4.5 Article

Chromatic and Morphological Differentiation of Triatoma dimidiata (Hemiptera: Reduviidae) with Land Use Diversity in El Salvador

Journal

PATHOGENS
Volume 10, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/pathogens10060753

Keywords

American trypanosomiasis; Central America; eco health; kissing bug; neglected tropical diseases; phenotypic variation; vector ecology

Categories

Funding

  1. Core Fulbright U.S. Scholar Program

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This study evaluates how the physical characteristics of Triatoma dimidiata vary in relation to land use in El Salvador, finding that the color and morphology of T. dimidiata change directly with anthropogenic changes to natural and agricultural environments. The adaptable population of T. dimidiata is primed to respond to environmental change, suggesting that mitigation efforts for Chagas disease should consider the relationships between anthropogenic land use and T. dimidiata morphology to understand the impact on disease transmission patterns.
Chagas disease is caused by the parasite Trypanosoma cruzi, which is transmitted by insect-vectors in the taxonomic subfamily Triatominae and affects approximately 8,000,000 people world-wide. Current mitigation strategies for Chagas focus on insecticides, infrastructure improvements, and management of symptoms, which are largely unsustainable in underserved communities where the disease is widespread. Transmission patterns of vector-borne diseases are known to adaptively respond to habitat change; as such, the objective of our study was to evaluate how the physical characteristics of Triatoma dimidiata would vary in relation to land use in El Salvador. We hypothesized that the color and morphology of T. dimidiata would change with municipal levels of urban and natural green space, natural green space, and agricultural space, as well as municipal diversity, richness, and evenness of land use types. Our results characterize how T. dimidiata color and morphology vary directly with anthropogenic changes to natural and agricultural environments, which are reflective of a highly adaptable population primed to respond to environmental change. Mitigation studies of Chagas disease should exploit the relationships between anthropogenic land use and T. dimidiata morphology to evaluate how the transmission pattern of T. cruzi and Chagas disease symptomology are impacted.

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