Laboratorio de Inmunología, Centro de Investigaciones Regionales "Dr. Hideyo Noguchi", Universidad Autónoma de Yucatán, Mexico.
Laboratorio de Inmunología, Centro de Investigaciones Regionales "Dr. Hideyo Noguchi", Universidad Autónoma de Yucatán, Mexico.
Acta Trop. 2023 Dec;248:107014. doi: 10.1016/j.actatropica.2023.107014. Epub 2023 Sep 10.
Could tropical forest conversion shape sand fly (Diptera: Phlebotominae) biting rhythms and Leishmania infection rates? Using a Shannon trap, we estimated the bite rate and infection prevalence among anthropophilic sand flies at sites with different land use in southern Mexico. We estimated the expected monthly infection rate of the Leishmania parasite along the gradient and generated information on the biting rhythm of sand flies in a poorly characterized cutaneous leishmaniasis endemic region. We used generalized mixed linear and mixed additives models to evaluate differences in the biting rate, nocturnal activity, and inoculation rate of female sand flies, as well as their relationship with the loss of forest cover and environmental disparities recorded throughout the study area. Our results show that the loss of forest cover influences the biting rhythm of sand fly species and the potential number of infectious bites with Leishmania, but the greatest entomological and potential epidemiological risk continues to be associated with sylvatic areas (amplification events). Despite this, we detected that the effect of forest cover (%) on the entomological exposure seems to be also dependent on the sand fly species, and that, albeit to a lesser extent, Leishmania parasite is circulating in disturbed landscapes through generalist and competent sand fly vector species. We also found that land use change did not affect the nocturnal activity, however we detected that important vector species were active most of the time. Contrary to our expectation, temperature and humidity did not shape the biting rhythm of sand fly species. We discuss the limitations and epidemiological implications of our findings regarding the risk of contracting leishmaniasis in southern Mexico.
热带森林的转换会影响沙蝇(双翅目:螫蝇科)的叮咬节律和利什曼原虫的感染率吗?利用 Shannon 陷阱,我们在墨西哥南部不同土地利用类型的地点估算了嗜人沙蝇的叮咬率和感染率。我们估计了 Leishmania 寄生虫在梯度上的预期月感染率,并生成了有关在皮肤利什曼病流行地区沙蝇叮咬节律的信息。我们使用广义混合线性和混合添加剂模型来评估雌性沙蝇的叮咬率、夜间活动和接种率的差异,以及它们与森林覆盖损失和整个研究区域记录的环境差异之间的关系。我们的研究结果表明,森林覆盖的减少会影响沙蝇物种的叮咬节律和携带利什曼原虫的潜在传染性叮咬数量,但最大的昆虫学和潜在的流行病学风险仍然与森林地区(扩增事件)有关。尽管如此,我们发现森林覆盖率(%)对昆虫暴露的影响似乎也取决于沙蝇物种,而且尽管程度较轻,但 Leishmania 寄生虫通过多宿主和有能力的沙蝇媒介物种在受干扰的景观中传播。我们还发现土地利用变化不会影响沙蝇的夜间活动,但我们发现重要的媒介物种大多数时间都很活跃。与我们的预期相反,温度和湿度并没有影响沙蝇的叮咬节律。我们讨论了我们在墨西哥南部发现的与感染利什曼病风险有关的研究结果的局限性和流行病学意义。