Distribution of freshwater snails in the river Niger basin in Mali with special reference to the intermediate hosts of schistosomes

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Standard

Distribution of freshwater snails in the river Niger basin in Mali with special reference to the intermediate hosts of schistosomes. / Madsen, Henry; Coulibaly, Godefroy; Furu, Peter.

I: Hydrobiologia, Bind 146, Nr. 1, 01.03.1987, s. 77-88.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Madsen, H, Coulibaly, G & Furu, P 1987, 'Distribution of freshwater snails in the river Niger basin in Mali with special reference to the intermediate hosts of schistosomes', Hydrobiologia, bind 146, nr. 1, s. 77-88. https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00007580

APA

Madsen, H., Coulibaly, G., & Furu, P. (1987). Distribution of freshwater snails in the river Niger basin in Mali with special reference to the intermediate hosts of schistosomes. Hydrobiologia, 146(1), 77-88. https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00007580

Vancouver

Madsen H, Coulibaly G, Furu P. Distribution of freshwater snails in the river Niger basin in Mali with special reference to the intermediate hosts of schistosomes. Hydrobiologia. 1987 mar. 1;146(1):77-88. https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00007580

Author

Madsen, Henry ; Coulibaly, Godefroy ; Furu, Peter. / Distribution of freshwater snails in the river Niger basin in Mali with special reference to the intermediate hosts of schistosomes. I: Hydrobiologia. 1987 ; Bind 146, Nr. 1. s. 77-88.

Bibtex

@article{8eb01e9a24f14030b5fe4d9fd1615de4,
title = "Distribution of freshwater snails in the river Niger basin in Mali with special reference to the intermediate hosts of schistosomes",
abstract = "Snail surveys were carried out in various parts of Mali. All areas surveyed are part of the Niger basin being either affluents or irrigation schemes fed by this river. The snail species present varied greatly between areas. The following potential hosts of schistosomes were recorded: Biomphalaria pfeifferi, Bulinus truncatus, B. globosus, B. umbilicatus, B. forskalii and B. senegalensis. In the large irrigation schemes, i.e. 'Office du Niger' and Baguin{\'e}da, only B. pfeifferi and B. truncatus appear to be intermediate hosts. Snail distribution appeared to some extent to be focal and high snail densities appeared to be associated with human water contact activities, which apparently create favourable biotopes for the snails. This is probably due to an alteration of the vegetation and an increase of the trophic status of the site by contamination with food remnants and other debris. The larger irrigation canals or lakes in these schemes play an important role in the transmission of human schistosomes and transmission appears to be very focal in these habitats. Infected snails are almost exclusively found in well-defined human water contact sites (WCS). Local infection rates with schistosomes were often high (i.e. up to 27% in B. pfeifferi). In urban areas (i.e. Bamako), transmission patterns are more variable. In Bamako schistosome-infected B. truncatus were found in the Niger river. A number of smaller semi-permanent or permanent streams are very important transmission sites, and schistosome infections were recorded from B. pfeifferi, B. truncatus and B. globosus. Schistosome infection rates in B. pfeifferi were often high (up to 30%). In a new lake at S{\'e}lingu{\'e}, B. truncatus was found to be widely distributed only about a year and a half after the dam was constructed, and in some sites schistosome infections were recorded.",
keywords = "Biomphalaria, Bulinus, Mali, River Niger, schistosomiasis",
author = "Henry Madsen and Godefroy Coulibaly and Peter Furu",
year = "1987",
month = mar,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1007/BF00007580",
language = "English",
volume = "146",
pages = "77--88",
journal = "Journal of Aquatic Ecosystem Health",
issn = "0018-8158",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Distribution of freshwater snails in the river Niger basin in Mali with special reference to the intermediate hosts of schistosomes

AU - Madsen, Henry

AU - Coulibaly, Godefroy

AU - Furu, Peter

PY - 1987/3/1

Y1 - 1987/3/1

N2 - Snail surveys were carried out in various parts of Mali. All areas surveyed are part of the Niger basin being either affluents or irrigation schemes fed by this river. The snail species present varied greatly between areas. The following potential hosts of schistosomes were recorded: Biomphalaria pfeifferi, Bulinus truncatus, B. globosus, B. umbilicatus, B. forskalii and B. senegalensis. In the large irrigation schemes, i.e. 'Office du Niger' and Baguinéda, only B. pfeifferi and B. truncatus appear to be intermediate hosts. Snail distribution appeared to some extent to be focal and high snail densities appeared to be associated with human water contact activities, which apparently create favourable biotopes for the snails. This is probably due to an alteration of the vegetation and an increase of the trophic status of the site by contamination with food remnants and other debris. The larger irrigation canals or lakes in these schemes play an important role in the transmission of human schistosomes and transmission appears to be very focal in these habitats. Infected snails are almost exclusively found in well-defined human water contact sites (WCS). Local infection rates with schistosomes were often high (i.e. up to 27% in B. pfeifferi). In urban areas (i.e. Bamako), transmission patterns are more variable. In Bamako schistosome-infected B. truncatus were found in the Niger river. A number of smaller semi-permanent or permanent streams are very important transmission sites, and schistosome infections were recorded from B. pfeifferi, B. truncatus and B. globosus. Schistosome infection rates in B. pfeifferi were often high (up to 30%). In a new lake at Sélingué, B. truncatus was found to be widely distributed only about a year and a half after the dam was constructed, and in some sites schistosome infections were recorded.

AB - Snail surveys were carried out in various parts of Mali. All areas surveyed are part of the Niger basin being either affluents or irrigation schemes fed by this river. The snail species present varied greatly between areas. The following potential hosts of schistosomes were recorded: Biomphalaria pfeifferi, Bulinus truncatus, B. globosus, B. umbilicatus, B. forskalii and B. senegalensis. In the large irrigation schemes, i.e. 'Office du Niger' and Baguinéda, only B. pfeifferi and B. truncatus appear to be intermediate hosts. Snail distribution appeared to some extent to be focal and high snail densities appeared to be associated with human water contact activities, which apparently create favourable biotopes for the snails. This is probably due to an alteration of the vegetation and an increase of the trophic status of the site by contamination with food remnants and other debris. The larger irrigation canals or lakes in these schemes play an important role in the transmission of human schistosomes and transmission appears to be very focal in these habitats. Infected snails are almost exclusively found in well-defined human water contact sites (WCS). Local infection rates with schistosomes were often high (i.e. up to 27% in B. pfeifferi). In urban areas (i.e. Bamako), transmission patterns are more variable. In Bamako schistosome-infected B. truncatus were found in the Niger river. A number of smaller semi-permanent or permanent streams are very important transmission sites, and schistosome infections were recorded from B. pfeifferi, B. truncatus and B. globosus. Schistosome infection rates in B. pfeifferi were often high (up to 30%). In a new lake at Sélingué, B. truncatus was found to be widely distributed only about a year and a half after the dam was constructed, and in some sites schistosome infections were recorded.

KW - Biomphalaria

KW - Bulinus

KW - Mali

KW - River Niger

KW - schistosomiasis

U2 - 10.1007/BF00007580

DO - 10.1007/BF00007580

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:51249172451

VL - 146

SP - 77

EP - 88

JO - Journal of Aquatic Ecosystem Health

JF - Journal of Aquatic Ecosystem Health

SN - 0018-8158

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 129427247