期刊
FRONTIERS IN ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
卷 11, 期 -, 页码 -出版社
FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fevo.2023.1212222
关键词
microbe; Staphylococcus; Stomoxys calcitrans; attraction; semiochemical; ammonia
类别
The human skin microbiome contributes to mosquito attraction, and we tested if bovine skin microbes affect the attraction of stable flies to bovine hosts. Microbes from a calf and adult cow were isolated and identified. Staphylococcus and bacterial heterogeners attracted flies in both lab and greenhouse experiments, and S. sciuri on agar induced more fly responses than sterile agar in the greenhouse.
The human skin microbiome reportedly contributes to the attraction of mosquitoes to human hosts. We tested the hypothesis that bovine skin microbes affect the attraction of blood-feeding stable flies, Stomoxys calcitrans, to their bovine hosts. Microbes were collected from a calf and adult cow, and subsequently isolated and identified by mass spectrometry and genetic sequencing. Separate groups of (i) four Staphylococcus congeners (S. chromogenes, S. sciuri, S. simulans, S. succinus) and (ii) three bacterial heterogeners (Glutamicibacter protophormiae, Corynebacterium stationis, Wautersiella sp.) grown on agar, each attracted flies in still-air olfactometers, as did each Staphylococcus congener singly. The four Staphylococcus microbes also attracted flies in room bioassays. In greenhouse bioassays with paired black barrels as visual (surrogate host) stimuli, the treatment barrel baited with S. sciuri on agar induced significantly more fly alighting responses than the control barrel with sterile agar. This treatment effect could not be demonstrated on a cattle farm, possibly because of chemically and visually complex surroundings. Ammonia emitted by Staphylococcus microbes attracted flies, and a synthetic blend of microbe odorants enhanced the attractiveness of ammonia. Optimal attraction of stable flies to bovine microbes likely requires the integration of multimodal host cues.
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