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The molting process and body growth in Rhodnius prolixus (Hemiptera: Reduviidae) (Ståhl, 1859) are significantly influenced by the availability and quality of food. Based on the body weight of each stage, the present study provides estimates of a potential critical weight threshold required for molt initiation in R. prolixus. In addition, a new measure given by the area under the weight curve is proposed, which encapsulates both body weight and time. It is shown that this measure is consistent with the data, and allows the estimation of a pre‐refractory period (i.e. the time interval between the moment at which the critical weight threshold is reached and the moment when no further meals are accepted). The present analysis estimates the critical weight threshold as 1.6, 5.3, 12.9, 42.0 and 97.0 mg for stages 1–5, respectively, whereas the values of the area under the curve threshold as 5, 16, 31.2, 159.7 and 329.9 mg days for stages 1–5, respectively. The results of the present study confirm the existence of a weight‐dependent mechanism for the initiation of molting in R. prolixus.  相似文献   
2.
Le comportement entomophage de Panstrongylus geniculatus (Latreille 1811), vecteur de la maladie de Chagas, est observé pour la première fois dans la nature, sur un Lépidoptère (Eacles sp., Lepidoptera: Saturniidae) au cours d’une chasse à la lumière dans une forêt de Guyane française.  相似文献   
3.
Pilocarpine is often applied or injected into ticks to induce salivation, and the resulting saliva used to test for various pharmacological, biochemical and immunological activities. To measure the amount of pilocarpine in pilocarpine-induced tick saliva, an HPLC-MS/MS method, based on capillary strong cation exchange chromatography online with an ion trap mass spectrometer, was used to measure pilocarpine in the pg to ng range. Results indicate large concentrations of pilocarpine in Ixodes scapularis Say and Amblyomma americanum (Linnaeus) (Acari: Ixodidae) saliva, ranging from 3 to 50 mm. Due to the known effects of pilocarpine on smooth muscle and immune cells, appropriate controls are proposed and discussed for proper interpretation of results using this saliva preparation.  相似文献   
4.
Female sandflies, Phlebotomus papatasi (Scopoli) (Diptera: Psychodidae), were fed via chicken membrane on heparinized blood from eight species of mammal (human, horse, cow, pig, dog, rabbit, guinea-pig, hamster) and their reproductive success rates were compared. No appreciable differences between those fed on human and animal blood were detected with respect to the proportion of flies that fed successfully, mortality-rate within 24h, number of eggs laid per blood-fed female or egg viability. When mass-rearing sandflies for research purposes, membrane-feeding avoids practical difficulties encountered if sandflies are allowed to feed on live hosts (i.e. anaesthesia, distress from handling and postfeeding inflammation) and reduction of sandfly fecundity due to host antibody interference. Use of animal blood also eliminates risks of accidental transmission of human blood-borne pathogens, e.g. hepatitis B and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), and is less expensive than maintenance of animals and their preparation for sandfly feeding.  相似文献   
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In two formerly malarious parts of Italy, age-related seroprevalence rates of Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus [human herpesvirus 8 (KSHV/HHV8)] were determined from local blood donors and correlated with periods of vector control during anti-malaria campaigns. In Veneto, decreased KSHV/HHV8 seroprevalence in the 1951-1955 birth cohort coincides with the peak of DDT house-spraying. In Sardinia, where larviciding augmented indoor DDT-spraying, a significant drop of KSHV/HHV8 seroprevalence between 1945 and 1950 and 1951-1955 birth cohorts (P = 0.0046) coincides with suppression of the malaria vector Anopheles labranchiae Falleroni (Diptera: Culicidae). These results are consistent with age-related association between KSHV/HHV8 seroprevalence rates in native/resident populations and the density of malaria vectors in Veneto and Sardinia. This example supports our 'promoter arthropod' hypothesis on the role of haematophagous insects [putatively blackflies (Simuliidae), sandflies (Phlebotominae) and biting midges (Ceratopogonidae), as well as mosquitoes] when their bites induce hypersensitivity and immunosuppression, potentiate KSHV/HHV8 transmission via human saliva (when insect bite lesions are licked by another person whose saliva carries the virus) and may facilitate Kaposi's sarcoma.  相似文献   
7.
Mosquitoes (Diptera: Culicidae) face their hosts' haemostatic mechanisms when attempting to feed on blood. Accordingly, they antagonize haemostasis by salivary agents that include anti-clotting, anti-platelet and vasodilatory compounds. Because haemostasis is a complex and redundant physiological response that varies between vertebrates, it is to be expected that haematophagous animals have a salivary armoury that most efficiently counteracts their preferred hosts. The mosquito Culex quinquefasciatus Say, which has a strong tendency to ornithophagy, appears to have only recently adapted to mammals and may not have evolved efficient mechanisms to counteract mammalian platelet responses, while birds only have relatively inefficient thrombocytes. Accordingly, we compared the probing behaviour of Cx. quinquefasciatus with two other mosquito species from different backgrounds: Aedes aegypti (L.) and Anopheles albimanus Weidemann, that have apparently had a longer evolutionary association with mammals. Culex takes much more time to find blood on a mammalian host (human or mouse) when compared to the two other mosquito species, but does not differ in probing behaviour when feeding on a chicken. Salivary anti-haemostatic components were also measured in those three species of mosquito and results are discussed in context with the probing behaviour.  相似文献   
8.
The distribution and morphology of antennal sensilla coeloconica in parasitic and predaceous biting midges were studied in females of Forcipomyia (feeding on the blood of frogs), Atrichopogon (feeding on haemolymph), Austroconops, Culicoides (feeding on the blood of birds and mammals) and Brachypogon (feeding on haemolymph and dissolved tissues of insects) (all: Diptera: Ceratopogonidae). A Lower Cretaceous female of Archiculicoides (Diptera: Ceratopogonidae) from Lebanese amber, which fed on the blood of unknown vertebrates, was also examined. In sensilla coeloconica ringed by microtrichia, the peg is grooved longitudinally and protrudes distinctly from the pit. We suggest that the microtrichia encircling the protruding peg form a structure resembling a picket fence in order to maintain a higher level of humidity, which facilitates the capture and transport of odour molecules through the channels in the peg wall. Sensilla coeloconica ringed by microtrichia function as very effective chemoreceptors in host‐ and prey‐seeking activity. During the evolution of Ceratopogonidae, sensilla coeloconica with a fence of microtrichia have evolved twice in groups feeding on the blood of vertebrates (i.e. in the basal lineage: Lower Cretaceous or earlier) and in the subgenus Lasiohelea of Forcipomyia (Palaeogene). Sensilla coeloconica ringed by microtrichia are described for the first time in the relict genus Austroconops.  相似文献   
9.
Anopheles gambiae sensu stricto Giles (Diptera: Culicidae) is the main malaria vector in sub‐Saharan Africa. Mated females show a circadian rhythm of spontaneous activity under constant environmental conditions that extends across the scotophase (subjective night). The effect of host‐associated cues [i.e. human foot odour supplemented with carbon dioxide (CO2)] on this nocturnal activity pattern is studied in laboratory‐reared A. gambiae s.s. M molecular form. Sixteen mated females (5–10 days old) are held in individual chambers (diameter 3.5 cm, length 4.5 cm) in a wind‐tunnel with a continuous flow (8.0 cm s?1) of clean air. At the onset of hours 3, 6 and 10 of the scotophase, their behaviour is recorded on video for 15 min in clean moving air and then for the next 15 min, with a specific treatment present in the clean airstream: (i) constant CO2 (4.8%) plus human odour; (ii) pulsed CO2 (5 s of every 30 s) plus human odour or (iii) control (clean air). Activities of individual mosquitoes are scored by direct observation of the video records for the incidents of ‘resting’, ‘walking’, ‘jumping’ and ‘flying’ in each of the 15‐min observation periods. There is a significant interaction between hour and treatment on mean changes in female activity level (P = 0.00004). Constant treatment increases the level of activity of A. gambiae females significantly, although only in hour 3 of the scotophase (P < 0.01), whereas pulsed and control treatments show no significant effect throughout the scotophase. Patterns of spontaneous activity in individual A. gambiae females thus appear to be modulated by host‐associated cues, resulting in a more active phase early in the night than might be expected from records of spontaneous activity under constant environmental conditions. Possible ecological and experimental implications of such an increase in activity are discussed in relation to host‐seeking behaviour.  相似文献   
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