Publications by authors named "B Knols"

Overwhelmingly, contemporary malaria vector control equals the use of chemical pesticides (through insecticide-treated bednets or indoor residual spraying). Gradually, but surely, we have become enslaved to thinking that controlling malaria mosquitoes equals the use of chemical insecticides, and much of the vector control field today is dominated by scientists, lobbyists, chemical companies, funding agencies and (global) institutions that endlessly repeat this dogmatic belief. Although chemical control has undoubtedly saved millions of lives, which, morally speaking would immediately justify its continued use, it has many sides that may ultimately cost more lives than it saves.

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Article Synopsis
  • * Experiments showed significant reductions in mosquito bites, with An. gambiae indoor and outdoor bites decreasing by 21.1% and 37.4%, and indoor An. funestus bites dropping by an impressive 87.5%.
  • * The findings suggest MEETs could be a valuable alternative to traditional insecticide-based methods for mosquito control, but further testing in natural settings is needed to confirm their effectiveness.
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Globalization and climate change are key drivers for arboviral and parasitic infectious diseases to expand geographically, posing a growing threat to human health and biodiversity. New non-pesticidal approaches are urgently needed because of increasing insecticide resistance and the negative human and environmental health impacts of synthetic pyrethroids used for fogging. Here, we report the complete and rapid removal of two mosquito species ( L.

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Since 2005, in a growing number of Dutch municipalities, increasing numbers of six exotic mosquito species have been reported. To prevent incursions, the Government has introduced policies that so far have not alleviated the problem. Populations of the Asian bush mosquito in Flevoland, Urk and parts of southern Limburg are now firmly established.

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Globally, environmental impacts and insecticide resistance are forcing pest control organizations to adopt eco-friendly and insecticide-free alternatives to reduce the risk of mosquito-borne diseases, which affect millions of people, such as dengue, chikungunya or Zika virus. We used, for the first time, a combination of human odor-baited mosquito traps (at 6.0 traps/ha), oviposition traps (7.

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