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She’s a femme fatale: low-density larval development produces good disease vectors

机译:她是蛇蝎美人:低密度的幼虫发育产生良好的疾病载体

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Two hypotheses for how conditions for larval mosquitoes affect vectorial capacity make opposite predictions about the relationship of adult size and frequency of infection with vector-borne pathogens. Competition among larvae produces small adult females. The competition-susceptibility hypothesis postulates that small females are more susceptible to infection and predicts frequency of infection should decrease with size. The competition-longevity hypothesis postulates that small females have lower longevity and lower probability of becoming competent to transmit the pathogen and thus predicts frequency of infection should increase with size. We tested these hypotheses for Aedes aegypti in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, during a dengue outbreak. In the laboratory, longevity increases with size, then decreases at the largest sizes. For field-collected females, generalised linear mixed model comparisons showed that a model with a linear increase of frequency of dengue with size produced the best Akaike’s information criterion with a correction for small sample sizes (AICc). Consensus prediction of three competing models indicated that frequency of infection increases monotonically with female size, consistent with the competition-longevity hypothesis. Site frequency of infection was not significantly related to site mean size of females. Thus, our data indicate that uncrowded, low competition conditions for larvae produce the females that are most likely to be important vectors of dengue. More generally, ecological conditions, particularly crowding and intraspecific competition among larvae, are likely to affect vector-borne pathogen transmission in nature, in this case via effects on longevity of resulting adults. Heterogeneity among individual vectors in likelihood of infection is a generally important outcome of ecological conditions impacting vectors as larvae.
机译:关于成虫幼虫状况如何影响媒介能力的两个假说,对成虫传播媒介的病原体与成年大小和感染频率之间关系的预测相反。幼虫之间的竞争产生了成年雌性。竞争敏感性假说假设小母鸡更容易感染,并预测感染的频率应随大小而减少。竞争寿命假设假设小雌性的寿命较低,并且有能力传播病原体的可能性较低,因此预测感染的频率应随大小而增加。在登革热爆发期间,我们在巴西里约热内卢的埃及伊蚊中验证了这些假设。在实验室中,寿命随着尺寸的增加而增加,然后在最大尺寸时降低。对于野外采集的雌性动物,广义线性混合模型比较表明,登革热频率随大小线性增加的模型产生了最佳的Akaike信息准则,并且对小样本量(AICc)进行了校正。三种竞争模型的共识预测表明,感染频率随雌性大小单调增加,这与竞争寿命假设相符。感染部位的频率与女性的部位平均大小没有显着相关。因此,我们的数据表明,幼虫在不拥挤的低竞争条件下产生的雌性最有可能是登革热的重要媒介。更一般而言,生态条件,特别是幼虫之间的拥挤和种内竞争,很可能会影响自然界中媒介传播的病原体传播,在这种情况下,是通过影响最终成年成年人的寿命来实现的。个体载体之间在感染可能性上的异质性通常是影响载体作为幼虫的生态条件的重要结果。

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