对索氏麝香(双翅目:麝科)和家麝的行为以及对化学和视觉线索的反应的综述。

Robert T Jones, Ifeoluwa K Fagbohun, Freya I Spencer, Vanessa Chen-Hussey, Laura A Paris, James G Logan, Alexandra Hiscox
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摘要

麝蝇(双翅目:麝科)被发现是机械传播病毒、细菌、原生动物和蠕虫等多种传染性病原体的罪魁祸首,尤其是在热带地区的低收入环境中。这些苍蝇数量众多,可通过传播病原体对社区及其牲畜的健康造成负面影响。在世界上的一些地区,苏门蝇尤其重要,因为它与沙眼的传播有关,沙眼是由沙眼衣原体引起的可预防的、不可逆转的失明或视力损伤的主要原因。目前控制和监测家蝇的工具仍然相当简陋,主要集中在环境管理、杀虫剂、诱捕器和粘纸的使用上。鉴于苍蝇的行为是由其环境中的化学线索引发的,监测方法可以通过关注那些与滋扰行为或潜在病原体传播相关的活动来改进,并且有机会通过利用对作为引诱剂或驱避剂的半化学物质的行为来改进苍蝇控制。我们回顾了目前关于影响苏门答腊蝇和家蝇行为的气味和视觉线索的知识,目的是更好地了解如何利用这些线索来支持疾病监测并指导制定更有效的控制策略。
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A review of Musca sorbens (Diptera: Muscidae) and Musca domestica behavior and responses to chemical and visual cues.

Musca flies (Diptera: Muscidae) have been found culpable in the mechanical transmission of several infectious agents, including viruses, bacteria, protozoans, and helminths, particularly in low-income settings in tropical regions. In large numbers, these flies can negatively impact the health of communities and their livestock through the transmission of pathogens. In some parts of the world, Musca sorbens is of particular importance because it has been linked with the transmission of trachoma, a leading cause of preventable and irreversible blindness or visual impairment caused by Chlamydia trachomatis, but the contribution these flies make to trachoma transmission has not been quantified and even less is known for other pathogens. Current tools for control and monitoring of house flies remain fairly rudimentary and have focused on the use of environmental management, insecticides, traps, and sticky papers. Given that the behaviors of flies are triggered by chemical cues from their environment, monitoring approaches may be improved by focusing on those activities that are associated with nuisance behaviors or with potential pathogen transmission, and there are opportunities to improve fly control by exploiting behaviors toward semiochemicals that act as attractants or repellents. We review current knowledge on the odor and visual cues that affect the behavior of M. sorbens and Musca domestica, with the aim of better understanding how these can be exploited to support disease monitoring and guide the development of more effective control strategies.

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