4.2 Article

The Palearctic blackfly Simulium equinum (Diptera: Simuliidae) as a biting pest of captive nyala antelopes (Tragelaphus angasii)

Journal

ZOO BIOLOGY
Volume 42, Issue 1, Pages 150-156

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/zoo.21719

Keywords

barcoding; blood-feeding; lesions; phylogeny; Wilhelmia; zoo

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Blackflies are global nuisance pests and vectors of many pathogens. This study identified the species causing skin lesions on captive nyala antelopes in the Vienna Zoo as Simulium equinum, a medically and veterinary important blackfly species. Preliminary results urge for further analysis of blackfly breeding sites and clarification of the host spectrum to assess the importance of blackflies in the Zoo.
Blackflies (Diptera: Simuliidae) are cosmopolitan nuisance pests of great economic importance as well as vectors of many pathogens. After reports of massive blackfly biting of captive nyala antelopes in the Vienna Zoo, Austria, this study aimed to identify the species causing multiple skin lesions on the antelope hosts. The Palearctic species Simulium equinum, belonging to the medically and veterinary important Wilhelmia subgenus, was identified as the most likely causative agent. Barcoding and maximum likelihood analysis supported morphological species identification and highlighted the complex phylogeny of the subgenus Wilhelmia. Our study gives first evidence of the multi-host feeding blackfly S. equinum in the Vienna Zoo, thereby raising the question whether other hosts could also be bitten on a regular basis. The preliminary results urge for further analysis of blackfly breeding sites as well as the clarification of the host spectrum to assess the medical and veterinary importance of blackflies in the Zoo.

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