%0 Journal Article %9 ACL : Articles dans des revues avec comité de lecture répertoriées par l'AERES %A Antonio-Nkondjio, C. %A Ndo, C. %A Costantini, Carlo %A Awono-Ambene, Parfait %A Fontenille, Didier %A Simard, Frédéric %T Distribution and larval habitat characterization of Anopheles moucheti, Anopheles nili, and other malaria vectors in river networks of southern Cameroon %D 2009 %L fdi:010048387 %G ENG %J Acta Tropica %@ 0001-706X %K Anopheles ; Bionomic ; Cameroon ; Canonical correspondence analysis %M ISI:000271797300005 %N 3 %P 270-276 %R 10.1016/j.actatropica.2009.08.009 %U https://www.documentation.ird.fr/hor/fdi:010048387 %> https://www.documentation.ird.fr/intranet/publi/2009/12/010048387.pdf %V 112 %W Horizon (IRD) %X Despite their importance as malaria vectors, little is known of the bionomic of Anopheles nili and Anopheles moucheti. Larval collections from 24 sites situated along the dense hydrographic network of south Cameroon were examined to assess key ecological factors associated with these mosquitoes distribution in river networks. Morphological identification of the III and IV instar larvae by the use of microscopy revealed that 47.6% of the larvae belong to An. nili and 22.6% to An. moucheti. Five variables were significantly involved with species distribution, the pace of flow of the river (lotic, or lentic), the light exposure (sunny or shady), vegetation (presence or absence of vegetation) the temperature and the presence or absence of debris. Using canonical correspondence analysis. it appeared that lotic rivers. exposed to light, with vegetation or debris were the best predictors of An. nili larval abundance. Whereas, An. moucheti and An. ovengensis were highly associated with lentic rivers, low temperature, having Pistia. An. nili and An. moucheti distribution along river systems across south Cameroon was highly correlated with environmental variables. The distribution of An. nili conforms to that of a generalist species which is adapted to exploiting a variety of environmental conditions, Whereas, An. moucheti, Anopheles ovengensis and Anopheles carnevalei appeared as specialist forest mosquitoes. %$ 052