Literature DB >> 27102015

Enhancement of Aedes albopictus collections by ovitrap and sticky adult trap.

Enkelejda Velo1, Perparim Kadriaj2, Kujtim Mersini3, Ada Shukullari4, Blerta Manxhari4, Artan Simaku2, Adrian Hoxha2, Beniamino Caputo5, Luca Bolzoni6, Roberto Rosà7, Silvia Bino2, Paul Reiter8, Alessandra della Torre5.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: In the last decades, Aedes albopictus has become an increasing public health threat in tropical as well as in more recently invaded temperate areas due to its capacity to transmit several human arboviruses, among which Dengue, Chikungunya and Zika. Enhancing the efficiency of currently used collection approaches, such as ovitraps and sticky traps, is desirable for optimal monitoring of the species abundance, for assessment of the risk of arbovirus transmission and for the optimisation of control activities.
FINDINGS: Two sets of 4 × 4 Latin-square experiments were carried out in Tirana (Albania) to test whether modifications in ovitrap shape and size and in oviposition substrate would increase collections of Ae. albopictus eggs and whether hay-infusion would increase adult catches by sticky trap. Generalized Linear Mixed Models with negative binomial error distribution were carried out to analyse the data. Cylindrical ovitraps lined with germination paper yielded significantly higher egg catches than those exploiting either the (commonly used) wooden paddles or floating polystyrene blocks as oviposition substrates. No difference was observed between cylindrical and conical shaped ovitraps. Ovitraps and sticky traps baited with hay infusion yielded significantly higher egg and adult catches than un-baited ones. A significant relationship between ovitrap and sticky trap catches was observed both in the absence and in the presence of attractants, with ovitrap catches increasing more than sticky trap catches at increasing adult female densities.
CONCLUSIONS: This study provides grounds for optimisation of ovitraps and sticky traps as monitoring tools for Ae. albopictus by (i) supporting use of germination paper as most appropriate oviposition substrate; (ii) suggesting the possible use of stackable conical ovitraps for large scale monitoring; (iii) confirming the use of hay-infusion to increase egg catches in ovitraps, and showing that hay-infusion also significant increases adult catches by sticky traps.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Aedes; Albania; Europe; Hay-infusion; Mosquito monitoring; Mosquito surveillance; Ovitrap; Sticky trap

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27102015      PMCID: PMC4839143          DOI: 10.1186/s13071-016-1501-x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Parasit Vectors        ISSN: 1756-3305            Impact factor:   3.876


Background

Aedes albopictus is the mosquito species which has been capable of the widest geographical expansion thus becoming a public health threat in tropical as well as in more recently invaded temperate areas due to its capacity to transmit several human arboviruses, among which Dengue, Chikungunya and Zika [1, 2]. Surveillance and monitoring of the species is thus an instrumental activity to be carried out to prevent infestation of new areas, to assess the risk of arbovirus transmission and to optimize control activities. Ovitrap is the simplest and most widely used monitoring device for Ae. albopictus, as well as of other container-breeding species such as Aedes aegypti, the major vector of yellow fever, dengue and Zika [3]. Ovitrap is a small black plastic vessel mimicking the preferred breeding site for the species, i.e., tree-holes, rock-holes and other small natural containers in its original habitat in south-east Asia, and small man-made containers in more recently colonized urban environments [4]. The vessel is partly filled with water and either contains a wood or masonite rough paddle standing in the water or has the internal walls lined with seed germination paper for females to lay eggs. Mosquito presence and abundance is indirectly estimated by counting eggs laid on the paddle or on the germination paper. Baiting ovitrap with hay-infusion has been shown to increase Ae. albopictus egg catches [5-11]. A more direct approach to monitor the same fraction of Ae. albopictus population monitored by ovitrap (i.e. oviposting females) is represented by sticky traps, which basically are ovitraps whose internal walls, or some internal additional structures, are lined with adhesive films to which the mosquitoes approaching the traps remained stuck [12, 13]. The aims of this study were to test under field conditions whether (i) some small modifications in shape and size and oviposition substrate could increase Ae. albopictus ovitrap-catches; (ii) hay-infusion could increase sticky trap catches, as already shown for ovitraps; and (iii) ovitrap and sticky traps baited with hay-infusion maintain the correlation shown to occur in the absence of the infusion [13].

Methods

Collection methods

Ovitraps (Ov) and Sticky traps (ST [13]) were used to collect Ae. albopictus eggs and adults, respectively. Two shapes of black plastic ovitrap were tested: Ov-A, a cylindrical vessel, 9 cm high, 11 cm in diameter with an overflow hole at 7 cm from the base, and Ov-B, a truncated cone (12 cm high; 6 cm lower diameter; 8 cm upper diameter; overflow hole at 9 cm from the base). Three types of oviposition substrates were provided to Ov-A: heavy-weight seed germination paper lining the internal walls (Ov-A1); a floating block of white polystyrene (5 × 5 × 2.5 cm; Ov-A2), and a wooden paddle (12.5 × 2.5 cm) with one rough side (Ov-A3 and Ov-B).

Experiment 1

Oviposition rates in Ov-A1, Ov-A2, Ov-A3 and Ov-B were compared in 4 × 4 Latin-square experiments carried for 20 weeks from June to October 2011 in nine suburban sites (located at > 500 m from each other) within a 2.25 ha area in Tirana in Albania, the first country in a Europe to be infested [14]. In each experimental site, the four ovitrap types were located in shaded sites at the corners of a 50 m-square area and rotated clockwise on a weekly basis, so that each trap was in the same position every four weeks. Egg counting was carried out under a stereomicroscope in the lab.

Experiment 2

The collection capacity of Ov-A1 and ST either baited or not with hay-infusion (60 g hay in 10 l of water fermented in open buckets at room temperature for one week) was assessed by Latin-square experiments carried out in July-August 2011 in 20 suburban sites in Tirana (located at > 500 m from the each other). In each site, the four traps (Ov-A1 and ST with clean water and Ov-A1 and ST with hay-infusion) were located in shaded positions at the corners of a 50 m-square area and rotated clockwise on a weekly basis for four weeks. Eggs were counted as in Experiment 1. Adults collected by sticky traps were counted and morphologically identified [15].

Statistical analysis

Generalized Linear Mixed Models (GLMM) with negative binomial error distribution were carried out to analyse the data. For Experiment 1, the model response variable were egg catches and the explanatory variable was ovitrap type. For Experiment 2, the model response variables were egg and adult female catches for Ov-A1 and ST, respectively, while the explanatory variable was presence/absence of hay-infusion (treatment). In both GLMMs julian day of collection and site were included as random crossed effects. Since likelihood ratio test (LRT) carried out to compare models either including or not the random effects showed that the role of crossed random effects was highly significant (P-value of LRT < 10−6), these were included in the best models for both experiments. Correlations between Ov-A1 and ST weekly catches and between averaged catches over the four week-long Experiment 2 were assessed by Kendall’s rank test. Moreover, after checking for the normality of error distribution (Shapiro-Wilkoxon normality tests, Ov-A1: W = 0.962, P = 0.201; ST: W = 0.988, P = 0.949), a standardized major axis regression (SMA) was used as in [13] to assess the relationship between means of log-transformed catches of Ov-A1 and ST in each site over the four weeks and to test whether this relationship was affected by hay-infusion. Specifically, SMA was preferred to a classical linear regression since sampling errors were expected to occur both for Ov-A1 and ST trap catches [16]. Analyses were carried out using R version 3.2.0, with “glmmADMB” and “smatr” packages.

Results and discussion

Overall, 104,143 Ae. albopictus eggs were collected in Experiment 1 and 19,541 eggs, 830 adult females and 71 males were collected in Experiment 2 (Table 1). No adult specimens belonging to other Aedes spp. were collected, confirming the exclusive presence of Ae. albopictus as a container-breeding mosquito in the area.
Table 1

Mean number ± standard deviation of Aedes albopictus eggs/ovitrap/day and adult females/sticky trap/day during the 4-week sampling carried out in Tirana (Albania) in 2011

WeekTotal
1234
No. of eggs per ovitrapH2O18.0 ± 32.251.4 ± 20.659.7 ± 66.928.7 ± 34.46,312
H2O + Hinf62.3 ± 74.372.0 ± 68.098.3 ± 98.3103.4 ± 107.213,209
No. of females per sticky trapH2O2.1 ± 2.22.1 ± 2.12.3 ± 2.32.8 ± 2.6368
H2O + Hinf2.4 ± 2.52.9 ± 3.63.5 ± 2.72.7 ± 2.4462

H2O: only water; H2O + Hinf water + hay-infusion

Mean number ± standard deviation of Aedes albopictus eggs/ovitrap/day and adult females/sticky trap/day during the 4-week sampling carried out in Tirana (Albania) in 2011 H2O: only water; H2O + Hinf water + hay-infusion Results of the GLMM analysis of the data from Experiment 1 showed that cylindrical ovitraps lined with germination paper yielded significantly higher egg catches than those exploiting as oviposition substrate either the (commonly used) paddles or a floating polystyrene block (Fig. 1, Table 2). Noteworthy, germination paper is already routinely used in the USA [17] and presents several practical advantages over the other oviposition substrates: (i) eggs are evenly distributed and easier to count; (ii) cleaning of the ovitrap internal wall is not required to avoid eggs sticking to these to hatch after the weekly substitution of either paddles or polystyrene blocks; and (iii) dry germination paper sheets can be labelled prior to use and can be easily folded and packed without risking to loose attached eggs during transportation. Results also showed no difference between cylindrical and conical shaped ovitraps (Table 2), which allows to propose the use of conical ovitraps particularly in large-scale monitoring schemes, when transportation of high numbers of traps is needed and the possibility to stack conical ovitraps can be highly convenient. However, it is important to highlight that higher evaporation in conical ovitraps could represent a problem under extreme heat conditions (which were not experienced in Tirana, where weekly mean temperature during the experiments never exceeded 27.3 °C).
Fig. 1

Aedes albopictus egg-catches in four ovitraps differing by shape and/or oviposition substrate. Ov-A1: cylindrical ovitrap lined with either heavyweight seed germination paper; Ov-A2: cylindrical ovitrap equipped with a floating white block of polystyrene; Ov-A3: cylindrical ovitrap equipped with a wooden paddle; Ov-B: conical ovitrap equipped with a wooden paddle. The boxes identify the first and third quartiles (the 25th and 75th percentiles). Horizontal black lines within the boxes represent the mean values. The upper whisker extends from the boxes to the highest value that is within 1.5*IQR (inter-quartile range: the distance between the first and third quartiles, so the height of the boxes). The lower whisker extends to the lowest value within 1.5*IQR. Points beyond the end of the whiskers are outliers

Table 2

Generalized Linear Mixed Model of Aedes albopictus egg catches by different types of ovitraps

VariableEstimateStandard Error Z-value P-value
Intercept4.6810.45910.19< 0.0001
Ov-A2-0.7130.145-4.93< 0.0001
Ov-A3-0.7910.145-5.45< 0.0001
Ov-B-0.6960.148-4.69< 0.0001

For each model coefficient estimates, their standard errors, Wald Z-statistic and associated P-values are reported. Ov-A1: cylindrical ovitrap lined with either heavyweight seed germination paper (taken as reference level); Ov-A2: cylindrical ovitrap equipped with a floating white block of polystyrene; Ov-A3: cylindrical ovitrap equipped with a wooden paddle; Ov-B: conical ovitrap equipped with a wooden paddle. Number of observations 725; number of weeks = 22

Aedes albopictus egg-catches in four ovitraps differing by shape and/or oviposition substrate. Ov-A1: cylindrical ovitrap lined with either heavyweight seed germination paper; Ov-A2: cylindrical ovitrap equipped with a floating white block of polystyrene; Ov-A3: cylindrical ovitrap equipped with a wooden paddle; Ov-B: conical ovitrap equipped with a wooden paddle. The boxes identify the first and third quartiles (the 25th and 75th percentiles). Horizontal black lines within the boxes represent the mean values. The upper whisker extends from the boxes to the highest value that is within 1.5*IQR (inter-quartile range: the distance between the first and third quartiles, so the height of the boxes). The lower whisker extends to the lowest value within 1.5*IQR. Points beyond the end of the whiskers are outliers Generalized Linear Mixed Model of Aedes albopictus egg catches by different types of ovitraps For each model coefficient estimates, their standard errors, Wald Z-statistic and associated P-values are reported. Ov-A1: cylindrical ovitrap lined with either heavyweight seed germination paper (taken as reference level); Ov-A2: cylindrical ovitrap equipped with a floating white block of polystyrene; Ov-A3: cylindrical ovitrap equipped with a wooden paddle; Ov-B: conical ovitrap equipped with a wooden paddle. Number of observations 725; number of weeks = 22 Results of the GLMM analysis of the data from Experiment 2 showed that ovitraps and STs baited with hay-infusion yielded significantly higher egg and adult female catches than un-baited ones (109 and 26 %, respectively; Fig. 2, Table 3). Although the attractive response of hay-infusion has been demonstrated since several years first for Ae. aegypti [18] and later for other mosquito species including Ae. albopictus [5-11], the present results show, to the best of our knowledge, for the first time that hay-infusion also increases adult female-catches by sticky traps in the field, an effect so far shown under laboratory conditions only [19].
Fig. 2

Aedes albopictus egg-catches in ovitraps (a) and female-catches in sticky traps (b) with or without of hay-infusion. H2O: water without hay-infusion; H2O + Hinf: water + hay-infusion. The boxes identify the first and third quartiles (the 25th and 75th percentiles). Horizontal black lines within the boxes represent the mean values. The upper whisker extends from the boxes to the highest value that is within 1.5*IQR (inter-quartile range: the distance between the first and third quartiles, so the height of the boxes). The lower whisker extends to the lowest value within 1.5*IQR. Points beyond the end of the whiskers are outliers

Table 3

GLMMs for numbers of Aedes albopictus eggs (response variable for ovitrap model) and adult females (response variable for sticky trap model) collected with or without hay-infusion

GLMMVariableEstimateStandard Error Z-value P-value
Ovitrap modelIntercept4.2620.22116.62< 0.0001
H2O-0.8630.151-5.72< 0.0001
Sticky trap modelIntercept0.9660.1396.96< 0.0001
H2O-0.2270.102-2.220.026

For each model coefficient estimates, their standard errors, Wald Z-statistic and associated P-values are reported. H2O + Hinf: water + hay-infusion (taken as reference level); H2O: water without hay-infusion. Number of observations = 320; number of weeks = 4

Aedes albopictus egg-catches in ovitraps (a) and female-catches in sticky traps (b) with or without of hay-infusion. H2O: water without hay-infusion; H2O + Hinf: water + hay-infusion. The boxes identify the first and third quartiles (the 25th and 75th percentiles). Horizontal black lines within the boxes represent the mean values. The upper whisker extends from the boxes to the highest value that is within 1.5*IQR (inter-quartile range: the distance between the first and third quartiles, so the height of the boxes). The lower whisker extends to the lowest value within 1.5*IQR. Points beyond the end of the whiskers are outliers GLMMs for numbers of Aedes albopictus eggs (response variable for ovitrap model) and adult females (response variable for sticky trap model) collected with or without hay-infusion For each model coefficient estimates, their standard errors, Wald Z-statistic and associated P-values are reported. H2O + Hinf: water + hay-infusion (taken as reference level); H2O: water without hay-infusion. Number of observations = 320; number of weeks = 4 A significant correlation between mean egg catches/Ov-A1 and adult female catches/ST was observed over the four week period (Kendall’s Tau = 0.364, P < 0.001), although no significant correlation was observed between weekly catches in Ov-A1 and ST (Kendall’s Tau = 0.065, P > 0.05), probably due to the high daily variability in trap catches. However, SMA regression revealed a positive relationship between ST and Ov-A1 means of log-transformed catches per site (regression slope on log-scale = 2.92, CI = 2.23–3.83, P < 0.001; Fig. 3). The SMA regression did not detect differences in regression slopes between traps with or without hay-infusion (P > 0.05), indicating that the significant relationship between ovitrap and ST catches already shown in the absence of attractants [13] is maintained also in the presence of hay-infusion. Moreover, the slope of the SMA regression was > 1, suggesting that, proportionally, Ov-A1 trap catches increase more (around twenty-fold) than ST trap catches at increasing adult female population densities.
Fig. 3

Standardized major axis regression based on means of log-transformed catches of Aedes albopictus eggs/ovitrap and females/sticky trap. Filled circles: catches by traps without hay-infusion. Open circles: catches by traps with hay-infusion

Standardized major axis regression based on means of log-transformed catches of Aedes albopictus eggs/ovitrap and females/sticky trap. Filled circles: catches by traps without hay-infusion. Open circles: catches by traps with hay-infusion Overall, our results provide grounds for optimisation of ovitraps and sticky traps as monitoring tools for Ae. albopictus, by (i) supporting the use of germination paper as most appropriate oviposition substrate; (ii) suggesting the possible use of stackable conical ovitraps; and (iii) confirming the use of hay-infusion to increase egg-catches in ovitraps, and showing that this attractiveness also significant increases adult catches by sticky traps.
  17 in total

Review 1.  A review of the invasive mosquitoes in Europe: ecology, public health risks, and control options.

Authors:  Jolyon M Medlock; Kayleigh M Hansford; Francis Schaffner; Veerle Versteirt; Guy Hendrickx; Herve Zeller; Wim Van Bortel
Journal:  Vector Borne Zoonotic Dis       Date:  2012-04-20       Impact factor: 2.133

2.  Evaluation of organic infusions and synthetic compounds mediating oviposition inAedes albopictus andAedes aegypti (Diptera: Culicidae).

Authors:  S A Allan; D L Kline
Journal:  J Chem Ecol       Date:  1995-11       Impact factor: 2.626

Review 3.  Public health significance of invasive mosquitoes in Europe.

Authors:  F Schaffner; J M Medlock; W Van Bortel
Journal:  Clin Microbiol Infect       Date:  2013-04-10       Impact factor: 8.067

4.  Oviposition responses of the mosquitoes Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus to experimental plant infusions in laboratory bioassays.

Authors:  Loganathan Ponnusamy; Ning Xu; Katalin Böröczky; Dawn M Wesson; Luma Abu Ayyash; Coby Schal; Charles S Apperson
Journal:  J Chem Ecol       Date:  2010-06-03       Impact factor: 2.626

5.  Aedes albopictus (Diptera: Culicidae) oviposition response to organic infusions from common flora of suburban Florida.

Authors:  P J Obenauer; S A Allan; P E Kaufman
Journal:  J Vector Ecol       Date:  2010-12       Impact factor: 1.671

6.  Infusion-baited ovitraps to survey ovipositional height preferences of container-inhabiting mosquitoes in two Florida habitats.

Authors:  P J Obenauer; P E Kaufman; S A Allan; D L Kline
Journal:  J Med Entomol       Date:  2009-11       Impact factor: 2.278

7.  Studies on the ovitraps baited with hay and leaf infusions for the surveillance of dengue vector, Aedes albopictus in northeastern India.

Authors:  R Gopalakrishnan; M Das; I Baruah; V Veer; P Dutta
Journal:  Trop Biomed       Date:  2012-12       Impact factor: 0.623

8.  Area-wide management of Aedes albopictus. Part 2: gauging the efficacy of traditional integrated pest control measures against urban container mosquitoes.

Authors:  Dina M Fonseca; Isik Unlu; Taryn Crepeau; Ary Farajollahi; Sean P Healy; Kristen Bartlett-Healy; Daniel Strickman; Randy Gaugler; George Hamilton; Daniel Kline; Gary G Clark
Journal:  Pest Manag Sci       Date:  2013-05-22       Impact factor: 4.845

9.  Field comparison of Bermuda-hay infusion to infusions of emergent aquatic vegetation for collecting female mosquitoes.

Authors:  Nathan D Burkett-Cadena; Gary R Mullen
Journal:  J Am Mosq Control Assoc       Date:  2007-06       Impact factor: 0.917

10.  Development of guidelines for the surveillance of invasive mosquitoes in Europe.

Authors:  Francis Schaffner; Romeo Bellini; Dušan Petrić; Ernst-Jan Scholte; Hervé Zeller; Laurence Marrama Rakotoarivony
Journal:  Parasit Vectors       Date:  2013-07-18       Impact factor: 3.876

View more
  10 in total

1.  From eggs to bites: do ovitrap data provide reliable estimates of Aedes albopictus biting females?

Authors:  Mattia Manica; Roberto Rosà; Alessandra Della Torre; Beniamino Caputo
Journal:  PeerJ       Date:  2017-03-16       Impact factor: 2.984

2.  Opportunities for applying whole-cell bioreporters towards parasite detection.

Authors:  Alexander J Webb; Richard Kelwick; Paul S Freemont
Journal:  Microb Biotechnol       Date:  2017-01-26       Impact factor: 5.813

3.  Forecasting the spatial and seasonal dynamic of Aedes albopictus oviposition activity in Albania and Balkan countries.

Authors:  Clément Tisseuil; Enkelejda Velo; Silvia Bino; Perparim Kadriaj; Kujtim Mersini; Ada Shukullari; Artan Simaku; Elton Rogozi; Beniamino Caputo; Els Ducheyne; Alessandra Della Torre; Paul Reiter; Marius Gilbert
Journal:  PLoS Negl Trop Dis       Date:  2018-02-12

Review 4.  Towards harmonisation of entomological surveillance in the Mediterranean area.

Authors:  Frédéric Jourdain; Abdallah M Samy; Afrim Hamidi; Ali Bouattour; Bülent Alten; Chafika Faraj; David Roiz; Dušan Petrić; Elisa Pérez-Ramírez; Enkeledja Velo; Filiz Günay; Golubinka Bosevska; Ibrahim Salem; Igor Pajovic; Jelena Marić; Khalil Kanani; Lusine Paronyan; Maria-Grazia Dente; Marie Picard; Marija Zgomba; M'hammed Sarih; Nabil Haddad; Oleksandr Gaidash; Roena Sukhiasvili; Silvia Declich; Taher Shaibi; Tatiana Sulesco; Zoubir Harrat; Vincent Robert
Journal:  PLoS Negl Trop Dis       Date:  2019-06-13

5.  Altitudinal variations in wing morphology of Aedes albopictus (Diptera, Culicidae) in Albania, the region where it was first recorded in Europe.

Authors:  Jorian Prudhomme; Enkelejda Velo; Silvia Bino; Perparim Kadriaj; Kujtim Mersini; Filiz Gunay; Bulent Alten
Journal:  Parasite       Date:  2019-09-06       Impact factor: 3.000

Review 6.  From tissue engineering to mosquitoes: biopolymers as tools for developing a novel biomimetic approach to pest management/vector control.

Authors:  Marco Friuli; Claudia Cafarchia; Riccardo Paolo Lia; Domenico Otranto; Marco Pombi; Christian Demitri
Journal:  Parasit Vectors       Date:  2022-03-05       Impact factor: 3.876

7.  A Novel Sampling Method to Measure Socioeconomic Drivers of Aedes Albopictus Distribution in Mecklenburg County, North Carolina.

Authors:  Ari Whiteman; Eric Delmelle; Tyler Rapp; Shi Chen; Gang Chen; Michael Dulin
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2018-10-05       Impact factor: 3.390

8.  IgG Antibody Responses to the Aedes albopictus 34k2 Salivary Protein as Novel Candidate Marker of Human Exposure to the Tiger Mosquito.

Authors:  Sara Buezo Montero; Paolo Gabrieli; Fabrizio Montarsi; Alessio Borean; Stefano Capelli; Giustina De Silvestro; Federico Forneris; Marco Pombi; Antonio Breda; Gioia Capelli; Bruno Arcà
Journal:  Front Cell Infect Microbiol       Date:  2020-07-29       Impact factor: 5.293

9.  The effectiveness of early start of Grade III response to dengue in Guangzhou, China: A population-based interrupted time-series study.

Authors:  Li Li; Wen-Hui Liu; Zhou-Bin Zhang; Yuan Liu; Xiao-Guang Chen; Lei Luo; Chun-Quan Ou
Journal:  PLoS Negl Trop Dis       Date:  2020-08-07

10.  Aedes albopictus (Diptera: Culicidae) Monitoring in the Lazio Region (Central Italy).

Authors:  Federico Romiti; Arianna Ermenegildi; Adele Magliano; Pasquale Rombolà; Donatella Varrenti; Roberto Giammattei; Silvia Gasbarra; Simona Ursino; Luca Casagni; Andrea Scriboni; Vincenzo Puro; Amilcare Ruta; Laura Brignola; Oriano Fantasia; Daniela Corpolongo; Giuseppe Di Luzio; Claudio De Liberato
Journal:  J Med Entomol       Date:  2021-03-12       Impact factor: 2.278

  10 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.