Reiter Matthew E, LaPointe Dennis A
Research Corporation of the University of Hawai'i, 2530 Dole Street, Sakamaki Hall D-100, Honolulu, HI 96822, USA.
J Med Entomol. 2007 Sep;44(5):861-8. doi: 10.1603/0022-2585(2007)44[861:lfitsd]2.0.co;2.
Mosquito-borne avian diseases, principally avian malaria (Plasmodium relictum Grassi and Feletti) and avian pox (Avipoxvirus sp.) have been implicated as the key limiting factor associated with recent declines of endemic avifauna in the Hawaiian Island archipelago. We present data on the relative abundance, infection status, and spatial distribution of the primary mosquito vector Culex quinquefasciatus Say (Diptera: Culicidae) across a mixed, residential-agricultural community adjacent to Hawai'i Volcanoes National Park on Hawai'i Island. We modeled the effect of agriculture and forest fragmentation in determining relative abundance of adult Cx. quinquefasciatus in Volcano Village, and we implement our statistical model in a geographic information system to generate a probability of mosquito capture prediction surface for the study area. Our model was based on biweekly captures of adult mosquitoes from 20 locations within Volcano Village from October 2001 to April 2003. We used mixed effects logistic regression to model the probability of capturing a mosquito, and we developed a set of 17 competing models a priori to specifically evaluate the effect of agriculture and fragmentation (i.e., residential landscapes) at two spatial scales. In total, 2,126 mosquitoes were captured in CO2-baited traps with an average probability of 0.27 (SE = 0.10) of capturing one or more mosquitoes per trap night. Twelve percent of mosquitoes captured were infected with P. relictum. Our data indicate that agricultural lands and forest fragmentation significantly increase the probability of mosquito capture. The prediction surface identified areas along the Hawai'i Volcanoes National Park boundary that may have high relative abundance of the vector. Our data document the potential of avian malaria transmission in residential-agricultural landscapes and support the need for vector management that extends beyond reserve boundaries and considers a reserve's spatial position in a highly heterogeneous landscape.
蚊媒传播的禽类疾病,主要是禽疟(残疟原虫,格拉西和费莱蒂)和禽痘(禽痘病毒属),被认为是与夏威夷群岛特有鸟类近期数量下降相关的关键限制因素。我们提供了关于主要蚊媒致倦库蚊(双翅目:蚊科)在夏威夷岛夏威夷火山国家公园附近一个混合的居住 - 农业社区中的相对丰度、感染状况和空间分布的数据。我们模拟了农业和森林碎片化对火山村成年致倦库蚊相对丰度的影响,并在地理信息系统中应用我们的统计模型,以生成研究区域内蚊子捕获概率的预测表面。我们的模型基于2001年10月至2003年4月在火山村20个地点每两周对成年蚊子的捕获情况。我们使用混合效应逻辑回归来模拟捕获蚊子的概率,并事先开发了一组17个竞争模型,以具体评估农业和碎片化(即居住景观)在两个空间尺度上的影响。总共在二氧化碳诱捕器中捕获了2126只蚊子,每个诱捕器每晚捕获一只或多只蚊子的平均概率为0.27(标准误差 = 0.10)。捕获的蚊子中有12%感染了残疟原虫。我们的数据表明,农田和森林碎片化显著增加了蚊子捕获的概率。预测表面确定了夏威夷火山国家公园边界沿线可能具有较高蚊媒相对丰度的区域。我们的数据记录了居住 - 农业景观中禽疟传播的可能性,并支持需要进行超越保护区边界的病媒管理,并考虑保护区在高度异质景观中的空间位置。