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Transmission dynamics of an iridescent virus in an experimental mosquito population: the role of host density

Marina Fernández, Carlos Félix [autor] | Fernández Salas, Ildefonso [autor] | Ibarra, Jorge E [autor] | Arredondo Jiménez, Juan Ignacio [autor] | Valle Mora, Javier Francisco [autor] | Williams, Trevor [autor].
Tipo de material: Artículo
 en línea Artículo en línea Tipo de contenido: Texto Tipo de medio: Computadora Tipo de portador: Recurso en líneaTema(s): Iridovirus | Culicidae | Patógenos de insectos | Infección | Aedes aegyptiTema(s) en inglés: Iridoviruses | Culicidae | Pathogenic insects | Infection | Aedes aegyptyDescriptor(es) geográficos: Tapachula (Chiapas, México) Nota de acceso: Disponible para usuarios de ECOSUR con su clave de acceso En: Ecological Entomology. Volumen 30, número 4 (August 2005), páginas 376-382. --ISSN: 0307-6946Número de sistema: 47308Resumen:
Inglés

1. The transmission of insect pathogens cannot be adequately described by direct linear functions of host and pathogen density due to heterogeneity generated from behavioural or physiological traits, or from the spatial distribution of pathogen particles. Invertebrate iridescent viruses (IIVs) can cause patent and lethal infection or a covert sub-lethal infection in insects. Aedes aegypti larvae were exposed to suspensions of IIV type 6 at two densities. High larval density increased the prevalence of aggression resulting in potentially fatal wounding. 2. The overall prevalence of infection (patent + covert) was positively influenced by host density and increased with exposure time in both densities. The survival time of patently infected insects was extended by ≈ 5 days compared with non-infected insects. 3. Maximum likelihood models based on the binomial distribution were fitted to empirical results. A model incorporating heterogeneity in host susceptibility by inclusion of a pathogen-free refuge was a significantly better fit to data than an all-susceptible model, indicating that transmission is non-linear. The transmission coefficient (υ) did not differ with host density whereas the faction of the population that occupied the pathogen-free refuge (ΠR) was significantly reduced at high host density compared with the low density treatment. 4. The transmission of free-living infective stages of an IIV in Ae. aegypti larvae is non-linear, probably because of density-related changes in the frequency of aggressive encounters between hosts. This alters host susceptibility to infection and effectively reduces the proportion of hosts that occupy the pathogen-free refuge.

Recurso en línea: https://doi.org/10.1111/j.0307-6946.2005.00711.x
Lista(s) en las que aparece este ítem: Williams Trevor
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Disponible para usuarios de ECOSUR con su clave de acceso

1. The transmission of insect pathogens cannot be adequately described by direct linear functions of host and pathogen density due to heterogeneity generated from behavioural or physiological traits, or from the spatial distribution of pathogen particles. Invertebrate iridescent viruses (IIVs) can cause patent and lethal infection or a covert sub-lethal infection in insects. Aedes aegypti larvae were exposed to suspensions of IIV type 6 at two densities. High larval density increased the prevalence of aggression resulting in potentially fatal wounding. 2. The overall prevalence of infection (patent + covert) was positively influenced by host density and increased with exposure time in both densities. The survival time of patently infected insects was extended by ≈ 5 days compared with non-infected insects. 3. Maximum likelihood models based on the binomial distribution were fitted to empirical results. A model incorporating heterogeneity in host susceptibility by inclusion of a pathogen-free refuge was a significantly better fit to data than an all-susceptible model, indicating that transmission is non-linear. The transmission coefficient (υ) did not differ with host density whereas the faction of the population that occupied the pathogen-free refuge (ΠR) was significantly reduced at high host density compared with the low density treatment. 4. The transmission of free-living infective stages of an IIV in Ae. aegypti larvae is non-linear, probably because of density-related changes in the frequency of aggressive encounters between hosts. This alters host susceptibility to infection and effectively reduces the proportion of hosts that occupy the pathogen-free refuge. eng

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