Multistage spatial model for informing release of Wolbachia-infected mosquitoes as disease control
Zhuolin Qu, Tong Wu

TL;DR
This paper develops a spatial PDE model to understand Wolbachia-infected mosquito spread, identifying critical thresholds for infection persistence and informing optimal release strategies for disease control.
Contribution
It introduces a novel PDE model incorporating mosquito life stages and spatial heterogeneity, revealing threshold conditions and dynamics of Wolbachia spread in the field.
Findings
Identifies a critical threshold, the 'critical bubble', for Wolbachia infection persistence.
Releases targeting adult mosquitoes and timing before the wet season are more effective.
Habitat modifications may increase the infection threshold, affecting release strategies.
Abstract
Wolbachia is a naturally occurring bacterium that can infect Aedes mosquitoes and reduce the transmission of mosquito-borne diseases, including dengue fever, Zika, and chikungunya. Field trials have been conducted worldwide to suppress local epidemics. We introduce a novel partial differential equation model to simulate the spread of Wolbachia infection in mosquito populations. Our model incorporates the intricate Wolbachia maternal transmission cycle and detailed mosquito life stages, while also accounting for the spatial heterogeneity induced by mosquito dispersion across a two-dimensional domain. Prior modeling studies and field data indicate that a critical threshold of Wolbachia-infected mosquitoes is necessary for infection to persist among the mosquito population. Through our spatial model, we identify a threshold condition, termed the ``critical bubble'', for having a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInsect symbiosis and bacterial influences · Mosquito-borne diseases and control
MethodsDiffusion
