Ebrahimi Babak, Jackson Bryan T, Guseman Julie L, Przybylowicz Colin M, Stone Christopher M, Foster Woodbridge A
Department of Evolution, Ecology, and Organismal Biology, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, USA.
Illinois Natural History Survey, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Champaign, IL, USA.
J Appl Ecol. 2018 Mar;55(2):841-851. doi: 10.1111/1365-2664.13001. Epub 2017 Sep 14.
Knowledge of the link between a vector population's pathogen-transmission potential and its biotic environment can generate more realistic forecasts of disease risk due to environmental change. It also can promote more effective vector control by both conventional and novel means.This study assessed the effect of particular plant species assemblages differing in nectar production on components of the vectorial capacity of the mosquito , an important vector of African malaria.We followed cohorts of mosquitoes for three weeks in greenhouse mesocosms holding nectar-poor and nectar-rich plant species by tracking daily mortalities and estimating daily biting rates and fecundities. At death, a mosquito's insemination status and wing length were determined. These life history traits allowed incorporation of larval dynamics into a vectorial capacity estimate. This new study provided both novel assemblages of putative host plants and a human blood host within a nocturnal period of maximum biting.Survivorship was significantly greater in nectar-rich environments than nectar-poor ones, resulting in greater total fecundity. Daily biting rate and fecundity per female between treatments was not detected. These results translated to greater estimated vectorial capacities in the nectar-rich environment in all four replicates of the experiment (means: 1,089.5 ± 125.2 vs. 518.3 ± 60.6). When mosquito density was made a function of survival and fecundity, rather than held constant, the difference between plant treatments was more pronounced, but so was the variance, so differences were not statistically significant. In the nectar-poor environment, females' survival suffered severely when a blood host was not provided. A sugar-accessibility experiment confirmed that is a nectar-poor plant for these mosquitoes. This study, assessing the effect of particular plant species assemblages on the vectorial capacity of malaria mosquitoes, highlights the likelihood that changes in plant communities (e.g. due to introduction of exotic or nectar-rich species) can increase malaria transmission and that a reduction of favourable nectar sources can reduce it. Also, plant communities' data can be used to identify potential high risk areas. Further studies are warranted to explore how and when management of plant species assemblages should be considered as an option in an integrated vector management strategy.
了解病媒种群的病原体传播潜力与其生物环境之间的联系,有助于更实际地预测因环境变化而产生的疾病风险。这也能够通过传统和新型手段促进更有效的病媒控制。本研究评估了花蜜产量不同的特定植物物种组合对蚊子传播能力组成部分的影响,蚊子是非洲疟疾的重要病媒。我们在温室中型生态系统中追踪蚊子群体三周,这些生态系统中种植了花蜜少和花蜜丰富的植物物种,通过跟踪每日死亡率、估计每日叮咬率和繁殖力来进行研究。在蚊子死亡时,确定其受精状态和翅长。这些生活史特征使得幼虫动态能够纳入传播能力估计中。这项新研究在最大叮咬的夜间时段内,既提供了假定宿主植物的新组合,也提供了人类血液宿主。在花蜜丰富的环境中,蚊子的存活率显著高于花蜜少的环境,从而导致总繁殖力更高。未检测到不同处理之间的每日叮咬率和每只雌蚊的繁殖力差异。这些结果转化为在实验的所有四个重复中,花蜜丰富环境中的估计传播能力更高(平均值:1089.5±125.2对518.3±60.6)。当蚊子密度作为生存和繁殖力的函数而不是保持恒定时,植物处理之间的差异更加明显,但方差也是如此,因此差异没有统计学意义。在花蜜少的环境中,如果不提供血液宿主,雌蚊的生存会受到严重影响。一项糖分可及性实验证实,对于这些蚊子来说,[具体植物名称]是一种花蜜少的植物。这项评估特定植物物种组合对疟疾蚊子传播能力影响的研究强调,植物群落的变化(例如由于引入外来或花蜜丰富的物种)可能会增加疟疾传播,而减少有利的花蜜来源可能会降低疟疾传播。此外,植物群落的数据可用于识别潜在的高风险地区。有必要进行进一步研究,以探索如何以及何时应将植物物种组合的管理视为综合病媒管理策略中的一种选择。