A total of 43 participants were recruited: 25 in Community A and 18 in Community B. There were no refusals to participate. Quotes from participants are cited with fictitious initials to maintain anonymity.
Rice farming: characteristics and experiences
In both villages, all rice farmers cultivated rice in irrigated lowlands, where 6 of 43 had their plots close to dams. Four farmers also cultivated rainfed rice near the river. Two-thirds of the participants cultivated other crops alongside rice, such as yams, cashews, maize, and market gardening (cucumbers, tomatoes, and okra).
Rice plots were an average size of 1.5 hectares in Community A and 0.9 hectares in Community B. Farmers had been cultivating rice for an average of 11.8 years, ranging between a few months to 38 years. Almost everyone grew the WITA-9 variety, but some also planted GT-11 and C-26. Farmers had previously tried other varieties (e.g. BOUAKE-189, ORILUX-6) but switched because current varieties were more resilient to insects, diseases, and the dry season (harmattan) and so produced greater yield (higher profitability). Some farmers mentioned that the variety they chose to grow also depended on seed availability and market demand. Two farmers from Community A also stated that researchers from the neighbouring rice research institute AfricaRice “advised [them] to stop using older varieties and recommended WITA-9” instead.
When asked whether rice farming was difficult, only one participant disagreed: “rice cultivation is work that nourishes the child – it brings money and allows [him] to send children to school”. Some respondents reasoned that it depended on whether one had enough means, i.e., money to purchase products and hire labour and machinery for ploughing. Most farmers (n=32) said that rice farming was difficult because of its costs and many requirements: machinery for ploughing, water control, inputs (herbicides, fertilisers, pesticides), and labour for transplanting and weeding (Figure 2).
Most farmers indicated ploughing as the main issue, as machinery availability was limited; the walking tractor often broke down and belonged to other villages of another ethnic group which tended to prioritise their own communities. The second most frequently cited issue was water availability. The dam used by farmers in Community A was operated by AfricaRice, and so farmers lacked control and there was sometimes resistance in opening water channels during the dry season. In Community B, respondents complained about water scarcity during the dry season due to poorly maintained canals; overgrown with grasses, these canals blocked water flow to rice fields farther away from the dam. Some disclosed that this issue created arguments between farmers whilst others pointed out that the president of the rice cooperative should organise these regular collective cleaning sessions. Many farmers pointed out the imbalance in effort towards cleaning:
“The water problem is like witchcraft. Even at midnight, I am still there…I block the water [flowing to other plots] so that the water goes to my fields”. – MJLK
“There are some people who are difficult, who open their pipes and never close them. There are others who don’t maintain their canals, so they are full of weeds. Every year we will clean up but when you mention it to them, they don’t listen to you”. – NKJP
“The president of the cooperative has to give orders for a time to clean the canals. We inform everyone but some do not go. You who are [far away from the dams] clean up properly for yourself but those who are close to the dam don’t do it, so you must leave your fields and go to theirs to clean it for them…we don’t love each other – it is wickedness!” – SNR
In terms of the perceived disadvantages of living near rice fields, there were some differences between villages. Whilst most respondents from Community A cited mosquitoes (14/25), sometimes together with the cold (6/25), many (10/25) also thought that despite them, it was an advantage to be closer to their workplace, saving on transport expenses. This was pointed out by one participant (MRCL):
“Living next to the bas-fonds[1] and the rice fields, our village has never lacked mosquitoes. We are always under attack. Even all the villages nearby call us the mosquito village, but luckily, we have easy access to the rice fields”.
When some respondents were prompted about health, the majority did not think that living near rice fields led to more illnesses. Only a few did, specifying Guinea worm disease[2], mosquito-borne diseases, and cancer. Of 25 participants from Community A, only four stated that it was not bothersome living next to rice fields.
On the other hand, in Community B, more than half the farmers (10/18) declared that living near rice fields was not troublesome, many of whom said it would be more convenient. A third of the farmers still cited mosquitoes as a problem and a few mentioned that living near the bas-fonds could bring illnesses such as Buruli ulcer, malaria, and African trypanosomiasis. Two farmers did not perceive it as a danger to health, where MORY said:
“If it made us sick, we who have been in the bas-fonds since a long time would all have died”.
Mosquitoes: knowledge, attitude, and perceptions
Problems caused by mosquitoes
When asked if their village had any mosquitoes, all participants replied “yes”, where a third of them added comments to the effect of “in abundance / numerous / too much!” and a few exclaiming or laughing in disbelief at the question. Many farmers expressed without further prompt that mosquitoes were a significant problem mainly because they cause nuisance. They specified that mosquitoes disturbed sleep (which caused fatigue, weakness, and illnesses) through noise and/or bites, forced villagers to wear long sleeved clothing, jackets, and boots as personal protection, and prevented evening activities such as going outside, trade, and studying for children. Three respondents also mentioned that mosquitoes necessitated bednet use, which in turn were uncomfortable or inconvenient to use. Most farmers (33/43) stated that mosquitoes can lead to diseases such as djèkouadjo (malaria[3], n=26), zoonotic diseases (n=4), diabetes (n=1), AIDS (n=1) and anaemia (n=1), which led to treatment costs, hospitalisation, and death. When asked to rate mosquitoes against other common insects such as flies and bedbugs, mosquitoes were consistently ranked the worst by all respondents. The following quotations demonstrate what a few participants think of mosquitoes:
“If there were no mosquito nets, I would leave the village. That's the only solution.” – NBL
“Yes, [mosquitoes are annoying] because we are not free! We do not live peacefully. My body can’t stand the heat, but if I don’t use mosquito nets, the mosquitoes will start biting me and I’ll get malaria”. – MRCL
“Mosquitoes are worse than working in rice”. – KOH
During the ethnographic immersion, it was recorded that villagers often complained about mosquitoes in the evening, tended to go to bed early and ordered their children to sleep early (under the bednet) to avoid catching malaria. In the field, farmers were observed to rush home in the evening to evade the mosquitoes. Some farmers claimed that the mosquitoes in the field were larger than those in the village.
Perceived origin of mosquitoes
Almost everyone across the two villages speculated that mosquitoes originated from neighbouring grasses or bushes, followed by wastewater (Table 1). Following these two sites, the most common speculations differed by village. In Community A, farmers attributed mosquitoes to bas-fonds, stagnant water, and the edge of water bodies (bas-fonds, dams, and rivers). Farmers referred to the bas-fonds mainly when mentioning their experience working in the fields at night:
“Even at night, you can’t go to the bas-fonds, everywhere is full of mosquitoes”. – CGK
“When you go to the field at night, the way the mosquitoes bite you are different from when you are in the village. In the village, they don’t bite you like that”. – NKJP
“Rice is a type of grass too – all the mosquitoes are in [the plants]. When you are there, there are mosquitoes hitting you, it’s like you’re getting stoned!” – SNR
Table 1. The perceived origin of mosquitoes, enumerated by number of mentions in IDIs.
Ranking
|
Community A
|
Community B
|
1
|
Grasses/bushes (20)
|
Grasses/bushes (15)
|
2
|
Wastewater (11)
|
Wastewater (10)
|
3
|
Bas-fonds (10)
|
Stagnant water (9)
|
4
|
Stagnant water (8)
|
Garbage (6) and river (6)
|
5
|
Edge of water bodies (6)
|
Dam (4)
|
6
|
Garbage (4)
|
Mangoes (3)
|
7
|
Forest (3) and dam (3), dark (3), humid (3)
|
Forest (2) and God (2)
|
8
|
River (2), animals (2)
|
Bas-fonds (1)
|
9
|
Agricultural ponds (1), ploughing (1), and God (1)
|
|
In Community B, mosquitoes were more often attributed to stagnant water, garbage, and rivers; bas-fonds were only mentioned once. Similar patterns in both villages could be seen from mapping conducted in FGDs: the bas-fonds, dams and wastewater were perceived to be main mosquito breeding sites in Community A whereas rice fields were ranked lower in Community B (Table 2). Several participants across both villages acknowledged that mosquitoes can migrate, namely from the bas-fonds, dams, and rivers as well as grasses, wet and dirty places. Conversely, a few said that mosquitoes could not migrate from dams because they were too far away or that mosquitoes only came from within the village.
Table 2. The perceived origin of mosquitoes as ranked in FGDs.
Ranking
|
Community A
|
Community B
|
Women
|
Men
|
Youth
|
Women
|
Men
|
1
|
Bas-fonds
|
Dam
|
Bas-fonds
|
Dam
|
River
|
2
|
Dam
|
Wastewater
|
Shower water
|
River
|
Rainy season
|
3
|
Toilet & shower water
|
Bas-fonds
|
Forest
|
Toilet & shower water
|
Grasses/ bushes
|
4
|
Dirty water
|
Stagnant water
|
Grasses/ bushes
|
Grasses/ bushes
|
Stagnant water
|
5
|
Garbage
|
Grasses/ bushes
|
Toilets
|
Garbage
|
Rice fields
|
6
|
Grasses/ bushes
|
Rainwater
|
Small water collections
|
Mangoes
|
Dry season
|
7
|
|
|
Garbage
|
Totems*
|
Mangoes
|
8
|
|
|
Dirty clothes
|
Small water collections
|
Toilet water
|
9
|
|
|
Maize
|
Rice fields
|
|
10
|
|
|
Totems*
|
|
|
*Totems refer to divine retribution from God for the disobedient who have trivialised ancestral practices and prohibitions.
Most participants were aware that mosquitoes developed in water. Rare exemptions included beliefs that mosquito development occurred in grasses and/or was only favoured by water or humidity. However, none of the respondents stated that there is a link between mosquitoes and rice cultivation. When probed, the majority (n=30) of the participants did not believe it existed. About half (n=14) of them specified that mosquitoes were linked to bas-fonds but not to rice itself (since rice fields are part of the bas-fonds). One farmer believed that mosquitoes could not survive in rice fields because agricultural insecticides are regularly sprayed. Many farmers also explained that mosquitoes were present even when rice was not being cultivated in the bas-fonds. Similar comments were gathered across all five FGDs. In IDIs, 11 farmers agreed that mosquitoes were associated with rice, where one mentioned that mosquitoes were associated with ploughing, another with transplantation and some thought that since it resembled grasses, rice could attract mosquitoes. The following statements capture the beliefs of a few farmers on the link between rice and mosquitoes:
“I say it is the water at the bottom of the rice that attracts mosquitoes, but the rice [plant] will not attract mosquitoes”. – GNM
“Rice can’t bring mosquitoes. The mosquitoes were already around before the forest was cleared and rice was grown. They have always been around, but not as numerous. We know that rice does not cause mosquitoes. There are times when there is no rice in the bas-fonds, but the mosquitoes are still there. So, rice can't be a problem.” – SYP
“If you stir the rice, you will see mosquitoes flying away. Going to the fields at night – it is not worth it. If you want a tonne [of mosquitoes], you can find it”. – MORY
“We can’t forbid rice growing just because the mosquitoes are going to kill us. What are we going to eat? …Thanks to the fields, we can harvest some rice for children to get educated and a little for us to eat. It’s not easy (laughs)!” – MRCL
Occurrence of mosquitoes
When asked about the timing of mosquitoes during a 24-hour period, almost all respondents said that mosquitoes started arriving to the villages between 18.00 and 19.00 h in the evening and were present until dawn and morning.
When asked about the timing of mosquitoes annually, all farmers discerned that mosquitoes were not as numerous from December to February (harmattan) but were abundant from March to October (the rainy season). For the latter, respondents often associated mosquitoes with heat, grass, and the mango season. For the former, many participants speculated that burning bushes, the wind and/or the cold during harmattan kept mosquitoes away. Overall, however, none of the respondents said that there was a period within a year without mosquitoes:
“A time without mosquitoes does not exist! Even during the harmattan period, they decrease but they are there.” – SYP
When asked about the historical differences in mosquito abundance in the past few decades, 23 participants said that there were more mosquitoes nowadays (that “when they were younger, they could sleep without mosquito nets”), 11 said there were more in the past and five said that there were no differences. Of the 23 farmers that believed that there were more mosquitoes currently, nine attributed it to the construction of a nearby dam and often with deliberated its importance for their livelihood. Five attributed the increase of mosquitoes to the presence of more grass, garbage, and wastewater and three to the loss of traditions (that since Christianity, the community no longer followed ancient laws and therefore the village is now paying the price). The following quotations summarise their thoughts:
“I myself cannot understand. Our parents told us that the mosquitoes weren't around too much before... Before, the neighbouring villages said that mosquitoes were abundant in Community A but nowadays there are mosquitoes in all these villages. Mosquitoes are everywhere now. Even in our [matriarchal] village, which is far from here, there are mosquitoes there. Except for houses that are in town where there is light and an air conditioning system. When the house is air-conditioned, they can't stand the cold and they leave to go elsewhere.” – REMI
“People before respected the [traditional] prohibitions, but now no one respects them.” – RLND
“Mosquitoes have been here a long time. We don't know what sent them. When they made the dam, the mosquitoes multiplied. Now they sting much compared to the past… Because the dam is close to us and we are on the edge of this big bas-fonds there and there are also small bas-fonds around the village. When the rainy season comes and the water stagnates everywhere, mosquitoes come in force. It's the stagnant water everywhere that matters, but without water we can't do anything. If we don't want the water to stagnate too, what are we going to eat? It is because of the bas-fonds that mosquitoes have the strength.” – Man from Community A FGD
However, two farmers believed that recent mosquito proliferation was not because of the dam:
“They made the dam in 1997-98 so, I can’t say it is because of the dam. Because the mosquitoes started to tire us long before we started the dam.” – NKJP
Of the 11 respondents who said that there were more mosquitoes in the past, 4 rationalised it with the current distribution of mosquito nets, 3 with the fact that the nets are now impregnated with insecticide and 3 with how the village had grown in size so mosquitoes are spread across more community members, or their house was no longer at the edge of the village. Overall, a quarter of the participants also observed that there were no years without mosquitoes.
Mosquito control practices
Household-level
At the household level, everyone claimed bednet use. Many observed that nets were the most effective control against mosquitoes; insecticidal sprays (Timor and Rambo) were popular (n=24) but farmers claimed that they could only “calm mosquitoes down a bit” and bought them only if they had extra money. The effectiveness of these sprays is expressed here:
“Timor is also good because it drives away mosquitoes automatically... It is the mosquito net that is more effective, because even if you pump the Timor they will come back. But with the mosquito net, they do not have access for entry”. – LKG
“Yes, [Timor] calms [the mosquitoes] down a bit, they go and then afterwards they come back again. But before the product we use to treat cotton there when you spray it, it kills certain insects. But now it just drives them away – it doesn’t kill them anymore”. – KKP
Twelve participants also used coils (Moskito), seven regularly cleaned their house and yard and five ensured that their house was well-constructed without many window, door, and roof openings. One farmer in Community A suggested that having electricity for light and air conditioning would help control mosquitoes. There were slight differences in household mosquito control between the two villages. In Community A, most farmers used both nets and insecticidal sprays (despite scepticism in the spray’s efficacy), and sometimes coils. In Community B, most participants only used a net and cleaned their home.
From the ethnographic immersion, the field observer noticed that during the evening, villagers regularly swatted their legs with their hands or a piece of cloth, put their feet in bags, shared mosquito coils amongst each other or used a torch to kill mosquitoes. House screening was also installed in some homes, using tarpaulins or traditional cloth.
Village-level
At the village level, the majority of the IDIs (n=30) and FGDs asserted that village cleanliness was required to control mosquitoes. Specifically, it entailed burning grass, removing garbage, and removing stagnant water and wastewater (from toilets, showers, and cooking) by making pits and closing their opening using slabs or by building proper showers. A few participants indicated that bush clean-ups should be organised by the youth president or that they would require machinery for ease. Compared to Community A, these “sanitation programmes” had been less successful in Community B due to disputes over land distribution and ownership. Most farmers therefore resorted to conducting clean-ups individually and more frequently, using machetes or herbicides.
Following village clean-ups, the most common answer was that there were no solutions against mosquitoes (n=11); a few farmers claimed that cleaning was not effective. Five farmers suggested spraying the village with insecticides (i.e. insecticidal product distribution and aerial spraying by the government) but clarified that it was only a temporary solution and labour intensive. In an FGD between female rice farmers in Community A, it was established nothing had been done to reduce mosquitoes because the village “did not have the money to hire a manager from town to reduce mosquitoes”. The following quotations encapsulate many participants’ suggestions:
“The village has to be clean, when the village is clean and they don't know where to land, where to breed, there won't be many of them there”. – KASS
“What we can do is respect each other – so that we can all work together to make the village clean… But there are many stubborn people that do not respect the laws of the village”. – IVN
“I don't see what we can do to reduce mosquitoes… Maybe it's products [the state is] going to send us, otherwise I can't see.” – TCHD
“Even if we spray insecticides, we can't spray the whole village.” – PIT
Several participants from IDIs and FGDs also explained that the community had not actioned on reducing mosquitoes because they were paying penance for breaking traditional laws.
Farm-level
At the rice field level, a third of the respondents did not observe links between mosquitoes and the bas-fonds or rice fields and hence did not reach this topic of conversation. Regardless, most farmers (n=17) were not convinced that anything could be done to reduce mosquitoes in the bas-fonds, sometimes referring to personal protection (through long-sleeved clothing) or village-level control:
“Over [in the field], we can’t do anything because the terrain is vast. There I do not see a solution because … we [farmers] are not in contact every day. But we in the village are always together so we can do something”. – CGK
“We can't do anything because rice is like grass, [mosquitoes] hide in it, so if we don't stop growing rice, we can't do anything to reduce mosquitoes.” – KOH
“At the level of the bas-fonds, we do not have any solutions yet because if the bas-fonds are not there, it is difficult to eat. Currently rice feeds people – yams are no longer successful, and it is thanks to the bas-fonds that we can eat. Maybe it's the dam, but if we stop the dam, we can't eat”. – Young person from Community A FGD
Seven farmers proposed insecticide application but similar to household-level observations, many were doubtful of how effective and manageable (daily application of) chemical control would be. One statement that encapsulates this was by MORY:
“No, [we can’t do anything]! there is no solution for this, I can't buy Rambo to spray the rice… I also can't take the mosquito net to cover the rice!”.
A few farmers, in both IDIs and FGDs, said that if they were shown or given the appropriate insecticides by the state, that they would do it:
“No [we cannot reduce mosquitoes in rice fields], except if the state shows us drugs to reduce them”. – KRST
“If someone presented a solution to us, it would be good – on our own, we cannot find the solution”. – Young person from Community A FGD
One-off suggestions, that were always underlined with doubt, included upland rice cultivation and using drip irrigation and greenhouses:
“We could cultivate rice on the plateau or with ramps and pipes connected to water. Once watered, the earth is wet, but the mud does not stay because the sun is beating down. The water disappears but the humidity remains. Apart from that, if we always cultivate in the bas-fonds, I don’t think we can reduce the rate of mosquitoes”. – MRCL
“Maybe in a greenhouse...if [rice is grown] in the open air, it's inevitable…Or the rice on the plateau but, for one, I haven’t mastered it and then two, I don’t think our land is fertile enough”. – DKB