Hostname: page-component-7479d7b7d-q6k6v Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-11T06:24:59.207Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

On the vertical distribution of Phlebotomine sandflies (Dipt., Psychodidae) in British Honduras (Belize)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 July 2009

Paul Williams
Affiliation:
Dermal Leishmaniasis Research Unit, Central Farm, Baking Pot, Cayo District, British Honduras (Belize), Central America

Extract

Phlebotomine sandflies were collected simultaneously at ground level, 25 ft and 40 ft in an area of medium bush in British Honduras (Belize).

Flies were captured on human bait, with rat-baited oil-traps and with miniature light-traps, and some resting individuals were collected at each level. One species of Brumptomyia França and 18 of Lutzomyia França & Parrot were obtained. Brief notes on some of these species are given.

Miniature light-traps provided the widest range of species, were the most satisfactory means for collecting Brumptomyia, L. steatopyga (Fairchild & Hertig) and L. carpenteri (Fairchild & Hertig), and yielded new information on the flight activities of L. deleoni (Fairchild & Hertig) and L. panamensis (Shannon).

Most species collected were found to be predominantly arboreal in habit, L. permira (Fairchild & Hertig) and Lutzomyia sp. P being almost exclusively so. Some species (L. panamensis, possibly L. geniculata (Mangabeira) and L. bispinosa (Fairchild & Hertig)) live amongst the foliage but descend to the forest floor to seek blood-meals. A few species (L. steatopyga, L. deleoni and L. olmeca (Vargas & Díaz Nájera)) are active mainly near the ground, though the occasional specimen may be carried much higher.

L. olmeca is the principal vector of rodent leishmaniasis in British Honduras. In the present study, no evidence was obtained to incriminate any other species of Phlebotomine as an insect host for Leishmania mexicana, and the mode of transmission of the parasite to man remains obscure.

Type
Research Paper
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1970

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Díaz Nájera, A. (1963). Phlebotomus de México. Descripción de la hembra de Ph. (Brumptomyia) galindoi F. & H. 1947: datos de distributión geográfica (Diptera, Psychodidae).—Revta Inst. Salubr. Enferm. trop., (Méx) 23, 193199.Google Scholar
Disney, R. H. L. (1966). A trap for Phlebotomine sandflies attracted to rats.—Bull. ent. Res. 56, 445451.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Disney, R. H. L. (1968). Observations on a zoonosis: leishmaniasis in British Honduras.—J. appl. Ecol. 5, 159.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fairchild, G. B. & Hertig, M. (1951). Notes on the Phlebotomus of Panama (Diptera, Psychodidae). VII. The subgenus Shannonomyina Pratt.—Ann. ent. Soc. Am. 44, 399–21.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johnson, P. T. & Hertig, M. (1961). The rearing of Phlebotomus sandflies (Diptera: Psychodidae). II. Development and behavior of Panamanian sandflies in laboratory culture.—Ann. ent. Soc. Am. 54, 764776.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johnson, P. T., McConnell, E. & Hertig, M. (1963). Natural infections of leptomonad flagellates in Panamanian Phlebotomus sandflies.—Expl Parasit. 14, 107122.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lainson, R. & Shaw, J. J. (1968). Leishmaniasis in Brazil: I. Observations on enzootic rodent leishmaniasis—incrimination of Lutzomyia flaviscutellata (Mangabeira) as the vector in the lower Amazonian Basin.—Trans. R. Soc. trop. Med. Hyg. 62, 385395.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lainson, R. & Strangways-Dixon, J. (1963). Leishmania mexicana: the epidemiology of dermal leishmaniasis in British Honduras. I. The human disease.—Trans. R. Soc. trop. Med. Hyg. 57, 242265.Google Scholar
Lainson, R. & Strangways-Dixon, J. (1964). The epidemiology of dermal leishmaniasis in British Honduras: Part II. Reservoir-hosts of Leishmania mexicana among the forest rodents.—Trans. R. Soc. trop. Med. Hyg. 58, 136153.Google Scholar
Lewis, D. J. & Garnham, P. C. C. (1959). The species of Phlebotomus (Diptera: Psychodidae) in British Honduras. Proc. R. ent. Soc. Lond. (B) 28, 7989.Google Scholar
Lewis, D. J. & Hitchcock, J. C. jr (1968). Phlebotomine sandflies of Chad.—Ann. trop. Med. Parasit. 62, 117121.Google Scholar
McConnell, E. & Correa, M. (1964). Trypanosomes and other micro-organisms from Panamanian Phlebotomus sandflies.—J. Parasit. 50, 523528.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shaw, J. J. & Lainson, R. (1968). Leishmaniasis in Brazil: II. Observations on enzootic rodent leishmaniasis in the Lower Amazon Region—the feeding habits of the vector, Lutzomyia flaviscutellata in reference to man, rodents and other animals.—Trans. R. Soc. trop. Med. Hyg. 62, 396405.Google Scholar
Strangways-Dixon, J. & Lainson, R. (1966). The epidemiology of dermal leishmaniasis in British Honduras. Part III. The transmission of Leishmania mexicana to man by Phlebotomus pessoanus with observations on the development of the parasite in different species of Phlebotomus.—Trans. R. Soc. trop. Med. Hyg. 60, 192201.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sudia, W. D. & Chamberlain, R. W. (1962). Battery-operated light traps, an improved model.—Mosquito News 22, 126129.Google Scholar
Theodor, O. (1965). On the classification of American Phlebotominae.—J. med Ent. 2, 171197.Google Scholar
Williams, P. (1965). Observations on the Phlebotomine sandflies of British Honduras.—Ann. trop. Med. Parasit. 59, 393404.Google Scholar
Williams, P., Lewis, D. J. & Garnham, P. C. C. (1965). On dermal leishmaniasis in British Honduras.—Trans. R. Soc. trop. Med. Hyg. 59, 6471.Google Scholar