An unrecognized species of the Culicoides obsoletus complex feeding on livestock in the Netherlands

•We found a new species of the Culicoides obsoletus complex with dark wing pattern.•CO1 sequences of our so-called ‘dark obsoletus’ support its status as a separate species.•Several European researchers have found ‘mystery species’ related to Culicoides obsoletus.•A Swedish CO1 series in GenBank sha...

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Veröffentlicht in:Veterinary parasitology 2015-01, Vol.207 (3-4), p.324-328
Hauptverfasser: Meiswinkel, R., De Bree, F., Bossers-De Vries, R., Elbers, A.R.W.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•We found a new species of the Culicoides obsoletus complex with dark wing pattern.•CO1 sequences of our so-called ‘dark obsoletus’ support its status as a separate species.•Several European researchers have found ‘mystery species’ related to Culicoides obsoletus.•A Swedish CO1 series in GenBank share 99% identity with our sequences.•Presence in Europe of undescribed Culicoides obsoletus species means taxonomy is not fully resolved.•This is undesirable because Culicoides-borne viruses spread north into temperate latitudes. In studies on Culicoides attacking livestock in the Netherlands, we chanced upon a species of the Obsoletus complex that we do not recognize, but whose dark wing pattern is distinctive. Nine cytochrome c oxidase (CO1) sequences of our so-called ‘dark obsoletus’ support its status as a separate species, the sequences differing significantly from those representing Culicoides obsoletus (Meigen) (90–91% homology) and Culicoides scoticus Downes & Kettle (87–88% homology). In the last decade, several research groups in Europe have encountered ‘mystery species’ related to C. obsoletus and in some instances have made their sequences for various genetic loci available in GenBank. These include a CO1 series submitted from Sweden in 2012 (annotated as ‘obsoletus 01, 02, or 03 MA-2012′) and of which some share a 99% identity with our sequences for ‘dark obsoletus’. Without doubt, the series from the Netherlands, along with a portion of the Swedish submissions, together represent a single species (‘dark obsoletus’). Whether this species is referable to the Russian Culicoides gornostaevae Mirzaeva recorded recently from Norway, Sweden and Poland, and based solely upon the external morphology of the male, is not clear. The presence in Western Europe of multiple undescribed species related to C. obsoletus means that the taxonomy of this important vector complex is not fully resolved; consequently, we know little about these cryptic species with regard to seasonality, geographic range and host preference. This is undesirable given that Culicoides-borne arboviruses causing disease in livestock are moving more regularly out of the tropics and spreading north into temperate latitudes.
ISSN:0304-4017
1873-2550
DOI:10.1016/j.vetpar.2014.12.032