Enzootic mosquito vector species at equine encephalitis transmission foci in the República de Panamá

 

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores: Torres, Rolando, Samudio, Rafael, Carrera, Jean-Paul, Young, Josue, Marquéz, Ricardo, Hurtado, Lisbeth, Weaver, Scott, Chaves, Luis Fernando, Tesh, Robert, Cáceres, Lorenzo
Formato: artículo
Fecha de Publicación:2017
Descripción:The identification of mosquito vector species present at arboviral enzootic transmission foci is important to understand transmission eco-epidemiology and to propose and implement prevention and control strategies that reduce vector-borne equine encephalitis transmis- sion. The goal of this study was to identify mosquito species potentially involved in the trans- mission of enzootic equine encephalitis, in relation to their abundance and diversity at three endemic regions in the Repu ́blica de Panama ́. We sampled adult mosquitoes during the dry and rainy season of Panama ́. We employed CDC light traps with octanol, EV traps with CO2 and Trinidad 17 traps baited with live hamsters. Traps were deployed in the peridomicile and extradomicile of houses from 18:00 to 6:00 h. We estimated the abundance and diver- sity of sampled species. We collected a total of 4868 mosquitoes, belonging to 45 species and 11 genera, over 216 sampling nights. Culex (Melanoconion) pedroi, a major Venezue- lan equine encephalitis vector was relatively rare (< 2.0% of all sampled mosquitoes). We also found Cx. (Mel) adamesi, Cx. (Mel) crybda, Cx. (Mel) ocossa, Cx. (Mel) spissipes, Cx. (Mel) taeniopus, Cx. (Mel) vomerifer, Aedes scapularis, Ae. angustivittatus, Coquillettidia venezuelensis, Cx. nigripalpus, Cx. declarator, Mansonia titillans, M. pseudotitillans and Psorophora ferox all species known to be vectorially competent for the transmission of arbo- viruses. Abundance and diversity of mosquitoes in the sampled locations was high, when compared with similar surveys in temperate areas. Information from previous reports about vectorial competence / capacity of the sampled mosquito species suggest that sampled locations have all the elements to support enzootic outbreaks of Venezuelan and Eastern equine encephalitides.
País:Repositorio UNA
Institución:Universidad Nacional de Costa Rica
Repositorio:Repositorio UNA
Lenguaje:Inglés
OAI Identifier:oai:null:11056/24397
Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/11056/24397
https://doi.org/ 10.1371/journal.pone.0185491
Palabra clave:MOSQUITOS
PANAMÁ
CAMBIO CLIMATICO
CLIMATE CHANGE
EPIDEMIOLOGIA
EPIDEMIOLOGY
ENCEFALITIS