3,530 research outputs found
Population monitoring of Aedes albopictus to assess of the effectiveness of insecticide-based control strategies and the risk of arbovirus transmission
New adhesive traps to monitor urban mosquitoes with a case study to assess the efficacy of insecticide control strategies in temperate areas
Background: Urban mosquitoes in temperate regions may represent a high nuisance and are associated with the risk of arbovirus transmission. Common practices to reduce this burden, at least in Italian highly infested urban areas, imply calendar-based larvicide treatments of street catch basins – which represent the main non-removable urban breeding site and/or insecticide ground spraying. The planning of these interventions, as well as the evaluation of their effectiveness, rarely benefit of adequate monitoring of the mosquito abundance and dynamics. We propose the use of adhesive traps to monitor Aedes albopictus and Culex pipiens adults and to evaluate the efficacy of insecticide-based control strategies.
Methods: We designed two novel types of adhesive traps to collect adult mosquitoes visiting and/or emerging from catch basins. The Mosquito Emerging Trap (MET) was exploited to assess the efficacy of larvicide treatments. The Catch Basin Trap (CBT) was exploited together with the Sticky Trap (ST, commonly used to collect ovipositing/resting females) to monitor adults abundance in the campus of the University of Rome “Sapienza” - where catch basins were treated with Insect Growth Regulators (IGR) bi-monthly and Low-Volume insecticide spraying were carried out before sunset - and in a nearby control area.
Results: Results obtained by MET showed that, although all monitored diflubenzuron-treated catch basins were repeatedly visited by Ae. albopictus and Cx. pipiens, adult emergence was inhibited in most basins. Results obtained by ST and CBT showed a significant lower adult abundance in the treated area than in the untreated one after the second adulticide spraying, which was carried out during the major phase of Ae. albopictus population expansion in Rome. Spatial heterogeneities in the effect of the treatments were also revealed.
Conclusions: The results support the potential of the three adhesive traps tested in passively monitoring urban mosquito adult abundance and seasonal dynamics and in assessing the efficacy of control measures. ST showed
higher specificity for Ae. albopictus and CBT for Cx. pipiens. The results also provide a preliminary indication on the effectiveness of common mosquito control strategies carried out against urban mosquito in European urban areas
From eggs to bites: do ovitrap data provide reliable estimates of Aedes albopictus biting females?
Background. Aedes albopictus is an aggressive invasive mosquito species that represents
a serious health concern not only in tropical areas, but also in temperate regions due
to its role as vector of arboviruses. Estimates of mosquito biting rates are essential to
account for vector-human contact in models aimed to predict the risk of arbovirus
autochthonous transmission and outbreaks, as well as nuisance thresholds useful for
correct planning of mosquito control interventions. Methods targeting daytime and
outdoor biting Ae. albopictus females (e.g., Human Landing Collection, HLC) are
expensive and difficult to implement in large scale schemes. Instead, egg-collections
by ovitraps are the most widely used routine approach for large-scale monitoring of
the species. The aim of this work was to assess whether ovitrap data can be exploited
to estimate numbers of adult biting Ae. albopictus females and whether the resulting
relationship could be used to build risk models helpful for decision-makers in charge
of planning of mosquito-control activities in infested areas.
Method. Ovitrap collections and HLCs were carried out in hot-spots of Ae. albopictus
abundance in Rome (Italy) along a whole reproductive season. The relationship between
the two sets of data was assessed by generalized least square analysis, taking into account
meteorological parameters.
Result. The mean number of mosquito females/person collected by HLC in 150
(i.e.,
females/HLC) and the mean number of eggs/day were 18.9 ± 0.7 and 39.0 ± 2.0,
respectively. The regression models found a significant positive relationship between
the two sets of data and estimated an increase of one biting female/person every five
additional eggs found in ovitraps. Both observed and fitted values indicated presence of
adults in the absence of eggs in ovitraps. Notably, wide confidence intervals of estimates
of biting females based on eggs were observed. The patterns of exotic arbovirus outbreak
probability obtained by introducing these estimates in risk models were similar to those
based on females/HLC (R0 > 1 in 86% and 40% of sampling dates for Chikungunya and
Zika, respectively; R0 < 1 along the entire season for Dengue). Moreover, the model
predicted that in this case-study scenario an R0 > 1 for Chikungunya is also to be
expected when few/no eggs/day are collected by ovitraps.
Discussion. This work provides the first evidence of the possibility to predict mean
number of adult biting Ae. albopictus females based on mean number of eggs and to
compute the threshold of eggs/ovitrap associated to epidemiological risk of arbovirus
transmission in the study area. Overall, however, the large confidence intervals in the
model predictions represent a caveat regarding the reliability of monitoring schemes
based exclusively on ovitrap collections to estimate numbers of biting females and plan
control interventions
The influence of push-off timing in a robotic ankle-foot prosthesis on the energetics and mechanics of walking
Background: Robotic ankle-foot prostheses that provide net positive push-off work can reduce the metabolic rate of walking for individuals with amputation, but benefits might be sensitive to push-off timing. Simple walking models suggest that preemptive push-off reduces center-of-mass work, possibly reducing metabolic rate. Studies with bilateral exoskeletons have found that push-off beginning before leading leg contact minimizes metabolic rate, but timing was not varied independently from push-off work, and the effects of push-off timing on biomechanics were not measured. Most lower-limb amputations are unilateral, which could also affect optimal timing. The goal of this study was to vary the timing of positive prosthesis push-off work in isolation and measure the effects on energetics, mechanics and muscle activity.
Methods: We tested 10 able-bodied participants walking on a treadmill at 1.25 m.s(-1). Participants wore a tethered ankle-foot prosthesis emulator on one leg using a rigid boot adapter. We programmed the prosthesis to apply torque bursts that began between 46% and 56% of stride in different conditions. We iteratively adjusted torque magnitude to maintain constant net positive push-off work.
Results: When push-off began at or after leading leg contact, metabolic rate was about 10% lower than in a condition with Spring-like prosthesis behavior. When push-off began before leading leg contact, metabolic rate was not different from the Spring-like condition. Early push-off led to increased prosthesis-side vastus medialis and biceps femoris activity during push-off and increased variability in step length and prosthesis loading during push-off. Prosthesis push-off timing had no influence on intact-side leg center-of-mass collision work.
Conclusions: Prosthesis push-off timing, isolated from push-off work, strongly affected metabolic rate, with optimal timing at or after intact-side heel contact. Increased thigh muscle activation and increased human variability appear to have caused the lack of reduction in metabolic rate when push-off was provided too early. Optimal timing with respect to opposite heel contact was not different from normal walking, but the trends in metabolic rate and center-of-mass mechanics were not consistent with simple model predictions. Optimal push-off timing should also be characterized for individuals with amputation, since meaningful benefits might be realized with improved timing
Nuclear DNA contents, rDNAs and karyotype evolution in subgenus Vicia. III. The heterogeneous section Hypechusa
Nuclear DNA contents, automated karyotype analyses, and
sequences of internal transcribed spacers from ribosomal genes have been
determined in the species belonging to section Hypechusa of the subgenus
Vicia. Karyomorphological results and phylogenetic data generated
from the comparison of rDNA (genes coding for rRNA) sequences
showed that sect. Hypechusa is not monophyletic; however, some monophyletic
units are apparent (one including Vicia galeata, V. hyrcanica,
V. noeana, and V. tigridis, another including V. assyriaca, V. hybrida,
V. melanops, V. mollis, and V. sericocarpa), which partly correspond to
morphology-based infrasectional groups. The relationships among these
species and the species in sections Faba, Narbonensis, Bithynicae, and
Peregrinae have been also investigated.L'articolo è disponibile sul sito dell'editore: http://www.springerlink.co
Transmission dynamics of the ongoing chikungunya outbreak in Central Italy. From coastal areas to the metropolitan city of Rome, summer 2017
A large chikungunya outbreak is ongoing in Italy, with a main cluster in the Anzio coastal municipality. With preliminary epidemiological data, and a transmission model using mosquito abundance and biting rates, we estimated the basic reproduction number R0 at 2.07 (95% credible interval: 1.47–2.59) and the first case importation between 21 May and 18 June 2017. Outbreak risk was higher in coastal/rural sites than urban ones. Novel transmission foci could occur up to mid-November
Whole exome sequencing in an Italian family with isolated maxillary canine agenesis and canine eruption anomalies
Objective: The aim of this study was the clinical and molecular characterization of a family segregating a trait consisting of a phenotype specifically involving the maxillary canines, including agenesis, impaction and ectopic eruption, characterized by incomplete penetrance and variable expressivity. Design: Clinical standardized assessment of 14 family members and a whole-exome sequencing (WES) of three affected subjects were performed. WES data analyses (sequence alignment, variant calling, annotation and prioritization) were carried out using an in-house implemented pipeline. Variant filtering retained coding and splice-site high quality private and rare variants. Variant prioritization was performed taking into account both the disruptive impact and the biological relevance of individual variants and genes. Sanger sequencing was performed to validate the variants of interest and to carry out segregation analysis. Results: Prioritization of variants “by function” allowed the identification of multiple variants contributing to the trait, including two concomitant heterozygous variants in EDARADD (c.308C>T, p.Ser103Phe) and COL5A1 (c.1588G>A, p.Gly530Ser), specifically associated with a more severe phenotype (i.e. canine agenesis). Differently, heterozygous variants in genes encoding proteins with a role in the WNT pathway were shared by subjects showing a phenotype of impacted/ectopic erupted canines. Conclusions: This study characterized the genetic contribution underlying a complex trait consisting of isolated canine anomalies in a medium-sized family, highlighting the role of WNT and EDA cell signaling pathways in tooth development
Momento Económico (31)
En este número Temas de hoy. 2/ El crac de las bolsas y el sistema capitalista mundial, Orlando Caputo. 3/ Apertura externa: ¿Un proyecto viable? Patricia Olave C.. 7/ Novedades en las negociadones contractuales: La revisión del contrato colectivo de trabajo de Pemex, Fabio Barbosa Cano, 9/ Pemex: ¿Los precios mas bajos del mundo? lssac Palacios Solano. 12/ Comentario del momento. El "destape": discrepancia y pirotecnia de la CTM. Roberto Borja. 16
Enhancement of Aedes albopictus collections by ovitrap and sticky adult trap
Abstract
Background: In the last decades, Aedes albopictus has become an increasing public health threat in tropical as
well as in more recently invaded temperate areas due to its capacity to transmit several human arboviruses, among
which Dengue, Chikungunya and Zika. Enhancing the efficiency of currently used collection approaches, such as
ovitraps and sticky traps, is desirable for optimal monitoring of the species abundance, for assessment of the risk
of arbovirus transmission and for the optimisation of control activities.
Findings: Two sets of 4 × 4 Latin-square experiments were carried out in Tirana (Albania) to test whether modifications
in ovitrap shape and size and in oviposition substrate would increase collections of Ae. albopictus eggs and whether
hay-infusion would increase adult catches by sticky trap. Generalized Linear Mixed Models with negative binomial error
distribution were carried out to analyse the data. Cylindrical ovitraps lined with germination paper yielded significantly
higher egg catches than those exploiting either the (commonly used) wooden paddles or floating polystyrene blocks
as oviposition substrates. No difference was observed between cylindrical and conical shaped ovitraps. Ovitraps
and sticky traps baited with hay infusion yielded significantly higher egg and adult catches than un-baited
ones. A significant relationship between ovitrap and sticky trap catches was observed both in the absence and
in the presence of attractants, with ovitrap catches increasing more than sticky trap catches at increasing adult
female densities.
Conclusions: This study provides grounds for optimisation of ovitraps and sticky traps as monitoring tools for
Ae. albopictus by (i) supporting use of germination paper as most appropriate oviposition substrate; (ii) suggesting the
possible use of stackable conical ovitraps for large scale monitoring; (iii) confirming the use of hay-infusion to increase
egg catches in ovitraps, and showing that hay-infusion also significant increases adult catches by sticky traps
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