Durden L A, Best T L, Wilson N, Hilton C D
Department of Arboviral Entomology, U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases, Fort Detrick, MD 21702.
J Med Entomol. 1992 May;29(3):507-11. doi: 10.1093/jmedent/29.3.507.
Seven species of mites were recovered from 133 Brazilian free-tailed bats, Tadarida brasiliensis, and 94 big brown bats, Eptesicus fuscus, from February through November 1990 in colonies that shared roosting space in east-central Alabama. The macronyssid Chiroptonyssus robustipes (Ewing) was the most common mite on T. brasiliensis (964 mites, 87% of bats infested) and on E. fuscus (109 mites, 29% of bats infested). However, C. rubustipes normally is a specific parasite of T. brasiliensis. The macronyssids Steatonyssus ceratognathus (Ewing) and S. occidentalis (Ewing) were recovered from both species of bats in low numbers. S. ceratognathus is not a typical parasite of either species of bat, but S. occidentalis normally is specific to E. fuscus. Predictably, S. occidentalis was most frequently collected from E. fuscus (16 mites, 9% of bats infested), but two specimens were recovered from T. brasiliensis. Five specimens of the laelapid Androlaelaps casalis (Berlese) (a mite that is frequently associated with rodents) and one specimen of the myobiid mite Ewingana (Doreyana) longa (Ewing) (a specific ectoparasite of T. brasiliensis) were also recovered from T. brasiliensis. Singletons of the rosensteiniids Mydopholeus sp. and Nycteriglyphites pennsylvanicus Fain, Lukoschus & Whitaker were the only additional mites collected from E. fuscus; both of these mites have previously been collected from bats or their guano but are recorded here from Alabama for the first time. With respect to ectoparasite cross-infestations, E. fuscus appears to be at greater risk from sharing roots with T. brasiliensis. This is highlighted by the comparatively large numbers of C. robustipes that occurred on E. fuscus and the low numbers of S. occidentalis on T. brasiliensis. Although mites were the only arthropods recovered from bats in this study, a separate survey in 1991 revealed that the bat bug Cimex adjunctus Barber infested some other colonies of T. brasiliensis and E. fuscus in Alabama.
1990年2月至11月期间,在阿拉巴马州中东部共用栖息空间的蝙蝠群落中,从133只巴西无尾蝠(Tadarida brasiliensis)和94只大棕蝠(Eptesicus fuscus)身上采集到了7种螨类。巨刺螨科的粗壮嗜蝠螨(Chiroptonyssus robustipes,Ewing)是巴西无尾蝠身上最常见的螨类(964只螨,87%的蝙蝠受感染),也是大棕蝠身上最常见的螨类(109只螨,29%的蝙蝠受感染)。然而,粗壮嗜蝠螨通常是巴西无尾蝠的特异性寄生虫。从两种蝙蝠身上都少量采集到了巨刺螨科的角颚硬皮螨(Steatonyssus ceratognathus,Ewing)和西方硬皮螨(S. occidentalis,Ewing)。角颚硬皮螨并非这两种蝙蝠的典型寄生虫,但西方硬皮螨通常特异性寄生于大棕蝠。不出所料,西方硬皮螨最常从大棕蝠身上采集到(16只螨,9%的蝙蝠受感染),但也从巴西无尾蝠身上采集到了两只标本。还从巴西无尾蝠身上采集到了5只厉螨科的卡氏安德罗厉螨(Androlaelaps casalis,Berlese)(一种常与啮齿动物相关的螨)和1只肉食螨科的长形尤氏螨(Ewingana (Doreyana) longa,Ewing)(巴西无尾蝠的一种特异性体外寄生虫)。玫瑰螨科的Mydopholeus sp.和宾夕法尼亚夜蝠螨(Nycteriglyphites pennsylvanicus,Fain、Lukoschus & Whitaker)的单只标本是从大棕蝠身上采集到的仅有的其他螨类;这两种螨此前都曾从蝙蝠或其粪便中采集到,但此次是首次在阿拉巴马州记录到。关于体外寄生虫的交叉感染,大棕蝠因与巴西无尾蝠共用栖息地而面临更大风险。这一点从大棕蝠身上出现的相对大量的粗壮嗜蝠螨以及巴西无尾蝠身上少量的西方硬皮螨中得到了体现。尽管在本研究中螨类是从蝙蝠身上采集到的唯一节肢动物,但1991年的另一项调查显示,蝙蝠臭虫(Cimex adjunctus,Barber)感染了阿拉巴马州其他一些巴西无尾蝠和大棕蝠的群落。