4.2 Article

Effects of woody plant encroachment by eastern redcedar on mosquito communities in Oklahoma

Journal

JOURNAL OF VECTOR ECOLOGY
Volume 47, Issue 2, Pages 179-187

Publisher

SOC VECTOR ECOLOGY

Keywords

Woody plant encroachment; Culex tarsalis; Aedes albopictus; West Nile virus

Categories

Funding

  1. CDC
  2. Oklahoma State Department of Health
  3. NIFA/USDA Hatch Grant funds through the Oklahoma Agricultural Experiment Station [OKL-03085, OKL-03036]
  4. Oklahoma State University Tick Rearing Facility (Oklahoma Agricultural Experiment Station) [OKL-0272, OKL-0336]

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Woody plant encroachment into grasslands may affect mosquito-borne disease transmission. The study found that the encroachment of eastern redcedar increased the abundance of at least one medically important mosquito species, but did not show a significant association with West Nile virus infection.
Woody plant encroachment into grasslands is occurring worldwide, affecting ecosystems in ways that likely influence mosquito-borne disease transmission. In the U.S. Great Plains, encroachment by eastern redcedar (Juniperus virginiana) (ERC) may be expanding conducive habitat for mosquitoes and their hosts, but few studies have evaluated associations between ERC encroachment and West Nile virus (WNV). To test the hypotheses that mosquito abundance and WNV-infected mosquitoes increase with increasing ERC cover, we collected mosquitoes in 32 sites in Oklahoma reflecting various ERC encroachment stages. We found support for our first hypothesis, as mean abundance of Aedes albopictus increased significantly with ERC cover. However, Psorophora columbiae and Anopheles quadrimaculatus abundance decreased with increasing ERC. There was no significant association with ERC for other mosquito species. We could not test our second hypothesis due to low WNV prevalence, but the only detected WNV-infected pool of mosquitoes (Cx. tarsalis) was collected in ERC. Our results suggest ERC encroachment increases abundance of at least one medically important mosquito species, but further research is needed to clarify how encroachment affects ecology of the entire WNV disease system through changes to vector and host communities, vector-host interactions, and thus disease transmission and prevalence. Understanding relationships between woody plant encroachment and the nidus of infection for mosquito-borne diseases will be crucial for targeting public health efforts, including land management activities that limit and/or eradicate woody plant encroachment, particularly in areas with high levels of disease risk. Journal of Vector Ecology 47 (2): 179-187. 2022.

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