MOSQUITO HUNTERS (A HISTORY OF HOSTILITIES AGAINST MAN'S DEADLIEST FOE - THE MOSQUITO - SINCE 1881)
$101.00
Author: | Dr B K Tyagi |
ISBN 13: | 9789389832884 |
Binding: | Hardbound |
Language: | English |
Year: | 2021 |
Subject: | Zoology/Insects |
About the Book
The book also tells the story of some of the mosquito species that contribute to human diseases such as malaria, filariasis,dengue, Zika, chikungunya, and Japanese encephalitis. These diseases have played an important role in slowing down the national progress through depleted economy, healthand intelligentsia. The country spends almost 50% of its health budget in fighting against these ailments. Therefore, it emerges that, besides the brutal facts of how the mosquito has insinuated itself into human history, from the malaria that devastated invaders of ancient Rome (Alexander ‘The Great’had reportedly died due to Plasmodium falciparum malaria while returning home after the battle with the Indian king Poru in the malaria infested Punjab region),the story of man's struggle to live with the mosquito, from the early 19th Century malaria-defeat inMian Mir under direct charge of DrSamuel Rickard Christophers, who advocated to Dr Ronalad Ross’s theory of ‘environment sanitation’,to the malaria-deaths of hundreds of rural inhabitants living in The Thar Desert’s irrigated Command Area under the world famous Indira Gandhi Nahar Pariyojana, in the early 1990s,and to the recent panic over the chikungunya virus’ in Kerala, as well as many other States and Union Territories, crippling thousands of people, in 2006, and deaths from dengue all over the country during 2012-14, need to be told to the modern generation of medical entomologists and vector-borne disease specialists to relive the moments of victories and defeats in this vicious age-old battle between man andmosquito. At the end we find that we have only ourselves to be blamed to a great extent for accelerating the spread of mosquitoes and the diseases they transmit; with climate change and increased international travel, mosquito-borne illnesses are flaring up all over the globe. Catastrophic failures of mosquito control have ensured that worldwide even now one person dies of malaria every twelve seconds.
This book describes, ina mosquito's-eye view, how mosquito breeds, rests, feeds, flies, mate, and dies, besidesinteraction with her natural enemies. The book also deals with the current constraints and future control prospects of mosquito control. In view of the increasing resistance to insecticides and chemotherapy, the book throws light on the subject of greatest promise to ending mosquitoes' deadly assault on man by render them impotent by genetic manipulation by replacing them through paratransgenesis involving micro-organisms such as bacteria and fungi.
Contents: • Dedication
• Foreword
• Preface
• Acknowledgement
• Glossary
• Prologue
1. MOSQUITO – THE ‘FEMME FATALE’
1.1.Introduction
1.2.Mosquitoes are both ugly and beautiful
1.3.Mosquitoes have some good siblings too
1.4.Why does a mosquito bite itch?
1.5.Change in vector behaviour inducing new disease paradigm
1.6.Intensification of vectorism: emergence of Aedesalbopictus as a main vector of dengue in
Kerala State (India)
1.7.Is it a good philosophy to annihilate mosquitoes?
2. MOSQUITO BODY - MORPHOLOGY AND TAXONOMY
2.1 Introduction
2.2 General body plan
2.3 Classification
2.4 Life Cycle
2.5 Mosquitoes’ blood-feeding behaviour
2.6 Reproduction
3. BIOMEDICALLY IMPORTANT MOSQUITOES: VECTOR DIVERSITY
3.1 Introduction
3.2 Biology of important mosquitoes
4. MOSQUITO AND DISEASES – DEADLY AND DEBILITATING
4.1 Introduction
4.2 Mosquito-borne Diseases in India
5. MOSQUITOES OF INDIA – VECTORS AND PESTS OF PUBLIC AND VETERINARY
IMPORTANCE
5.1 Introduction
5.2 CATALOGUE OF INDIAN MOSQUITOES
6. IDENTIFICATION KEYS FOR INDIAN VECTOR MOSQUITOES–4TH INSTAR LARVA
AND ADULT
6.1 Introduction
6.2 Larval Characters
6.3 Vectors of Japanese Encephalitis in India
6.4. Adult Keys
7. WORLD’S FOREMOST ANTI-MOSQUITO CRUSADERS OUTSIDE INDIA – 19TH CENTURY
8. MOSQUITO TERMINATORS OF INDIA – AN EXTRAORDINARY LEAGUE OF CULICIDOLOGISTS
8.1 Introduction
8.2 The mosquito ambushers
1 Ronald Ross
2 F.V. Theobald
3 S.R. Christophers
4 P.J. Barraud
5 Major Idie
6 S.P. James
7 W.G. Liston
8 D.S. Turkhud
9 T.N. Annandale
10 J.W.W. Stephens
11 G. Covell
12 G.M. Giles
13 G. MacDonald
14 J.A. Sinton
15 P.F. Russell
16 H.E. Shortt
17 I.M. Puri
18 A.P. Ray
19 T.R. Rao
20 M.O.T. Iyengar
21 D.K. Viswanathan
22 J. Singh
23 T.N. Ananthakrishnan
24 M.I.D. Sharma
25 R. Pal
26 C.F. Curtis
27 G.B. White
28 V.P. Sharma
29 P.K. Rajagopalan
30 Rachel Reuben
31 B.L. Wall
32 N.L. Kalra
33 Sarala K. Subbarao
34 P.K. Das
35 Senior White
36 W.C. Sweet
37 R. Rajagopal
38 A.P. Dash
39 R. Rajendran
40 I.P. Sunish
41 S.C. Tewari
42 J. Hiriyan
43 R.S. Sharma
44 Kaushal Kumar
45 P.K. Srivastava
46 Vijay Veer
47 Shri Prakash
48 Jagbir Singh
49 Reddya Naoik
50 Sajal
51 Sabesan
52 Jambulingam
53 Ashwani Kumar
54 S.K. Ghosh
55 B.K. Tyagi
9. NOTEWORTHY INDIAN DISCOVERIES AND INVENTIONS ON MOSQUITOES
9.1 Introduction
9.2 Dr Ronald Ross’s discovery of oocysts in the midgut of an Anopheles mosquito
9.3 JSB Stain for malarial parasites
9.4 Pupae separator
9.5 Mosquito Sampler
9.6 Transfer of Technologies
9.7 ‘Tanka’ lid
9.8 N,N-diethylphenylacetamide (DEPA):
9.9 Discovery of Anopheles pseudosundaicus Tyagi et al.,2009
9.10 Discovery of Aedes albopictus as the primary and all important vector of dengue in Kerala
State, India
9.11 AlboTyag – An Aedes albopictus breeding preventer in rubber plantation latex-collecting cup
in Kerala
9.12 Coining the term “Desert Malaria”
10. THE MOSQUITO THEORIES
10.1 Introduction
10.2 The mosquito theory of filariasis
10.3 The mosquito theory of yellow fever
10.4 The mosquito theory of dengue fever
10.5 The mosquito theory of encephalitis
10.6 The mosquito theory of Zika
11. MAN-MOSQUITO: FACE OFF
11.1 Introductio
11.2 Prelude to the ‘Great Malaria-Mosquito War’
11.3 The Nobel Prize factor
11.4 The Italian folly
11.5 Mosquitoes under suspicion
11.6 Mosquitoes under scrutiny
11.7 The international competition
11.8 Mosquito-malaria world war of priority and primacy
12. MAN’S HEROICS AGAINST THE MOSQUITO – EXAMPLES OF SUCCESS AND FAILURE
12.1 Introduction
12.2 The successes
12.3 The Failures
13. VECTOR CONTROL AND FUTURE NOVEL TECHNOLOGIES
13.1 Introduction
13.2 Need for alternative strategies
13.3 Chemical-based measures
13.4 Non-chemical measures
13.5 Biological control agents
13.6 Repellents
13.7 Insect Traps
13.8 Strategies based on genetic manipulation
13.9 Integrated vector control strategy .