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Culicoides species community composition and infection status with parasites in an urban environment of east central Texas, USA

Despite their importance as vectors of zoonotic parasites that can impact human and animal health, Culicoides species distribution across different habitat types is largely unknown. Here we document the community composition of Culicoides found in an urban environment including developed and natural...

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Published in:Parasites & vectors 2019-01, Vol.12 (1), p.39-39, Article 39
Main Authors: Martin, Estelle, Chu, Elaine, Shults, Phillip, Golnar, Andrew, Swanson, Dustin A, Benn, Jamie, Kim, Dongmin, Schneider, Peter, Pena, Samantha, Culver, Cassie, Medeiros, Matthew C I, Hamer, Sarah A, Hamer, Gabriel L
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cited_by cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c566t-666e0da7d75818b656eeebc35d1dd01a73165c2f5fa194b98f7207994e35114c3
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creator Martin, Estelle
Chu, Elaine
Shults, Phillip
Golnar, Andrew
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Culver, Cassie
Medeiros, Matthew C I
Hamer, Sarah A
Hamer, Gabriel L
description Despite their importance as vectors of zoonotic parasites that can impact human and animal health, Culicoides species distribution across different habitat types is largely unknown. Here we document the community composition of Culicoides found in an urban environment including developed and natural sites in east central Texas, a region of high vector diversity due to subtropical climates, and report their infection status with haemoparasites. A total of 251 individual Culicoides were collected from May to June 2016 representing ten Culicoides species, dominated by C. neopulicaris followed by C. crepuscularis. We deposited 63 sequences to GenBank among which 25 were the first deposition representative for six Culicoides species: C. arboricola (n = 1); C. nanus (n = 4); C. debilipalpis (n = 2); C. haematopotus (n = 14); C. edeni (n = 3); and C. hinmani (n = 1). We also record for the first time the presence of C. edeni in Texas, a species previously known to occur in the Bahamas, Florida and South Carolina. The urban environments with natural area (sites 2 and 4) had higher species richness than sites more densely populated or in a parking lot (sites 1 and 3) although a rarefaction analysis suggested at least two of these sites were not sampled sufficiently to characterize species richness. We detected a single C. crepuscularis positive for Onchocercidae gen. sp. DNA and another individual of the same species positive for Haemoproteus sacharovi DNA, yielding a 2.08% prevalence (n = 251) for both parasites in this species. We extend the knowledge of the Culicoides spp. community in an urban environment of Texas, USA, and contribute to novel sequence data for these species. Additionally, the presence of parasite DNA (Onchocercidae gen. sp. and H. sacharovi) from C. crepuscularis suggests the potential for this species to be a vector of these parasites.
doi_str_mv 10.1186/s13071-018-3283-9
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ispartof Parasites & vectors, 2019-01, Vol.12 (1), p.39-39, Article 39
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subjects Analysis
Animal health
Avian hosts
Biting midges
Chlorotabanus crepuscularis
Climate
Communities
Community composition
Composition
Culicoides
Culicoides edeni
Deoxyribonucleic acid
DNA
Epidemiology
Haemosporida
Infection
Infections
Integrative taxonomy
Medical research
Novels
Nucleotide sequence
Onchocercidae
Parasites
Parking lots
Population density
Rarefaction
Reptiles & amphibians
Research parks
Risk factors
Species
Species richness
Taxonomy
Urban environments
Vector-parasite association
Vectors
Viruses
West Nile virus
Zoonoses
title Culicoides species community composition and infection status with parasites in an urban environment of east central Texas, USA
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