Australian Journal of Entomology (2004) 43, 271-282
Richard C. Russell and Brian H. Kay (2004)
Medical entomology: changes in the spectrum of mosquito-borne disease in Australia and other vector threats and risks, 1972-2004
Australian Journal of Entomology 43 (3), 271-282
Abstract: Our paper presents an assessment of research and operational development in relation to medically important mosquito-borne disease, mainly the arboviruses Ross River, Barmah Forest, Murray Valley encephalitis, Japanese encephalitis, Kunjin and dengue, but also with respect to malaria. Since 1972, there have been considerable gains in research output, organisational structure, communication, surveillance including quarantine inspection and operational control. This has been due to the 1974 epidemic of Murray Valley encephalitis virus extending into temperate Australia, increasing occurrence of Ross River and the dengue viruses, the discovery of Barmah Forest virus as a disease entity in 1988, and the introduction of Japanese encephalitis in 1995. Because many of the outputs involve methodologies of global import, this has resulted in an unprecedented upsurge in publications of international standard.
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Database assignments for author(s): Richard C. Russell, Brian H. Kay
Research topic(s) for pests/diseases/weeds:
general biology - morphology - evolution
Pest and/or beneficial records:
Beneficial | Pest/Disease/Weed | Crop/Product | Country | Quarant.
|
---|---|---|---|---|
Culex quinquefasciatus | ||||
Culex annulirostris | Australia (South+SE) | |||
Aedes vigilax | Australia (NT+QLD) | |||
Anopheles farauti | ||||
Aedes aegypti | Australia (NT+QLD) |