44 research outputs found

    Données préliminaires sur le paludisme humain en zones rurale et sémi-urbaine du département du Nkam (Littoral-Cameroun)

    Get PDF
    Objectif : Cette étude évalue les connaissances et les pratiques des populations sur le traitement et la prévention du paludisme et détermine la transmission du paludisme en zones rurale et sémi-urbaine du département du Nkam.Méthodologie et résultats : Un questionnaire a été administré aux populations de Bodiman et Yabassi, localités rurale et semi-urbaine, en mai 2015. Les captures de moustiques sur volontaires ont été effectuées à l’intérieur de 7 habitations par site, de juillet à septembre 2015, au rythme de 2 nuits consécutives par mois. L’infectivité des vecteurs a été déterminée par le test ELISA-CSP. 73,17% (n= 513) d’interviewés connaissaient les vecteurs du paludisme alors que seulement 9,46% (n= 63) connaissaient le germe. La moustiquaire était l’outil de prévention le plus utilisé à Bodiman (100%) et Yabassi (38,46%). Le montant mensuellement dépensé par les ménages contre le paludisme s’élevait à 2,31€ et 16,01€ en moyenne, respectivement à Bodiman et Yabassi. La majorité d’interviewés à Bodiman (n= 98 ; %=49,49) et Yabassi (n=198 ; %= 42,31) se rendaient à l’hôpital en cas de paludisme. En outre, 37 833 moustiques dont 35 961 à Bodiman et 1 872 à Yabassi ont été capturés. An. gambiae (81,82%) et An. coluzzii (18,18%) étaient les membres du complexe Gambiae identifiés ; An. coluzzii (59,26%) étant le plus représenté à Yabassi, et An. gambiae (81,82%) à Bodiman. Les indices sporozoïtiques d’An. gambiae s.l. étaient de 0% à Bodiman et de 2,15% à Yabassi.Conclusion et application : L’association de la lutte antilarvaire aux méthodes existantes de lutte antivectorielle par les pouvoirs publics contribuerait à baisser les fortes densités agressives observées à Bodiman de manière à réduire le budget alloué au paludisme par les ménages.Mots-clés : Connaissances, pratiques, transmission, paludisme, Bodiman, Yabassi

    Climatic and cultural changes in the west Congo Basin forests over the past 5000 years

    Get PDF
    Central Africa includes the world's second largest rainforest block. The ecology of the region remains poorly understood, as does its vegetation and archaeological history. However, over the past 20 years, multidisciplinary scientific programmes have enhanced knowledge of old human presence and palaeoenvironments in the forestry block of Central Africa. This first regional synthesis documents significant cultural changes over the past five millennia and describes how they are linked to climate. It is now well documented that climatic conditions in the African tropics underwent significant changes throughout this period and here we demonstrate that corresponding shifts in human demography have had a strong influence on the forests. The most influential event was the decline of the strong African monsoon in the Late Holocene, resulting in serious disturbance of the forest block around 3500 BP. During the same period, populations from the north settled in the forest zone; they mastered new technologies such as pottery and fabrication of polished stone tools, and seem to have practised agriculture. The opening up of forests from 2500 BP favoured the arrival of metallurgist populations that impacted the forest. During this long period (2500–1400 BP), a remarkable increase of archaeological sites is an indication of a demographic explosion of metallurgist populations. Paradoxically, we have found evidence of pearl millet (Pennisetum glaucum) cultivation in the forest around 2200 BP, implying a more arid context. While Early Iron Age sites (prior to 1400 BP) and recent pre-colonial sites (two to eight centuries BP) are abundant, the period between 1600 and 1000 BP is characterized by a sharp decrease in human settlements, with a population crash between 1300 and 1000 BP over a large part of Central Africa. It is only in the eleventh century that new populations of metallurgists settled into the forest block. In this paper, we analyse the spatial and temporal distribution of 328 archaeological sites that have been reliably radiocarbon dated. The results allow us to piece together changes in the relationships between human populations and the environments in which they lived. On this basis, we discuss interactions between humans, climate and vegetation during the past five millennia and the implications of the absence of people from the landscape over three centuries. We go on to discuss modern vegetation patterns and African forest conservation in the light of these events.Peer reviewe

    Reconstructing Asian faunal introductions to eastern Africa from multi-proxy biomolecular and archaeological datasets

    Get PDF
    Human-mediated biological exchange has had global social and ecological impacts. In subS-aharan Africa, several domestic and commensal animals were introduced from Asia in the pre-modern period; however, the timing and nature of these introductions remain contentious. One model supports introduction to the eastern African coast after the mid-first millennium CE, while another posits introduction dating back to 3000 BCE. These distinct scenarios have implications for understanding the emergence of long-distance maritime connectivity, and the ecological and economic impacts of introduced species. Resolution of this longstanding debate requires new efforts, given the lack of well-dated fauna from high-precision excavations, and ambiguous osteomorphological identifications. We analysed faunal remains from 22 eastern African sites spanning a wide geographic and chronological range, and applied biomolecular techniques to confirm identifications of two Asian taxa: domestic chicken (Gallus gallus) and black rat (Rattus rattus). Our approach included ancient DNA (aDNA) analysis aided by BLAST-based bioinformatics, Zooarchaeology by Mass Spectrometry (ZooMS) collagen fingerprinting, and direct AMS (accelerator mass spectrometry) radiocarbon dating. Our results support a late, mid-first millennium CE introduction of these species. We discuss the implications of our findings for models of biological exchange, and emphasize the applicability of our approach to tropical areas with poor bone preservation

    Seismic stratigraphy and deformational styles of the offshore Cyrenaica (Libya) and bordering Mediterranean Ridge

    No full text
    International audienceOff northwest Libya the Cyrenaica foreland basin domain and its Pan-African continental crust, which constitute the African promontory, are overthrusted by the Mediterranean Ridge Complex. The thrust belt contact and its seismic stratigraphy have been analysed using pre-stack depth-migrated multichannel seismic (MCS) lines recorded during the MEDISIS survey (2002). The geometry and sedimentary distribution analysis through the wedge-top depocentres allow reconstruction of schematic cross-sections of the tectono-sedimentary wedge that includes two major thrust sequences separated by an apparently poorly deformed transition zone. Based on time-space variation of several piggyback basins, we propose that these thrust sequences relate to distinct phases of shortening. (1) A first event, which probably occurred just prior to the Messinian crisis in latest Miocene (Tortonian times?) and (2) A second event, that has finally led to the present-day overthrusting of the Mediterranean Ridge over the Libyan continental slope

    Chemoselective synthesis of trifluoromethylvinyl sulfoxides and sulfones through oxidation of corresponding sulfides

    No full text
    At low temperatures, perfluoro-cis-2,3-dialkyloxaziridines 4 oxidize 1-trifluoromethylvinyl sulfides 1 to the corresponding sulfoxides 2 in quantitative yields. By using 3-chloroperoxybenzoic acid, or the same oxaziridines at room temperature, sulfones 3 are formed exclusively

    Préhistoire en Afrique

    No full text

    Challenges towards the elimination of Human African Trypanosomiasis in the sleeping sickness focus of Campo in southern Cameroon

    No full text
    The sleeping sickness focus of Campo lies along the Atlantic coast and extends along the Ntem River, which constitutes the Cameroonian and Equatorial Guinean border. It is a hypo-endemic focus with the disease prevalence varying from 0.3 to 0.86% during the last few decades. Investigations on animal reservoirs revealed a prevalence of Trypanosoma brucei gambiense of 0.6% in wild animals and 4.83% in domestic animals of this focus. From 2001 to 2012, about 19 931 tsetse were collected in this focus and five tsetse species including Glossina palpalis palpalis, G. pallicera, G. nigrofusca, G. tabaniformis and G. caliginea were identified. The analysis of blood meals of these flies showed that they feed on human, pig, goat, sheep, and wild animals such as antelope, duiker, wild pig, turtle and snake. The percentage of blood meals taken on these hosts varies according to sampling periods. For instance, 6.8% of blood meals from pig were reported in 2004 and 22% in 2008. This variation is subjected to considerable evolutions because the Campo HAT focus is submitted to socio-economic mutations including the reopening of a new wood company, the construction of autonomous port at "Kribi" as well as the dam at "Memve ele". These activities will bring more that 3000 inhabitants around Campo and induce the deforestation for the implementation of farmlands as well as breeding of domestic animals. Such mutations have impacts on the transmission and the epidemiology of sleeping sickness due to the modification of the fauna composition, the nutritional behavior of tsetse, the zoophilic/anthropophilic index. To achieve the elimination goal in the sleeping sickness focus of Campo, we report in this paper the current epidemiological situation of the disease, the research findings of the last decades notably on the population genetics of trypanosomes, the modifications of nutritional behavior of tsetse, the prevalence of T. b. gambiense in humans, domestic and wild animals. An overview on the types of mutations occurring in the region has been raised and a discussion on the strategies that can be implemented to achieve the elimination of the disease has been made
    corecore