Literature detail

Culex nigripalpus: seasonal shift in the bird-mammal feeding ratio in a mosquito vector of human encephalitis.

J D Edman D J Taylor
PMID 5659128 1968 Science eng ppublish
PubMed DOI Browse context

Article

Publication summary

Blood-engorged Culex nigripalpus (Theob.) collected throughout the year in two Florida localities were serologically tested to determine the host range of this mosquito in nature. A proportional increase in feeding on mammals occurred in early summer, reached a maximum between July and October, and was followed by a shift back to avian hosts which dominated the feeding pattern during winter and spring. This finding strengthens the hypothesis that a biphasic pattern of feeding is a basic characteristic of an enzootic vector that, in epidemic years, also serves as the primary vector of avian arbovirus to man.

Birds Culex Encephalitis Viruses Encephalitis, St. Louis Insect Vectors Mammals Seasons Zoonoses Animals Florida Humans

Structured evidence records

Evidence records

1 total
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.80
Key finding

Culex nigripalpus mosquitoes in Florida exhibited a seasonal shift in feeding from birds to mammals during summer, indicating ecological dynamics relevant to the maintenance and spillover of encephalitis viruses.

Virus
Not specified
Location
Supporting text

Blood-engorged Culex nigripalpus (Theob.) collected throughout the year in two Florida localities were serologically tested to determine the host range of this mosquito in nature. A proportional increase in feeding on mammals occurred in early summer, reached a maximum between July and October, and was followed by a shift back to avian hosts which dominated the feeding pattern during winter and spring.

Method
serological testing; field sampling
Sample type
blood meals
Geographic raw
Florida
Country inferred
United States