纬度和人为因素对吸血蝇及其脊椎动物宿主网络结构的影响。

IF 1.6 3区 农林科学 Q2 ENTOMOLOGY
Ben Bellekom, Owen T. Lewis, Talya D. Hackett
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引用次数: 0

摘要

叮咬蝇(Diptera)传播病原体,导致人类、家畜和野生动物患上许多重要疾病。将这些昆虫与其宿主联系起来的进食相互作用网络,以及它们在地理上的变化和对人类土地利用的反应,目前记录较少,但与了解跨物种疾病传播有关。我们从文献中汇编了一个关于叮咬Diptera宿主相互作用的数据库,以研究关键的相互作用网络指标是如何随纬度和人类土地使用而变化的。交互作用均匀度和H2’(网络特异性程度的衡量标准)没有随纬度的变化而显著。与近自然栖息地相比,农业栖息地的相互作用均匀度明显较低,那里的网络由相对较少的物种对主导,但没有证据表明人类及其驯养动物在网络中的存在导致网络结构的系统性变化。我们讨论了这些结果的流行病学相关性,以及对预测和缓解未来溢出事件的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Latitudinal and anthropogenic effects on the structuring of networks linking blood-feeding flies and their vertebrate hosts

Latitudinal and anthropogenic effects on the structuring of networks linking blood-feeding flies and their vertebrate hosts

Biting flies (Diptera) transmit pathogens that cause many important diseases in humans as well as domestic and wild animals. The networks of feeding interactions linking these insects to their hosts, and how they vary geographically and in response to human land-use, are currently poorly documented but are relevant to understanding cross-species disease transmission. We compiled a database of biting Diptera–host interactions from the literature to investigate how key interaction network metrics vary latitudinally and with human land-use. Interaction evenness and H2' (a measure of the degree of network specificity) did not vary significantly with latitude. Compared to near-natural habitats, interaction evenness was significantly lower in agricultural habitats, where networks were dominated by relatively few species pairs, but there was no evidence that the presence of humans and their domesticated animals within networks led to systematic shifts in network structure. We discuss the epidemiological relevance of these results and the implications for predicting and mitigating future spill-over events.

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来源期刊
Medical and Veterinary Entomology
Medical and Veterinary Entomology 农林科学-昆虫学
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
5.30%
发文量
65
审稿时长
12-24 weeks
期刊介绍: Medical and Veterinary Entomology is the leading periodical in its field. The Journal covers the biology and control of insects, ticks, mites and other arthropods of medical and veterinary importance. The main strengths of the Journal lie in the fields of: -epidemiology and transmission of vector-borne pathogens changes in vector distribution that have impact on the pathogen transmission- arthropod behaviour and ecology- novel, field evaluated, approaches to biological and chemical control methods- host arthropod interactions. Please note that we do not consider submissions in forensic entomology.
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