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1.
Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz ; 92(5): 719-24, Sept.-Oct. 1997. tab
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-194222

ABSTRACT

Following the positive results obtained regarding the molluscicidal properties of the latex of Euphorbia splendens that were corroborated in laboratory and field tests restrited conditions, a field study was conducted in experimental streams located in an endemic area. After recording the average annual fluctuation of vectors in three streams, a solution of E. splendens latex at ppm was applied in stream A, a solution of niclosamide at 3 ppm that applied in stream B and a third stream (C) remained untreated for negative control. Applications of E. splendens and niclosamide resulted in a mortality of 100 per cent among the snails collected in the streams A and B. No dead snails were found in the negative control stream. A monthly follow-up survey conducted during three consecutive months confirmed the return of vectors to both experimental streams treated with latex and niclosamide. This fact has called for a need to repeat application in order to reach the snails that remained buried in the mud substrate or escaped to the water edge, as well as, newly hatched snails that did not respond to the concentration of these molluscicides. Adults snails collected a month following treatment led us to believe that they had migrate from untreated areas of the streams to those previously treated.


Subject(s)
Animals , Latex/toxicity , Molluscacides/administration & dosage , Mollusca/drug effects , Biomphalaria/drug effects , Niclosamide/administration & dosage , Schistosomiasis/prevention & control , Snails/drug effects
2.
Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz ; 88(3): 457-64, July-Sept. 1993. tab, graf, mapas
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-148800

ABSTRACT

The present work was carried out in a watercress garden in Alto da Boa Vista, in the city of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. The investigation was carried out in two phases. The first one (1985-86) involved the sampling of Biomphalaria tenegophila in two areas to determine its relative populational densities. The results showed that the populations presented similar densities and dynamics. The second phase (1988-89) involved the study of the influence of some environmental factors on the establishment of B. tenagophila in watercress garden. Two factors were identified as responsible for the establishment of B. tenagophila in the garden: (1) the quality of the water entering the irrigation system, to which domestic sewage is added, and (2) alterations in the nature of the substrate, due to inadequate fertilization techniques, which employ organic matter from adjacent pigsties. Aquatic plants and hydrological parameters of the irrigation system were subsidiary factors to the establishment of B. tenagophila in the garden


Subject(s)
Animals , Agriculture , Biomphalaria/physiology , Ecology , Biomphalaria/growth & development , Brazil , Population Density , Sampling Studies , Schistosomiasis mansoni/transmission , Water
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