Tiffany D Tran, Brittany M Nelms, Michelle L Koschik, Jamesina J Scott, Tara Thiemann
{"title":"Prevalence of filarial parasites in field-caught mosquitoes in northwestern California.","authors":"Tiffany D Tran, Brittany M Nelms, Michelle L Koschik, Jamesina J Scott, Tara Thiemann","doi":"10.52707/1081-1710-47.1.61","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>Mosquitoes were collected in Lake County, CA, in 2014 and tested using standard polymerase chain reaction for filarial parasite DNA. Filarial parasites were detected in 23 out of 1,008 total pools. DNA from <i>Dirofilaria immitis,</i> the parasite causing dog heartworm, was detected in <i>Aedes increpitus</i> (MIR=4.62), <i>Aedes sierrensis</i> (MIR=6.72), <i>Anopheles freeborni</i> (MIR=1.08), and <i>Culex tarsalis</i> (MIR=0.10). <i>Setaria yehi,</i> deer body worm, was detected in <i>Ae. sierrensis</i> (MIR=13.42), <i>Anopheles franciscanus</i> (MIR=0.55), <i>An. freeborni</i> (MIR=2.69), and <i>Culex stigmatosoma</i> (MIR=0.41). The avian parasite <i>Splendidofilaria</i> could not be identified to species but was detected in <i>Cx. tarsalis</i> (MIR=0.20). DNA was also detected for three unidentified filarial parasites in <i>Culex</i>. Filarial-positive pools spanned May-August, with <i>Splendidofilaria</i> earlier in the season and <i>S. yehi</i> later. For <i>D. immitis</i>, MIR tended to be highest in June, when the 130 HDU development threshold was reached. Interestingly, <i>D. immitis</i> was also detected prior to the HDU threshold, and <i>D. immitis</i> was not detected August-September, though HDU remained high enough for development. This suggests that there are other factors influencing dog heartworm transmission in the area.</p>","PeriodicalId":49961,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Vector Ecology","volume":"47 1","pages":"61-68"},"PeriodicalIF":1.4000,"publicationDate":"2022-06-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"2","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Vector Ecology","FirstCategoryId":"97","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.52707/1081-1710-47.1.61","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"农林科学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"ENTOMOLOGY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 2
Abstract
Mosquitoes were collected in Lake County, CA, in 2014 and tested using standard polymerase chain reaction for filarial parasite DNA. Filarial parasites were detected in 23 out of 1,008 total pools. DNA from Dirofilaria immitis, the parasite causing dog heartworm, was detected in Aedes increpitus (MIR=4.62), Aedes sierrensis (MIR=6.72), Anopheles freeborni (MIR=1.08), and Culex tarsalis (MIR=0.10). Setaria yehi, deer body worm, was detected in Ae. sierrensis (MIR=13.42), Anopheles franciscanus (MIR=0.55), An. freeborni (MIR=2.69), and Culex stigmatosoma (MIR=0.41). The avian parasite Splendidofilaria could not be identified to species but was detected in Cx. tarsalis (MIR=0.20). DNA was also detected for three unidentified filarial parasites in Culex. Filarial-positive pools spanned May-August, with Splendidofilaria earlier in the season and S. yehi later. For D. immitis, MIR tended to be highest in June, when the 130 HDU development threshold was reached. Interestingly, D. immitis was also detected prior to the HDU threshold, and D. immitis was not detected August-September, though HDU remained high enough for development. This suggests that there are other factors influencing dog heartworm transmission in the area.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Vector Ecology is an international journal published by the Society for Vector Ecology. It is concerned with all aspects of the biology, ecology, and control of arthropod and vertebrate vectors and the interrelationships between the vectors and the agents of disease that they transmit. The journal publishes original research articles and scientific notes, as well as comprehensive reviews of vector biology based on presentations at Society meetings. All papers are reviewed by at least two qualified scientists who recommend their suitability for publication. Acceptance of manuscripts is based on their scientific merit and is the final decision of the editor, but these decisions may be appealed to the editorial board. The journal began publishing in 1974 and now publishes on-line only.