多重宿主,多重影响:脊椎动物宿主多样性在塑造蚊子生活史和病原体传播中的作用

Amélie Vantaux, Nicolas Moiroux, Kounbobr Roch Dabiré, Anna Cohuet, Thierry Lefèvre
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摘要

疟疾寄生虫从蚊子向人类的传播在很大程度上取决于按蚊以人类为食的饮食专一性。很少有研究探讨血源对寄生虫和蚊子的适合度的影响。本研究调查了4种脊椎动物(人、牛、羊或鸡)连续3-4次血食对几种适合度性状的影响,包括蚊子取食率、血食大小、对恶性疟原虫野生分离株的敏感性、存活率、繁殖力、F1后代发育时间和大小。我们的研究结果显示,对寄生虫的发育没有显著的影响。同样,接触寄生虫对蚊子的适应性没有总体影响。然而,血粉类型确实对蚊子的取食率、存活率、终生繁殖力和后代大小有很强的影响。具体来说,与喂食人血的蚊子相比,连续喂食鸡血的蚊子产卵更少,F1成虫也更少、更小。将我们的结果结合到一个理论模型中,我们表明,与喂食人血的蚊子相比,喂食鸡血或牛血的蚊子的媒介能力有所下降,而喂食羊血的蚊子的媒介能力有所增加。这些发现强调了考虑血食来源多样性对了解蚊子生态及其在疟原虫传播强度中的作用的重要性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Multiple hosts, multiple impacts: the role of vertebrate host diversity in shaping mosquito life history and pathogen transmission
The transmission of malaria parasites from mosquito to human is largely determined by the dietary specialization of Anopheles mosquitoes to feed on humans. Few studies have explored the impact of blood meal sources on the fitness of both the parasite and the mosquito. Our study investigated the effects of 3-4 consecutive blood meals from one of four vertebrate species (human, cattle, sheep, or chicken) on several fitness traits, including mosquito feeding rate, blood meal size, susceptibility to wild isolates of Plasmodium falciparum, survival, fecundity, F1 offspring development time, and size. Our findings revealed no significant effect on parasite development. Similarly, parasite exposure had no overall effects on mosquito fitness. However, blood meal type did have a strong impact on mosquito feeding rate, survival, lifetime fecundity, and offspring size. Specifically, mosquitoes that were fed successive chicken blood meals produced fewer eggs and fewer and smaller F1 adults compared to those fed human blood. Combining our results in a theoretical model, we show a decrease in the vectorial capacity of mosquitoes fed chicken or cow blood and an increase in the capacity of those fed sheep blood compared to those fed human blood. These findings emphasize the importance of considering the diversity of blood meal sources in understanding mosquito ecology and their role in the transmission intensity of malaria parasites.
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