| Literature DB >> 32533171 |
Paul L Duque1,2,3, Jazzmín Arrivillaga-Henríquez1,4, Sandra Enríquez1, Lenin Ron-Garrido1,5, Washington Benítez1,5, Juan-Carlos Navarro2.
Abstract
This research represents the first attempt to assess the spatial and temporal distribution based on micro-meso scales on two species with different host preference habits (anthropophilic vs zoophilic), in the major Leishmaniasis endemic area in Ecuador, tourist locations, and Biosphere reserve. Phlebotomine species, Lutzomyia trapidoi (Fairchild) and Lutzomyia reburra (Fairchild and Hertig), were analyzed by trap/habitat/month/locality/altitude, through the Poisson generalized regression model. Our data reveal a bimodal pattern for both species related with low precipitations and preference for forest habitat. Altitude, proximity to the forest, and the river were the variables that determine the hypervolume of the spatial distribution of relative abundance, where the overlap of these two species increases the risk of translocation and circulation of the etiological agent of leishmaniasis in sylvatic environments to rural-tourist-biosphere reserve areas and vice versa. The ecological characteristics of these two phlebotomines could explain the permanence of the major active and endemic focus of cutaneous leishmaniasis in the North-Western Ecuador a key aspect in tourism health-security in alternative tourism.Entities:
Keywords: ecology; landscape variables; leishmaniasis disease; phlebotomine distribution; tourism
Year: 2020 PMID: 32533171 DOI: 10.1093/jme/tjaa102
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Entomol ISSN: 0022-2585 Impact factor: 2.278