INVESTIGADORES
CARBAJO Anibal Eduardo
artículos
Título:
The role of the landscape in structuring immature mosquito assemblages in wetlands
Autor/es:
CARDO MARÍA VICTORIA; DARÍO VEZZANI; ANIBAL EDUARDO CARBAJO
Revista:
WETLANDS ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT
Editorial:
SPRINGER
Referencias:
Año: 2013 vol. 21 p. 55 - 70
ISSN:
0923-4861
Resumen:
The distribution of mosquito populations is spatially heterogeneous and influenced by factors acting at a wide range of scales. The aim of this study was to assess the role of environmental heterogeneity at the landscape level in shaping the composition of immature mosquito communities inhabiting surface water habitats. The Paraná Lower Delta (Argentina) is a temperate wetland that extends along a 1º north-south gradient and presents high landscape heterogeneity, due to the combined action of geomorphology, hydrology and human intervention. Immature mosquitoes were collected every 2 weeks (Nov. 2011 - April 2012) from surface water habitats within eleven peridomestic areas interspersed along a 75km 29 north-south transect. The environment was quantified by 24 variables regarding the geomorphology, geography, economic use, climate, landcover and topography of each site and its surroundings at three radii. The association between the mosquito assemblage and the environment was tested by two multivariate approaches, the community-based Outlying Mean Index and by-species Generalized Linear Models. The former explained 93.6% of the marginality of all taxa as a function of the type and diversity of landcover, precipitation, presence of cattle and altitude. The niche of six species, most of which were floodwater mosquitoes of the genera Ochlerotatus and Psorophora, deviated significantly from uniformity. The by-species approach rendered significant models for four species as a function of  landcover type and precipitation. Both methodologies were broadly consistent in pointing that landscape elements affect the distribution of immature mosquitoes, thereby shaping the composition of the mosquito assemblage in peridomestic environments within wetlands