Research Focus
There are no effective vaccines against malaria or most arboviruses. There are no chemotherapeutants for the treatment of arbovirus infection. Mosquito surveillance, management and manipulation remain the mainstays of most mosquito-borne disease control programs.
The Mosquito Control Laboratory (MCL) manages state-of-the art pathogen and insect containment facilities with the capacity to undertake studies on all aspects of vector biology and disease transmission. We work on innovations in mosquito surveillance and control that might help interrupt parasite and pathogen transmission.
We are unique in the Southern Hemisphere with regard to our size, capacity and expertise. This makes us a key partner in a national, regional and international network. Our presence significantly enhances Australia’s ability to investigate emerging vector-borne disease threats in the region. A major remit of the refurbished (2013) MCL is to exploit this unique facility through building strong collaborative links with parasitology, virology and vector biology laboratories throughout the world.
The MCL has permission to hold a number of exotic mosquito species in addition to native Australian mosquitoes. These include insecticide-resistant and susceptible Aedes aegypti strains, Aedes albopictus and Anopheles stephensi.
The MCL has local access to real-world mosquito-virus transmission systems through a number of native mosquito vectors and their associated alphaviruses (including Ross River and Barmah Forest). We have field work in progress in Asia, Europe and the Americas.
Gallery
Research Projects
Current Research Projects
Novel surveillance tools (Smart traps, Molecular Xeno-monitoring, Automated tracking).
Mosquito invasion risks – exotic species, invasion pathways and potential costs.
Vectorial capacity (the ability of mosquitoes to transmit disease).
Research Team
Hayden Rohlf
Fitsum Tolossa
Carla Vieira
Alyssa Peterson
Funding
We have a broad funding base that includes local and federal government, the Australian NHMRC, the US Department of Defence, USAID, the Wellcome Trust and the UK Medical Research Council. We have been awarded approximately $5.5M AUD in funding since 2013.
Student Projects
Further Information
- Dr Andrew van den Hurk and Dr Narayan Gyawali, Queensland Forensic and Scientific Services.
- Dr Nigel Beebe, University of Queensland.
- Dr Brendan Trewin, CSIRO.
- Dr Wenjin Liu, Australian Defence Force Malaria & Infectious Disease Institute (ADFMIDI).
- MAJ Lisa Rigby, Australian Defence Force Malaria & Infectious Disease Institute (ADFMIDI).
- MAJ Chris Peatey, Australian Defence Force Malaria & Infectious Disease Institute (ADFMIDI).
- Tropical Public Health Services, Cairns.
- Dr Dickson Lwetoijera, Ifarkara Health Institute, Tanzania.
- Tanya Russell, PacMOSSI, James Cook University.
- Stephan Karl and Lincoln Timinao, Papua New Guinea Institute of Medical Research.
- Dr Francesca Frentiu, Queensland University of Technology.
- Dr Van-Mai Cao-Lormeau, Institut Louis Malarde.
- Professor Pablo Manrique-Saide, Universidad Autonoma de Yucatan.
- Dr Gonzalo Vasquez Prokopec, School of Environmental Sciences, Emory, USA.
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