美洲以外的锥蝽:全球监测恰加斯病媒介的综合数据集。

IF 1.2
GigaByte (Hong Kong, China) Pub Date : 2025-08-26 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.46471/gigabyte.163
Soledad Ceccarelli, Maria Eugenia Vicente, Qin Liu, Xiao-Nong Zhou, Di Wu, Agustin Balsalobre, Emiliano A Bruno, S Emilia Barboza, Romina Valente, Gerardo A Marti
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引用次数: 0

摘要

恰加斯病由克氏锥虫引起,主要通过锥虫亚科(半翅目:锥虫科)昆虫传播给包括人类在内的哺乳动物。也被称为“接吻虫”,这个亚科包括5个部落18属159种。虽然大多数种类都在美洲,但在这里,我们提出了非美洲triatomine出现的第一个汇编。资料(396条)对应于1926年至2022年间在非洲、亚洲和大洋洲收集的Linschosteus和Triatoma属16种,包括地理坐标、收集日期和生态信息的验证记录。我们的数据集的主要新颖之处在于(i)非美洲物种的时间和地理更新,(ii)内陆数百公里的rubrofasciata记录,以及(iii)最近两个描述的Triatoma物种(T. atrata和T. picta)的地理记录。我们的资源支持全球监测、生态建模和风险评估,为美洲以外地区控制恰加斯病的潜在媒介提供证据。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Triatomines outside the Americas: a comprehensive dataset for the global surveillance of Chagas disease vectors.

Triatomines outside the Americas: a comprehensive dataset for the global surveillance of Chagas disease vectors.

Triatomines outside the Americas: a comprehensive dataset for the global surveillance of Chagas disease vectors.

Triatomines outside the Americas: a comprehensive dataset for the global surveillance of Chagas disease vectors.

Chagas disease is caused by Trypanosoma cruzi, which is transmitted to mammals, including humans, mainly by insects of the subfamily Triatominae (Hemiptera: Reduviidae). Also known as "kissing bugs", the subfamily includes 159 species in 18 genera and five tribes. Although most species are in the Americas, here we present the first compilation of non-American triatomine occurrences. The data (396 records) corresponds to 16 species of the genera Linschosteus and Triatoma from Africa, Asia, and Oceania collected between 1926 and 2022, and include verified records with geographic coordinates, collection dates, and ecological information. The key novelties of our dataset regard (i) temporal and geographical updates of non-American species, (ii) records of T. rubrofasciata hundreds of kilometers inland, and (iii) geographical records of the last two described Triatoma species (T. atrata and T. picta). Our resource supports global surveillance, ecological modeling, and risk assessment by providing evidence of potential vectors for Chagas disease control outside the Americas.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.60
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