Literature DB >> 10484162

Lifetime changes in the nutritional characteristics of female tsetse Glossina pallidipes caught in odour-baited traps.

J W Hargrove1.   

Abstract

Female Glossina pallidipes Austen were captured in odour-baited traps at Rekomitjie Research Station, Zambezi Valley, Zimbabwe during February 1994; 2890 were dissected and assigned to their ovarian age category and day of pregnancy using the lengths of the oocytes and uterine content. For 1838 of these flies, the nutritional state of the mother and her uterine content were estimated separately. It was thereby possible to see how, during pregnancy, the females acquired fat and residual dry weight (RDW) and transfered them to the larva. Newly emerged flies contained 1 mg fat and 6 mg RDW, of which 4 mg was in the thorax (TRDW). Fat hardly increased by the first ovulation; RDW increased by 2.5 mg and 1.5 mg of this increase was in TRDW. Mean haematin levels increased from 2 to 8 microg during each pregnancy. Fat increased from 1.2 mg to 4.5-5 mg by day 7 and was then rapidly transferred to the larva. RDW increased by only 1.8 mg by day 7, but larval RDW increased thereafter by > 6 mg. Amino acids from late-pregnancy bloodmeals are incorporated directly, in the uterine gland, into 'milk' that is taken up rapidly by the larva. Capture probability was highest on day 1 of pregnancy, when nutritional levels were lowest, with lesser peaks on days 5 and 8 when the fly was nourishing a rapidly developing larva. On day 1, the peak of the logarithm of the haematin distribution corresponded to flies estimated to have fed approximately 75 h previously; by day 8 it had shifted to approximately 60 h post-feeding. A model in which feeding rates and capture probabilities increased exponentially with time since feeding accounted for 97% of the variance in log haematin frequencies. On 4/9 days of pregnancy there was no significant decline in fat with haematin content during the lipolytic phase. The rate of decline is not a satisfactory estimate of the rate of fat usage. Flies in this study had longer wings and higher TRDW than those from refuges in an earlier study, but had lower levels of fat and haematin.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10484162     DOI: 10.1046/j.1365-2915.1999.00153.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Vet Entomol        ISSN: 0269-283X            Impact factor:   2.739


  8 in total

1.  Mortality estimates from ovarian age distributions of the tsetse fly Glossina pallidipes Austen sampled in Zimbabwe suggest the need for new analytical approaches.

Authors:  J W Hargrove; S F Ackley
Journal:  Bull Entomol Res       Date:  2015-03-25       Impact factor: 1.750

2.  Modeling the control of trypanosomiasis using trypanocides or insecticide-treated livestock.

Authors:  John W Hargrove; Rachid Ouifki; Damian Kajunguri; Glyn A Vale; Stephen J Torr
Journal:  PLoS Negl Trop Dis       Date:  2012-05-15

3.  Stoichiometric estimates of the biochemical conversion efficiencies in tsetse metabolism.

Authors:  Adrian V Custer
Journal:  BMC Ecol       Date:  2005-08-05       Impact factor: 2.964

4.  Artificial warthog burrows used to sample adult and immature tsetse (Glossina spp) in the Zambezi Valley of Zimbabwe.

Authors:  John W Hargrove; M Odwell Muzari
Journal:  PLoS Negl Trop Dis       Date:  2015-03-18

5.  How maternal investment varies with environmental factors and the age and physiological state of wild tsetse Glossina pallidipes and Glossina morsitans morsitans.

Authors:  John W Hargrove; M Odwell Muzari; Sinead English
Journal:  R Soc Open Sci       Date:  2018-02-14       Impact factor: 2.963

6.  Where, when and why do tsetse contact humans? Answers from studies in a national park of Zimbabwe.

Authors:  Stephen J Torr; Andrew Chamisa; T N Clement Mangwiro; Glyn A Vale
Journal:  PLoS Negl Trop Dis       Date:  2012-08-28

7.  Impact of habitat fragmentation on tsetse populations and trypanosomosis risk in Eastern Zambia.

Authors:  Cornelius Mweempwa; Tanguy Marcotty; Claudia De Pus; Barend Louis Penzhorn; Ahmadou Hamady Dicko; Jérémy Bouyer; Reginald De Deken
Journal:  Parasit Vectors       Date:  2015-08-04       Impact factor: 3.876

8.  Effects of Human Settlements and Spatial Distribution of Wing Vein Length, Wing Fray Categories and Hunger Stages in Glossina morsitans morsitans (Diptera: Glossinidae) and Glossina pallidipes (Diptera: Glossinidae) in Areas Devoid of Cattle in North-Eastern Zambia.

Authors:  Kalinga Chilongo; Tawanda Manyangadze; Samson Mukaratirwa
Journal:  J Med Entomol       Date:  2021-03-12       Impact factor: 2.278

  8 in total

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