Insects (Mar 2022)

Comparison of Ground Release and Drone-Mediated Aerial Release of <i>Aedes aegypti</i> Sterile Males in Southern Mexico: Efficacy and Challenges

  • Carlos F. Marina,
  • Pablo Liedo,
  • J. Guillermo Bond,
  • Adriana R. Osorio,
  • Javier Valle,
  • Roberto Angulo-Kladt,
  • Yeudiel Gómez-Simuta,
  • Ildefonso Fernández-Salas,
  • Ariane Dor,
  • Trevor Williams

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/insects13040347
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 4
p. 347

Abstract

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Sterile males of Aedes aegypti were released once a week for 8 weeks to evaluate the dispersal efficiency of ground and aerial drone release methods in a rural village of 26 Ha in southern Mexico. Indoor and outdoor BG-Sentinel traps were placed in 13–16 houses distributed throughout the village. The BG traps were activated 48 h after the release of the sterile males and functioned for a 24 h period following each release. Over the 8-week period of simultaneous ground and aerial releases, an average of 85,117 ± 6457 sterile males/week were released at ground level and 86,724 ± 6474 sterile males/week were released using an aerial drone. The ground release method resulted in higher numbers of captured males (mean = 5.1 ± 1.4, range 1.1–15.7 sterile males/trap) compared with the aerial release method (mean = 2.6 ± 0.8, range 0.5–7.3 sterile males/trap) (p p < 0.01). The lower numbers of sterile males captured in the aerial release method could be due to mortality or physical injury caused by the chilling process for immobilization, or the compaction of these insects during transport and release. However, aerial releases by a two-person team distributed insects over the entire village in just 20 min, compared to ~90 min of work for a five-person team during the ground release method. Ground release also resulted in higher aggregations of males and some villagers reported feeling discomfort from the presence of large numbers of mosquitoes in and around their houses. We conclude that modifications to the handling and transport of sterile males and the design of containers used to store males are required to avoid injury and to improve the efficiency of aerial releases for area-wide SIT-based population suppression programs targeted at mosquito vectors of human disease.

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