4.3 Review

Human-Mosquito Contact: A Missing Link in Our Understanding of Mosquito-Borne Disease Transmission Dynamics

Journal

ANNALS OF THE ENTOMOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA
Volume 114, Issue 4, Pages 397-414

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/aesa/saab011

Keywords

human-mosquito contact; mosquito biting rate; bite-exposure rate; blood-feeding rate; vector-borne diseases

Categories

Funding

  1. California Academy of Sciences
  2. National Institutes of Health/National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases [P01-AI106695, 1U01AI151788]
  3. National Science Foundation [1563531]
  4. Division Of Mathematical Sciences
  5. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien [1563531] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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This article synthesizes current knowledge of host-vector contact dynamics, emphasizing the importance of contact in disease transmission. It challenges classic assumptions about mosquito biting rates and explores alternative ecological assumptions. Researchers are encouraged to test contact rate models empirically to enhance understanding of disease transmission mechanisms.
Despite the critical role that contact between hosts and vectors, through vector bites, plays in driving vector-borne disease (VBD) transmission, transmission risk is primarily studied through the lens of vector density and overlooks host-vector contact dynamics. This review article synthesizes current knowledge of host-vector contact with an emphasis on mosquito bites. It provides a framework including biological and mathematical definitions of host-mosquito contact rate, blood-feeding rate, and per capita biting rates. We describe how contact rates vary and how this variation is influenced by mosquito and vertebrate factors. Our framework challenges a classic assumption that mosquitoes bite at a fixed rate determined by the duration of their gonotrophic cycle. We explore alternative ecological assumptions based on the functional response, blood index, forage ratio, and ideal free distribution within a mechanistic host-vector contact model. We highlight that host-vector contact is a critical parameter that integrates many factors driving disease transmission. A renewed focus on contact dynamics between hosts and vectors will contribute new insights into the mechanisms behind VBD spread and emergence that are sorely lacking. Given the framework for including contact rates as an explicit component of mathematical models of VBD, as well as different methods to study contact rates empirically to move the field forward, researchers should explicitly test contact rate models with empirical studies. Such integrative studies promise to enhance understanding of extrinsic and intrinsic factors affecting host-vector contact rates and thus are critical to understand both the mechanisms driving VBD emergence and guiding their prevention and control.

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