Diversity Patterns of Hematophagous Insects in Atlantic Forest Fragments and Human-Modified Areas of Southern Bahia, Brazil

There have been several important outbreaks of mosquito-borne diseases in the Neotropics in recent years, particularly in Brazil. Some taxa are also considered to be indicators of environmental health. Despite the importance of understanding insect abundance and distribution to the understanding of...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of vector ecology 2018-12, Vol.43 (2), p.293-304
Hauptverfasser: Catenacci, Lilian S, Nunes-Neto, Joaquim, Deem, Sharon L, Palmer, Jamie L, Rosa, Elizabeth S. Travassos-da, Tello, J. Sebastian
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container_end_page 304
container_issue 2
container_start_page 293
container_title Journal of vector ecology
container_volume 43
creator Catenacci, Lilian S
Nunes-Neto, Joaquim
Deem, Sharon L
Palmer, Jamie L
Rosa, Elizabeth S. Travassos-da
Tello, J. Sebastian
description There have been several important outbreaks of mosquito-borne diseases in the Neotropics in recent years, particularly in Brazil. Some taxa are also considered to be indicators of environmental health. Despite the importance of understanding insect abundance and distribution to the understanding of disease dynamics and design strategies to manage them, very little is known about their ecology in many tropical regions. We studied the abundance and diversity of mosquitoes and sand flies in the Bahia State of Brazil, a point of origin for arbovirus outbreaks, including Zika and Chikungunya fever. During 2009-2014, 51 mosquito taxa were identified, belonging to three dipteran families, Ceratopogonidae, Culicidae, and Psychodidae. The family Culicidae, including the Sabethini tribe, were the most abundant (81.5%) and most taxa-rich (n=45). While season (winter and summer) was a strong factor determinant of the occurrence of the most abundant taxa, the stratification level in the forest (ground or tree level) had a strong effect and the dominant taxa at ground level were completely different from the dominant species collected at tree level. We suggest that sites with a mix of forest and agroforestry systems support the highest biodiversity of hematophagous insects as compared to highly disturbed landscapes.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/jvec.12313
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subjects Abundance
Agroforestry
Animals
Aquatic insects
Arbovirus
Arthropoda
Arthropods
Biodiversity
Brazil
Culicidae
Demography
Dengue fever
Disease
Ecology
Environmental health
Forests
Infectious diseases
Insects
mosquito
Mosquitoes
Outbreaks
Pest outbreaks
Rarefaction
richness
Rural areas
Seasons
Species composition
Tropical diseases
Vector-borne diseases
West Nile virus
Wild animals
Wildlife conservation
Wildlife sanctuaries
Winter
Zika virus
title Diversity Patterns of Hematophagous Insects in Atlantic Forest Fragments and Human-Modified Areas of Southern Bahia, Brazil
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