| Literature DB >> 21870965 |
Rebecca Hood-Nowotny1, Margarete Watzka, Leo Mayr, Solomon Mekonnen, Berisha Kapitano, Andrew Parker.
Abstract
The sterile insect technique has been successfully used to eliminate tsetse populations in a number of programs. Program monitoring in the field relies on the ability to accurately differentiate released sterile insects from wild insects so that estimates can be made of the ratio of sterile males to wild males. Typically, released flies are marked with a dye, which is not always reliable. The difference in isotopic signatures between wild and factory-reared populations could be a reliable and intrinsic seEntities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21870965 PMCID: PMC3281438 DOI: 10.1673/031.011.7901
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Insect Sci ISSN: 1536-2442 Impact factor: 1.857
Mean isotopic values of the different blood fed to the tsetse flies. Values in parenthesis are one standard deviation of the mean value.
Figure 1. Average isotopic signature of oxygen and hydrogen in dried tsetse fly, Glossina pallidipes wings collected from the mass reared colony and from two locations in the wild, Sodo and Dilla, Ethiopia. Bars are plus and minus one standard deviation of the mean, n = 5. VSMOW is Vienna Standard Mean Ocean Water, an internationally recognized standard for 2H. High quality figures are available online
Figure 2. Average isotope values of tsetse flies, Glossina pallidipes collected from the mass rearing factory, Sodo, Dilla, or Nech Sar in Ethiopia. Error bars are two standard deviations of the mean. VPDB is Vienna Pee Dee Belemnite an internationally recognised standard for 13C. High quality figures are available online
Figure 3. Average isotope values of laboratory reared labelled G1 tsetse flies Glossina pallidipes (13C triangles, 15N filled circles) and control un-labelled flies (short bar) at various times after emergence, error bars plus and minus two standard deviations (n = 3–5). The solid line represents the mean isotopic value of the wild population and the dashed lines, plus and minus two standard deviations of that mean value. A and C are females; B and D are males. High quality figures are available online
Figure 4. Decline in 15N enrichment of tsetse flies, Glossina pallidipes. Line is modelled decline in the 15N value of females (y = 13.741 e(-0.3322x) + 29.3). Circles are observed male values; triangles observed female values. High quality figures are available online