECIFICADO
Moo Llanes, DavidNO ESPECIFICADONO ESPECIFICADO
Danis Lozano, RogelioNO ESPECIFICADONO ESPECIFICADO
Cisneros Vázquez, Luis AlbertoNO ESPECIFICADONO ESPECIFICADO
Flores Suárez, Adriana ElizabethNO ESPECIFICADONO ESPECIFICADO
Ponce García, GustavoNO ESPECIFICADONO ESPECIFICADO
Medina de la Garza, Carlos EduardoNO ESPECIFICADONO ESPECIFICADO
Díaz González, Esteban EduardoNO ESPECIFICADONO ESPECIFICADO
Fernández Salas, Ildefonsoifernand1@hotmail.comNO ESPECIFICADO
Fecha del depósito: 14 Oct 2022 20:22
Última modificación: 14 Oct 2022 20:22
URI: http://eprints.uanl.mx/id/eprint/24016

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