Ecological factors related to the widespread distribution of sylvatic Rhodnius ecuadoriensis populations in southern Ecuador
Ecological factors related to the widespread distribution of sylvatic Rhodnius ecuadoriensis populations in southern Ecuador
Blog Article
Abstract
Background
Chagas disease transmission risk is a function of the presence of triatomines in domestic habitats.
ecuadoriensis
Methods
Manual triatomine searches were conducted by skilled bug collectors in 23 communities.Sylvatic searched sites were selected by a) directed sampling, where microhabitats were selected by the searchers and b) random sampling, where sampling points where randomly generated.Domiciliary triatomine searches were conducted using the one man-hour method.
Natural trypanosome infection was determined by microscopic examination and PCR.Generalized linear models were used to test the effect of environmental factors on the presence of sylvatic triatomines.
Results
In total, 1,923 sylvatic individuals were collected representing a sampling effort of 751 man-hours.Collected sylvatic triatomines were associated with mammal and bird nests.
The 1,219 sampled nests presented an infestation index of 11.9%, a crowding cashel tail bag of 13 bugs per infested nest, and a colonization of 80% of the nests.Triatomine abundance was significantly higher in squirrel (
5% of the 820 examined houses in the same localities were infested with triatomines.There was a significant correlation between
Parasitological analysis revealed that 64.7% and 15.7% of the sylvatic bugs examined (n = 300) were infected with
Conclusions
The wide distribution of sylvatic
ecuadoriensis