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An atlas of tsetse and animal African trypanosomiasis in Zimbabwe

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dc.contributor.author Shereni, William
dc.contributor.author Neves, Luis
dc.contributor.author Argilés, Rafael
dc.contributor.author Nyakupinda, Learnmore
dc.contributor.author Cecchi, Giuliano
dc.date.accessioned 2024-08-29T09:32:43Z
dc.date.available 2024-08-29T09:32:43Z
dc.date.issued 2021
dc.identifier.uri http://www.repositorio.uem.mz/handle258/1102
dc.description.abstract In the 1980s and 1990s, great strides were taken towards the elimination of tsetse and animal African trypanosomiasis (AAT) in Zimbabwe. However, advances in recent years have been limited. Previously freed areas have been at risk of reinvasion, and the disease in tsetse-infested areas remains a constraint to food security. As part of ongoing control activities, monitoring of tsetse and AAT is performed regularly in the main areas at risk. How- ever, a centralized digital archive is missing. To fill this gap, a spatially explicit, national-level database of tsetse and AAT (i.e. atlas) was established through systematic data collation, harmonization and geo-referencing for the period 2000–2019. Methods: The atlas covers an area of approximately 70,000 ­km 2 , located mostly in the at-risk areas in the north of the country. In the tsetse component, a total of 33,872 entomological records were assembled for 4894 distinct trap locations. For the AAT component, 82,051 samples (mainly dry blood smears from clinically suspicious animals) were collected at 280 diptanks and examined for trypanosomal infection by microscopy. Results: Glossina pallidipes (82.7% of the total catches) and Glossina morsitans morsitans (17.3%) were the two tsetse species recorded in the north and northwest parts of the country. No fly was captured in the northeast. The distribu- tion of AAT follows broadly that of tsetse, although sporadic AAT cases were also reported from the northeast, appar- ently because of transboundary animal movement. Three trypanosome species were reported, namely Trypanosoma brucei (61.7% of recorded infections), Trypanosoma congolense (28.1%) and Trypanosoma vivax (10.2%). The respective prevalences, as estimated in sentinel herds by random sampling, were 2.22, 0.43 and 0.30%, respectively. Discussion: The patterns of tsetse and AAT distributions in Zimbabwe are shaped by a combination of bioclimatic factors, historical events such as the rinderpest epizootic at the turn of the twentieth century and extensive and sustained tsetse control that is aimed at progressively eliminating tsetse and trypanosomiasis from the entire country. The comprehensive dataset assembled in the atlas will improve the spatial targeting of surveillance and control activi- ties. It will also represent a valuable tool for research, by enabling large-scale geo-spatial analyses en_US
dc.language.iso eng en_US
dc.publisher BMC en_US
dc.rights openAcess en_US
dc.subject Atlas en_US
dc.subject Glossina morsitans morsitans en_US
dc.subject Glosssina pallidipes en_US
dc.subject Animal African trypanosomiasis en_US
dc.subject Epsilon trap en_US
dc.subject Database en_US
dc.subject Zimbabwe en_US
dc.title An atlas of tsetse and animal African trypanosomiasis in Zimbabwe en_US
dc.type article en_US
dc.journal Parasites & Vectors en_US


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