Lord Jennifer S, Mthombothi Zinhle, Lagat Vitalis K, Atuhaire Fatumah, Hargrove John W
Department of Vector Biology, Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, Liverpool, United Kingdom.
SACEMA, University of Stellenbosch, Stellenbosch, South Africa.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2017 Jul 3;11(7):e0005730. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0005730. eCollection 2017 Jul.
Females of all blood-feeding arthropod vectors must find and feed on a host in order to produce offspring. For tsetse-vectors of the trypanosomes that cause human and animal African trypanosomiasis-the problem is more extreme, since both sexes feed solely on blood. Host location is thus essential both for survival and reproduction. Host population density should therefore be an important driver of population dynamics for haematophagous insects, and particularly for tsetse, but the role of host density is poorly understood. We investigate the issue using data on changes in numbers of tsetse (Glossina morsitans morsitans Westwood) caught during a host elimination experiment in Zimbabwe in the 1960s. During the experiment, numbers of flies caught declined by 95%. We aimed to assess whether models including starvation-dependent mortality could explain observed changes in tsetse numbers as host density declined. An ordinary differential equation model, including starvation-dependent mortality, captured the initial dynamics of the observed tsetse population. However, whereas small numbers of tsetse were caught throughout the host elimination exercise, the modelled population went extinct. Results of a spatially explicit agent-based model suggest that this discrepancy could be explained by immigration of tsetse into the experimental plot. Variation in host density, as a result of natural and anthropogenic factors, may influence tsetse population dynamics in space and time. This has implications for Trypanosoma brucei rhodesiense transmission. Increased tsetse mortality as a consequence of low host density may decrease trypanosome transmission, but hungrier flies may be more inclined to bite humans, thereby increasing the risk of transmission to humans. Our model provides a way of exploring the role of host density on tsetse population dynamics and could be incorporated into models of trypanosome transmission dynamics to better understand how spatio-temporal variation in host density impacts trypanosome prevalence in mammalian hosts.
所有吸血节肢动物传播媒介的雌性个体都必须找到宿主并以其为食才能繁殖后代。对于传播导致人类和动物非洲锥虫病的锥虫的采采蝇来说,问题更为严峻,因为雌雄两性都仅以血液为食。因此,宿主定位对于生存和繁殖都至关重要。宿主种群密度因此应该是吸血昆虫种群动态的一个重要驱动因素,尤其是对于采采蝇而言,但宿主密度的作用却鲜为人知。我们利用20世纪60年代在津巴布韦进行的一次宿主清除实验中捕获的采采蝇(Glossina morsitans morsitans Westwood)数量变化的数据来研究这个问题。在实验过程中,捕获的苍蝇数量下降了95%。我们旨在评估包含饥饿依赖性死亡率的模型是否能够解释随着宿主密度下降观察到的采采蝇数量变化。一个包含饥饿依赖性死亡率的常微分方程模型捕捉到了观察到的采采蝇种群的初始动态。然而,尽管在整个宿主清除过程中捕获到的采采蝇数量很少,但模拟种群却灭绝了。一个基于空间显式主体的模型结果表明,这种差异可以通过采采蝇迁入实验区域来解释。由于自然和人为因素导致的宿主密度变化,可能会在空间和时间上影响采采蝇种群动态。这对罗德西亚布氏锥虫的传播有影响。宿主密度低导致采采蝇死亡率增加可能会降低锥虫传播,但饥饿的苍蝇可能更倾向于叮咬人类,从而增加向人类传播的风险。我们的模型提供了一种探索宿主密度对采采蝇种群动态作用的方法,可以纳入锥虫传播动态模型,以更好地理解宿主密度的时空变化如何影响哺乳动物宿主中锥虫的流行率。