INVESTIGADORES
GURTLER Ricardo Esteban
artículos
Título:
Feeding rates, nutritional status and flight dispersal potential of peridomestic populations of Triatoma infestans in rural northwestern Argentina
Autor/es:
CEBALLOS LA; VAZQUEZ-PROKOPEC GM; CECERE MC; MARCET PL; GURTLER RE
Revista:
ACTA TROPICA
Editorial:
ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
Referencias:
Año: 2005 vol. 95 p. 149 - 159
ISSN:
0001-706X
Resumen:
Triatoma infestans, the main vector of Chagas disease in Southern Cone countries, frequently infests peridomestic structures housing domestic animals. A total of 814 T. infestans collected from 35 different peridomestic sites in rural northwestern Argentina over 1-4 consecutive seasons was examined for recent blood meals and nutritional status. Bugs from goat or pig corrals had lower qualitative nutritional status and mean weight to length ratios (W/L) than those captured in chicken coops. Males systematically had lower qualitative nutritional status and W/L than females. Using logistic multiple regression, the daily feeding rates of T. infestans were significantly associated with season and stage but not ecotope, whereas the proportion of well-fed bugs varied significantly with all three factors. The seasonal trends in feeding rates and nutritional status were consistent with the local availability and breeding timing of domestic animals. The observed data fed into an empirical model predicted that the probability of flight initiation would peak in summer from pig or goat corrals, not chicken coops, and be insignificant in all ecotopes in spring and fall. Male T. infestans outnumbered females as potential fliers. This is the first study conducted in well-defined habitat units that shows significant heterogeneities in the feeding rates and nutritional status of triatomine populations linked to host demographics and management, and how these affect flight dispersal potential over seasons. Peridomestic bug populations are of great relevance as a source of domestic reinfestation and for the elimination of T. infestans.