Effect of temperature on life history parameters of adult Culicoides sonoremis (Diptera: Ceratopogonidae) in relation to geographic origin and vectorial capacity for bluetongue virus

Citation

Lysyk, T.J., Danyk, T. (2007). Effect of temperature on life history parameters of adult Culicoides sonoremis (Diptera: Ceratopogonidae) in relation to geographic origin and vectorial capacity for bluetongue virus, 44(5), 741-751. http://dx.doi.org/10.1603/0022-2585(2007)44[741:EOTOLH]2.0.CO;2

Abstract

The effect of temperature on survival, opposition, gonotrophic development, and a life history factor of vectorial capacity were examined in adult Culkoides sonorensis (Wirth & Jones) (Diptera: Ceratopogonidae) that originated from two geographic locations. Flies originating from the United States (Colorado) had slightly reduced survival after abloodmeal compared with wild flies collected in southern Alberta (AB), Canada Survival of AB flies declined in a curvilinear manner with temperature, whereas survival of U.S. flies showed a linear response to temperature. The survivorship curve of the AB flies more closely followed a Weibull distribution than an exponential, indicating survival was age-dependent. Survivorship of the U.S. flies followed an exponential distribution. Females from both sources laid similar numbers of eggs throughout their life. The first eggs were laid by females from both sources at 31.9 degree-day (DD)93. Dissections of blood-fed flies reared at various temperatures indicated that flies from both sources were 90% gravid at 32 DD . Relationships among temperature and life history components of vectorial capacity were similar among flies from the two sources and indicated that vectorial capacity would be ≈ 1.8-2.6-fold greater in a southern U.S. climate compared with southwestern Canada due solely to the effects of temperature on the life history of C. sonorensis. Using life history estimates derived from Weibull model had little effect on estimating vectorial capacity, whereas using estimates derived from the exponential model slightly overestimated vectorial capacity. 9.3

Publication date

2007-09-01