Lopez-Solis Alma D, Solis-Santoyo Francisco, Saavedra-Rodriguez Karla, Sanchez-Guillen Daniel, Castillo-Vera Alfredo, Gonzalez-Gomez Rebeca, Rodriguez Americo D, Penilla-Navarro Patricia
Centro Regional de Investigación en Salud Pública, Instituto Nacional de Salud Pública, Cuarta Norte y 19 Calle Poniente S/N Colonia Centro, Tapachula 30700, Mexico.
El Colegio de la Frontera Sur, Unidad Tapachula. Carretera Antiguo Aeropuerto Km. 2.5, Centro, Tapachula Chiapas 30700, Mexico.
Insects. 2023 Jun 17;14(6):565. doi: 10.3390/insects14060565.
Tapachula, Mexico, a tropical city, is an endemic area for dengue, in addition to several outbreaks in the last decade with chikungunya and zika. As part of the migratory corridor from Central to North America and the risks of scattered infectious diseases that this implies, the identification and distribution of potential disease vectors in and around residential areas are essential in terms of entomological surveillance for the prevention of disease outbreaks. The identification of mosquito species of medical importance coexisting in houses and cemeteries in Tapachula and two semiurban sites in southern Chiapas was investigated. Adult mosquitoes were collected from May to December 2018, resting inside and outside houses and in the tombstones and fallen tree leaves in cemeteries. A total of 10,883 mosquitoes belonging to three vector species were collected across 20 sites; 6738 were from neighborhood houses, of which 55.4% were , 41.6% , and 2.9% . was the most common mosquito resting inside houses (56.7%), while and were mostly found resting outside houses (75.7%). In the cemeteries, (60.8%) and (37.3%) were the most abundant, while (1.9%) was the least abundant. This is the first report to identify adults of three major disease vector species coexisting in the domestic environment of urban and semiurban sites and adult resting inside of urban houses in Mexico. It would be opportune to consider comprehensive strategies that can be applied in this region to control the three species at the same time and avoid outbreaks of the diseases they transmit.
墨西哥的塔帕丘拉是一座热带城市,除了在过去十年中发生过几次基孔肯雅热和寨卡病毒疫情外,还是登革热的流行地区。作为从中美洲到北美洲的迁徙走廊的一部分,以及由此带来的传染病传播风险,确定居民区及其周边潜在病媒的种类和分布对于预防疾病爆发的昆虫学监测至关重要。本研究调查了塔帕丘拉以及恰帕斯州南部两个半城市地区的房屋和墓地中同时存在的具有医学重要性的蚊种。于2018年5月至12月收集成年蚊子,它们栖息在房屋内外、墓地的墓碑和落叶上。在20个地点共收集到10883只属于三种病媒蚊种的蚊子;其中6738只来自社区房屋,其中55.4%是[蚊种1],41.6%是[蚊种2],2.9%是[蚊种3]。[蚊种1]是最常见的栖息在房屋内的蚊子(56.7%),而[蚊种2]和[蚊种3]大多在房屋外被发现(75.7%)。在墓地中,[蚊种1](60.8%)和[蚊种2](37.3%)数量最多,而[蚊种3](1.9%)数量最少。这是首次报告在墨西哥城市和半城市地区的家庭环境中同时存在三种主要病媒蚊种的成虫,以及[蚊种1]成虫栖息在城市房屋内的情况。考虑在该地区应用综合策略以同时控制这三种蚊种并避免它们传播的疾病爆发是适时的。