Mayo Christie E, Osborne Cameron J, Mullens Bradley A, Gerry Alec C, Gardner Ian A, Reisen William K, Barker Christopher M, Maclachlan N James
Department of Pathology, Microbiology and Immunology, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of California Davis, Davis, California, United States of America.
Department of Entomology, University of California Riverside, Riverside, California, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2014 Feb 21;9(2):e89633. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0089633. eCollection 2014.
The Sacramento (northern Central) Valley of California (CA) has a hot Mediterranean climate and a diverse ecological landscape that is impacted extensively by human activities, which include the intensive farming of crops and livestock. Waste-water ponds, marshes, and irrigated fields associated with these agricultural activities provide abundant larval habitats for C. sonorensis midges, in addition to those sites that exist in the natural environment. Within this region, C. sonorensis is an important vector of bluetongue (BTV) and related viruses that adversely affect the international trade and movement of livestock, the economics of livestock production, and animal welfare. To characterize the seasonal dynamics of immature and adult C. sonorensis populations, abundance was monitored intensively on two dairy farms in the Sacramento Valley from August 2012- to July 2013. Adults were sampled every two weeks for 52 weeks by trapping (CDC style traps without light and baited with dry-ice) along N-S and E-W transects on each farm. One farm had large operational waste-water lagoons, whereas the lagoon on the other farm was drained and remained dry during the study. Spring emergence and seasonal abundance of adult C. sonorensis on both farms coincided with rising vernal temperature. Paradoxically, the abundance of midges on the farm without a functioning waste-water lagoon was increased as compared to abundance on the farm with a waste-water lagoon system, indicating that this infrastructure may not serve as the sole, or even the primary larval habitat. Adult midges disappeared from both farms from late November until May; however, low numbers of parous female midges were detected in traps set during daylight in the inter-seasonal winter period. This latter finding is especially critical as it provides a potential mechanism for the "overwintering" of BTV in temperate regions such as northern CA. Precise documentation of temporal changes in the annual abundance and dispersal of Culicoides midges is essential for the creation of models to predict BTV infection of livestock and to develop sound abatement strategies.
加利福尼亚州萨克拉门托(中北部)山谷拥有炎热的地中海气候和多样的生态景观,受到人类活动的广泛影响,这些活动包括农作物和牲畜的集约化养殖。与这些农业活动相关的废水池塘、沼泽和灌溉田地,除了自然环境中存在的地点外,还为索诺拉库蠓提供了丰富的幼虫栖息地。在该地区,索诺拉库蠓是蓝舌病(BTV)及相关病毒的重要传播媒介,这些病毒对牲畜的国际贸易和运输、牲畜生产的经济状况以及动物福利产生不利影响。为了描述未成熟和成年索诺拉库蠓种群的季节动态,2012年8月至2013年7月在萨克拉门托山谷的两个奶牛场对其数量进行了密集监测。每隔两周用陷阱(无光源、用干冰诱饵的疾控中心式陷阱)沿着每个农场的南北和东西样带对成年库蠓进行采样,共采样52周。一个农场有大型运营废水泻湖,而另一个农场的泻湖在研究期间被排空并保持干燥。两个农场成年索诺拉库蠓的春季羽化和季节数量与春季气温上升一致。矛盾的是,与有废水泻湖系统的农场相比,没有正常运行废水泻湖的农场蠓的数量增加了,这表明该基础设施可能不是唯一的,甚至不是主要的幼虫栖息地。两个农场的成年蠓从11月下旬到5月消失;然而,在季节性冬季白天设置的陷阱中检测到少量已产卵的雌性蠓。后一个发现尤为关键,因为它为BTV在加利福尼亚州北部等温带地区的“越冬”提供了一种潜在机制。精确记录库蠓年度数量和扩散的时间变化对于创建预测牲畜BTV感染的模型以及制定合理的控制策略至关重要。