Gisella Obholz1, Fernando Diez1,2, Germán San Blas1,2, Gustavo Rossi3. 1. Universidad Nacional de La Pampa, Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales, Santa Rosa, La Pampa, Argentina. 2. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas (CONICET), Buenos Aires, Argentina. 3. Centro de Estudios Parasitológicos y de Vectores, CCT La Plata, CONICET UNLP, La Plata, Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The genus Haemagogus Williston is restricted to Central America and North and middle of South America and it includes numerous species of yellow fever virus vectors. METHODS: Adult female and larvae mosquitoes were collected using hand aspirators and dipper and pipette, respectively. RESULTS: The first record of a species of Haemagogus and particularly of Haemagogus spegazzinii was from La Pampa, Argentina. With this registry, the number of species found in La Pampa province rises to 18. CONCLUSIONS: New information on breeding sites for the species and implications of this new record suggest a possible extension of distribution in the near future.
INTRODUCTION: The genus Haemagogus Williston is restricted to Central America and North and middle of South America and it includes numerous species of yellow fever virus vectors. METHODS: Adult female and larvae mosquitoes were collected using hand aspirators and dipper and pipette, respectively. RESULTS: The first record of a species of Haemagogus and particularly of Haemagogus spegazzinii was from La Pampa, Argentina. With this registry, the number of species found in La Pampa province rises to 18. CONCLUSIONS: New information on breeding sites for the species and implications of this new record suggest a possible extension of distribution in the near future.
The genus Haemagogus Williston, 1896 includes numerous species of yellow
fever virus vectors. Their immature stages are found mainly in tree holes, but they can
also be found in artificial containers; the adults generally inhabit savannas, forests,
and cultivated areas
. To conduct control programs, it is necessary to know the distribution of
mosquito species, mainly those with public health implications, which is essential to
determine areas of potential risk of transmission of diseases
. Haemagogus is restricted to North and middle of South America,
Central America, and the Caribbean islands (from Jamaica to Martinique) with a single
species recorded in the Nearctic, in Texas, USA. In South America, its distribution
includes north to central regions of the subcontinent, from Venezuela to the north of
Argentina, except for the Pacific coast of the Gulf of Guayaquil (Ecuador) and certain
elevations of the Andes
,
,
. There are some mosquito genera, such as Toxorhynchites,
Orthopodomyia, Haemagogus,
Limatus, Isostomyia, Onirion,
Sabethes, Trichoprosopon, Wyeomyia, and certain
subgenera of Anopheles, Aedes, and Culex, whose
species exclusively use phytotelmata as breeding sites. Among the
phytotelmata most used by mosquitoes are bamboo, tree holes, floral bracts such as woody
phytotelmata, and herbaceous phytotelmata such as Apiaceae, Araceae, and
Bromeliaceae
while several of the species also do so in artificial containers. Among the
species of Haemagogus, there is single record of phytotelmata on
Prosopis, Prosopis juliflora as the breeding site
of Haemagogus equinus
. In Argentina, 4 species are cited out of the 28 species described for the genus
Haemagogus: Hg. (Con.)
leococelaenus Dyar and Shannon, Hg.
(Hag.) capricornii Lutz, Hg.
(Hag.) janthinomys Dyar and Hg.
(Hag.) spegazzinii Brèthes
. These species are specialists, that is, they use phytotelmata as their only
breeding site, although only two species have been reported breeding in tree holes:
Hg. leucocelaenus in Misiones and Hg. spegazzinii
in Salta, Córdoba
, and Chaco
; in all cases, the host plants were not identified.Hg. spegazzinii extends in South America from eastern and southeastern
Brazil to Paraguay, northern Argentina, and eastern Bolivia and Ecuador, Venezuela
, and Colombia
. In Argentina, its distribution covers the provinces of Catamarca, Chaco,
Córdoba, Corrientes, Formosa, Jujuy, Salta, San Luis, Santa Fe, Santiago del Estero,
Tucumán, Mendoza, and Misiones
,
.La Pampa province is located in the central region of Argentina. This province has an
arid temperate weather with 300-850 mm of annual precipitation and annual temperatures
ranging between 14 and 16 °C
. One of the biogeographical provinces represented in the region is the Pampean
province situated in the north-eastern region
. Only 17 species of mosquitoes are cited, and none of them belong to
Haemagogus
. In the present study, new distributional records are provided, and
Prosopis caldenia is recorded as a new host plant to
Haemagogus spegazzinii breeding sites.One adult female mosquito was collected using hand-held aspirators on humans and was kept
in a labeled plastic pot with cotton, paper, and naphthalene. Three mosquito larvae were
collected by dipper and pipette, from a tree hole of Prosopis caldenia
Burkart (Figure 1). Mosquitoes in the immature
stages were kept in a labeled plastic bottle and brought to the laboratory for
identification and reared up to one male and two females (Figure 2). Material obtained was identified based on morphological keys
. The abbreviations of genus and subgenus follow the approach of Reinert
.
FIGURE 1:
Breeding site of Haemagogus spegazzinii in
Prosopis caldenia.
FIGURE 2:
Photo of female Haemagogus spegazzinii. Scale bar: 10
mm.
Material Examined: La Pampa, Eduardo Castex, 35° 50′ 24.82′′ S, 64° 31′ 50.23′′ W (Figure 3), Feb. 2016. One male, two females MLPDipC
4733 a and b, and 1 larva.
FIGURE 3:
Map of the georeferenced point where Haemagogus
spegazzinii was found.
Liria & Navarro
performed a study on the potential distribution of the species of
Haemagogus and concluded that La Pampa could be a province of
distribution of Hg. spegazzinii but with low occurrence probability.
Despite this species being collected in La Pampa, climate conditions in that year were
special with heavy rains registered between January and February 2016 (120 and 141.5 mm,
respectively). Furthermore, collections during following years were nil. We think this
could mean the population is not established in the region, but because we found larvae,
it means they were able to develop in this location. Despite the species not being
established in the province, a change in climate conditions could make it suitable for
its establishment in the future. This implication is of great medical importance for the
province and Argentina; it could mean a probable future extension of distribution of
this yellow fever vector in the country.Finally, in the present study, new distributional records are provided and
Prosopis caldenia is recorded as a new host plant to
Haemagogus spegazzinii breeding sites. This represents the first
record of a species of Haemagogus and particularly of Hg.
spegazzinii given that La Pampa, Argentina corresponds to the southernmost
locality for species of the genus. With this registry, the number of species found in La
Pampa province rises to 18.
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