洛杉矶新奥尔良市不同社会环境梯度的废弃汽车轮胎及其与蚊媒丰度的关系。

Rebeca de Jesús Crespo, Alexandros Pavlakis, Jennifer Breaux, Claudia Riegel
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引用次数: 0

摘要

废弃的汽车轮胎是蚊子传播媒介的栖息地。在路易斯安那州新奥尔良市,废弃轮胎日益成为公众关注的焦点,特别是考虑到该市是许多具有重要医学价值的蚊子物种的栖息地。众所周知,废弃轮胎与蚊子数量有关,但人们对废弃轮胎如何与其他社会环境梯度相互作用以影响蚊子生态还知之甚少。在这里,我们询问废弃轮胎的分布是否可以用社会因素来解释,特别是收入中位数、房屋空置率和人口密度,以及这些因素是否与城市热岛(UHI)相互作用,从而推动蚊子媒介的聚集。我们在 2020 年 5 月至 10 月间对全市的轮胎堆和 12 个地点的成蚊进行了调查。我们将这些数据与选定的社会指标和 UHI 估计值进行了比较。结果显示,收入中位数和人口密度与轮胎丰度成反比。轮胎丰度与低热(LS)地区的白纹伊蚊丰度呈正相关。高温是其他监测物种的唯一预测因素,高温对应埃及伊蚊的高丰度,而低温对应库蚊的高丰度。我们的研究结果表明,新奥尔良低收入、人口稀少的社区可能是丢弃汽车轮胎的热点地区,至少与一种对医学有重要意义的蚊子(白纹伊蚊)的高丰度有关。这些发现为优先减少蚊媒来源的工作提供了潜在的地点,并强调了废弃轮胎是低收入居民面临不平等疾病风险的潜在接触途径。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Discarded vehicle tires and their association with mosquito vector abundance across socioenvironmental gradients in New Orleans, LA.

Discarded vehicle tires serve as habitat for mosquito vectors. In New Orleans, Louisiana, discarded tires are an increasingly important public concern, especially considering that the city is home to many medically important mosquito species. Discarded tires are known to be associated with mosquito abundance, but how their presence interacts with other socioenvironmental gradients to influence mosquito ecology is poorly understood. Here, we ask whether discarded tire distribution could be explained by social factors, particularly median income, home vacancy and human population density, and whether these factors interact with urban heat islands (UHI) to drive mosquito vector assemblages. We surveyed tire piles across the city and adult mosquitoes in 12 sites, between May and October of 2020. We compared this data with the social indicators selected and UHI estimates. Our results show that median income and human population density were inversely related to tire abundance. Tire abundance was positively associated with Aedes albopictus abundance in places of low heat (LS) severity. Heat was the only predictor for the other monitored species, where high heat corresponded to higher abundance of Aedes aegypti, and LS to higher abundance of Culex quinquefasciatus. Our results suggest that low-income, sparsely populated neighborhoods of New Orleans may be hotspots for discarded vehicle tires, and are associated with higher abundances of at least one medically important mosquito (Ae. albopictus). These findings suggest potential locations for prioritizing source reduction efforts to control mosquito vectors and highlight discarded tires as a potential exposure pathway to unequal disease risk for low-income residents.

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