Shifting host choices of the vector of Chagas disease, Triatoma infestans, in relation to the availability of hosts in houses in north-west Argentina

1. Data froth a 4-year study on the blood meal sources of 1964 specimens of Triatoma infestans collected from human sleeping places in three rural villages of north-west Argentina were analysed using individual houses as the basic sampling unit. Logistic multiple regression analysis was used to test...

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Publicado: 1997
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Acceso en línea:https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_00218901_v34_n3_p699_Gurtler
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_00218901_v34_n3_p699_Gurtler
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spelling paper:paper_00218901_v34_n3_p699_Gurtler2023-06-08T14:42:40Z Shifting host choices of the vector of Chagas disease, Triatoma infestans, in relation to the availability of hosts in houses in north-west Argentina Feeding preferences Triatominae Trypanosoma cruzi Vector ecology Zooprophylaxis Canis familiaris Felis catus Gallus gallus Triatoma infestans Triatominae Trypanosoma Trypanosoma cruzi Canis familiaris Catus felis Gallus gallus Hemiptera Reduviidae Triatoma infestans blood feeding Chagas disease disease vector host availability host choice Argentina 1. Data froth a 4-year study on the blood meal sources of 1964 specimens of Triatoma infestans collected from human sleeping places in three rural villages of north-west Argentina were analysed using individual houses as the basic sampling unit. Logistic multiple regression analysis was used to test whether the proportion of domiciliary T. infestans that fed on humans, dogs, chickens or cats was related to the number of these hosts in the house and to vector density. 2. On average, flogs were 2.6 or 2.3 times more likely to be selected than humans, relative to availability, in summer 1992 (at 23 houses) or spring summer 1988 89 (at 11 houses), respectively, but 0.8 less likely to be selected than humans, relative to their availability, in winter 1988 (at 12 houses). In the hot season, chickens were 4.8 times more likely to be selected than humans, relative to their assumed availability. 3. From data collected during the hot season, the proportion of bugs that fed on humans, among all bugs with arty identified blood source (the human blood index, HBI), or on humans only (HBI ONLY), decreased significantly as both the number of dogs sharing human sleeping places (room-mate dogs) and the proportion of bugs that fed on chickens increased. The proportion of hugs that fed partly on dogs, or on dogs alone, increased significantly with increasing numbers of room-mate dogs and decreased significantly with an increasing proportion of bugs feeding on chickens. 4. From data collected during the winter, when fewer cases of feeding on chickens were detected and most people slept indoors, both HBI and HBI ONLY increased significantly with the number of humans and decreased with the number of room-mate dogs. 5. The effects of vector density on HBI or HBI ONLY were investigated by multiple logistic regression analysis. In summer 1992, after a backward elimination procedure, both HBI and HBI ONLY were significantly and negatively related to the density of domiciliary T. infestans per house, the number of room-mate dogs and the proportion of the bugs that fed on chickens. A marginally significant and negative relationship between HBI and the log-density of bugs was verified in two published datasets. 6. Analysis of 13 published host-feeding patterns of domiciliary T. infestans, and of another 27 datasets from 11 other triatomine species collected inside or around bedroom areas, showed that HBI was inversely and significantly related to the proportion of bugs that fed on chickens (in both groups of vector species) or on dogs (for T. infestans). 7. Our study is the first to show that: (i) the likelihood of feeding partly on humans, or on humans only, significantly decreased in the presence of dogs and chickens in bedroom areas: (ii) the HBI was also negatively related to the density of bugs per house after controlling for the effects of chickens and room-mate dogs; and (iii) the likelihood of feeding on dogs increased significantly with more room-mate dogs and decreased with an increasing proportion of bugs feeding on chickens. Some epidemiological consequences of these relationships lot transmission, control, zooprophylaxis and modelling are discussed. 1997 https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_00218901_v34_n3_p699_Gurtler http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_00218901_v34_n3_p699_Gurtler
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-134
collection Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA)
topic Feeding preferences
Triatominae
Trypanosoma cruzi
Vector ecology
Zooprophylaxis
Canis familiaris
Felis catus
Gallus gallus
Triatoma infestans
Triatominae
Trypanosoma
Trypanosoma cruzi
Canis familiaris
Catus felis
Gallus gallus
Hemiptera
Reduviidae
Triatoma infestans
blood feeding
Chagas disease
disease vector
host availability
host choice
Argentina
spellingShingle Feeding preferences
Triatominae
Trypanosoma cruzi
Vector ecology
Zooprophylaxis
Canis familiaris
Felis catus
Gallus gallus
Triatoma infestans
Triatominae
Trypanosoma
Trypanosoma cruzi
Canis familiaris
Catus felis
Gallus gallus
Hemiptera
Reduviidae
Triatoma infestans
blood feeding
Chagas disease
disease vector
host availability
host choice
Argentina
Shifting host choices of the vector of Chagas disease, Triatoma infestans, in relation to the availability of hosts in houses in north-west Argentina
topic_facet Feeding preferences
Triatominae
Trypanosoma cruzi
Vector ecology
Zooprophylaxis
Canis familiaris
Felis catus
Gallus gallus
Triatoma infestans
Triatominae
Trypanosoma
Trypanosoma cruzi
Canis familiaris
Catus felis
Gallus gallus
Hemiptera
Reduviidae
Triatoma infestans
blood feeding
Chagas disease
disease vector
host availability
host choice
Argentina
description 1. Data froth a 4-year study on the blood meal sources of 1964 specimens of Triatoma infestans collected from human sleeping places in three rural villages of north-west Argentina were analysed using individual houses as the basic sampling unit. Logistic multiple regression analysis was used to test whether the proportion of domiciliary T. infestans that fed on humans, dogs, chickens or cats was related to the number of these hosts in the house and to vector density. 2. On average, flogs were 2.6 or 2.3 times more likely to be selected than humans, relative to availability, in summer 1992 (at 23 houses) or spring summer 1988 89 (at 11 houses), respectively, but 0.8 less likely to be selected than humans, relative to their availability, in winter 1988 (at 12 houses). In the hot season, chickens were 4.8 times more likely to be selected than humans, relative to their assumed availability. 3. From data collected during the hot season, the proportion of bugs that fed on humans, among all bugs with arty identified blood source (the human blood index, HBI), or on humans only (HBI ONLY), decreased significantly as both the number of dogs sharing human sleeping places (room-mate dogs) and the proportion of bugs that fed on chickens increased. The proportion of hugs that fed partly on dogs, or on dogs alone, increased significantly with increasing numbers of room-mate dogs and decreased significantly with an increasing proportion of bugs feeding on chickens. 4. From data collected during the winter, when fewer cases of feeding on chickens were detected and most people slept indoors, both HBI and HBI ONLY increased significantly with the number of humans and decreased with the number of room-mate dogs. 5. The effects of vector density on HBI or HBI ONLY were investigated by multiple logistic regression analysis. In summer 1992, after a backward elimination procedure, both HBI and HBI ONLY were significantly and negatively related to the density of domiciliary T. infestans per house, the number of room-mate dogs and the proportion of the bugs that fed on chickens. A marginally significant and negative relationship between HBI and the log-density of bugs was verified in two published datasets. 6. Analysis of 13 published host-feeding patterns of domiciliary T. infestans, and of another 27 datasets from 11 other triatomine species collected inside or around bedroom areas, showed that HBI was inversely and significantly related to the proportion of bugs that fed on chickens (in both groups of vector species) or on dogs (for T. infestans). 7. Our study is the first to show that: (i) the likelihood of feeding partly on humans, or on humans only, significantly decreased in the presence of dogs and chickens in bedroom areas: (ii) the HBI was also negatively related to the density of bugs per house after controlling for the effects of chickens and room-mate dogs; and (iii) the likelihood of feeding on dogs increased significantly with more room-mate dogs and decreased with an increasing proportion of bugs feeding on chickens. Some epidemiological consequences of these relationships lot transmission, control, zooprophylaxis and modelling are discussed.
title Shifting host choices of the vector of Chagas disease, Triatoma infestans, in relation to the availability of hosts in houses in north-west Argentina
title_short Shifting host choices of the vector of Chagas disease, Triatoma infestans, in relation to the availability of hosts in houses in north-west Argentina
title_full Shifting host choices of the vector of Chagas disease, Triatoma infestans, in relation to the availability of hosts in houses in north-west Argentina
title_fullStr Shifting host choices of the vector of Chagas disease, Triatoma infestans, in relation to the availability of hosts in houses in north-west Argentina
title_full_unstemmed Shifting host choices of the vector of Chagas disease, Triatoma infestans, in relation to the availability of hosts in houses in north-west Argentina
title_sort shifting host choices of the vector of chagas disease, triatoma infestans, in relation to the availability of hosts in houses in north-west argentina
publishDate 1997
url https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_00218901_v34_n3_p699_Gurtler
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_00218901_v34_n3_p699_Gurtler
_version_ 1768545493233696768