1960
DOI: 10.1016/0035-9203(60)90115-2
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Malaria in the Pare area of Tanganyika

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Cited by 31 publications
(14 citation statements)
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“…It appears that the exophilous populations of A. junestus, and to a lesser extent of A. gambiae, although primarily anthropophilous show some deviation towards other vertebrates. This is not so marked, however, as that observed in East Africa, where Draper & Smith (1957) found considerable deviation of A. gambiae, and to a lesser extent of .4. junestus, to cattle. Zoophilic tendencies in these species have also been reported from western Sokoto, where nearly all the catch of A. gambiae and A. funcstus taken in human habitations had fed on man, but 62-87 per cent, of A. gambiae and about 30 per cent, of A. junestus resting in horse stables had fed on horse; in addition, a few had fed on cattle and then entered the stables.…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 51%
“…It appears that the exophilous populations of A. junestus, and to a lesser extent of A. gambiae, although primarily anthropophilous show some deviation towards other vertebrates. This is not so marked, however, as that observed in East Africa, where Draper & Smith (1957) found considerable deviation of A. gambiae, and to a lesser extent of .4. junestus, to cattle. Zoophilic tendencies in these species have also been reported from western Sokoto, where nearly all the catch of A. gambiae and A. funcstus taken in human habitations had fed on man, but 62-87 per cent, of A. gambiae and about 30 per cent, of A. junestus resting in horse stables had fed on horse; in addition, a few had fed on cattle and then entered the stables.…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 51%
“…data). At Pare, 120 km to the north, the natural sporozoite rate in A. gambiae is 0-3-0-5% (Draper & Smith, 1957) in a population of A. gambiae comprising over 90% of species B (White & Muniss, 1970, and unpubl. data).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Notably, Africa was not formally included in this program despite clear evidence of the large disease burden within the continent at that time. However, elimination campaigns were subsequently undertaken on a smaller scale within Africa, most prominently in two areas of moderate to high transmission in Nigeria (the Garki project [7],[8]) and on the Kenyan/Tanzanian border (the Pare-Taveta project [9]), but also periodically in areas of lower transmission including the Kenyan highlands [10] and the island of Madagascar [11]. These campaigns included frequent insecticide spraying of houses to reduce the vector populations and rounds of mass treatment to reduce the human infectious reservoir.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%