Castillo-Neyra Ricardo, Barbu Corentin M, Salazar Renzo, Borrini Katty, Naquira Cesar, Levy Michael Z
Department of Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland, United States of America; Center for Clinical Epidemiology & Biostatistics - Department of Biostatistics & Epidemiology, University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States of America.
Center for Clinical Epidemiology & Biostatistics - Department of Biostatistics & Epidemiology, University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States of America.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2015 Jan 8;9(1):e3433. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0003433. eCollection 2015 Jan.
Chagas disease affects millions of people in Latin America. The control of this vector-borne disease focuses on halting transmission by reducing or eliminating insect vector populations. Most transmission of Trypanosoma cruzi, the causative agent of Chagas disease, involves insects living within or very close to households and feeding mostly on domestic animals. As animal hosts can be intermittently present it is important to understand how host availability can modify transmission risk to humans and to characterize the host-seeking dispersal of triatomine vectors on a very fine scale. We used a semi-field system with motion-detection cameras to characterize the dispersal of Triatoma infestans, and compare the behavior of vector populations in the constant presence of hosts (guinea pigs), and after the removal of the hosts. The emigration rate - net insect population decline in original refuge - following host removal was on average 19.7% of insects per 10 days compared to 10.2% in constant host populations (p = 0.029). However, dispersal of T. infestans occurred in both directions, towards and away from the initial location of the hosts. The majority of insects that moved towards the original location of guinea pigs remained there for 4 weeks. Oviposition and mortality were observed and analyzed in the context of insect dispersal, but only mortality was higher in the group where animal hosts were removed (p-value <0.01). We discuss different survival strategies associated with the observed behavior and its implications for vector control. Removing domestic animals in infested areas increases vector dispersal from the first day of host removal. The implications of these patterns of vector dispersal in a field setting are not yet known but could result in movement towards human rooms.
恰加斯病影响着拉丁美洲数百万人。这种通过媒介传播的疾病的防控重点在于通过减少或消灭昆虫媒介种群来阻断传播。恰加斯病的病原体克氏锥虫的大多数传播都涉及生活在家庭内部或非常靠近家庭的昆虫,且这些昆虫主要以家畜为食。由于动物宿主可能会间歇性出现,因此了解宿主的可利用性如何改变对人类的传播风险,并在非常精细的尺度上描述锥蝽媒介寻找宿主的扩散情况非常重要。我们使用了带有运动检测摄像头的半野外系统来描述侵袭锥蝽的扩散情况,并比较在持续存在宿主(豚鼠)的情况下以及移除宿主后媒介种群的行为。移除宿主后,迁出率——原始避难所中昆虫种群的净减少——平均为每10天19.7%的昆虫,而在持续存在宿主的种群中为10.2%(p = 0.029)。然而,侵袭锥蝽的扩散发生在两个方向,朝着和远离宿主的初始位置。大多数朝着豚鼠初始位置移动的昆虫在那里停留了4周。在昆虫扩散的背景下观察并分析了产卵和死亡率,但只有在移除动物宿主的组中死亡率更高(p值<0.01)。我们讨论了与观察到的行为相关的不同生存策略及其对媒介控制的影响。在受感染地区移除家畜会从移除宿主的第一天起增加媒介的扩散。这些媒介扩散模式在野外环境中的影响尚不清楚,但可能会导致昆虫向人类居住的房间移动。