Abstract

Green periurban residential areas in Mediterranean countries have flourished in the last decades and become foci for leishmaniasis. To remedy the absence of information on vector ecology in these environments, we examined phlebotomine sand fly distribution in 29 sites in Murcia City over a 3-year period, including the plots of 20 detached houses and nine non-urbanized sites nearby. We collected 5,066 specimens from five species using “sticky” interception and light attraction traps. The relative frequency of the main Leishmania infantum vector Phlebotomus perniciosus in these traps was 32% and 63%, respectively. Sand fly density was widely variable spatially and temporally and greatest in non-urbanized sites, particularly in caves and abandoned buildings close to domestic animal holdings. Phlebotomus perniciosus density in house plots was positively correlated with those in non-urbanized sites, greatest in larger properties with extensive vegetation and non-permanently lived, but not associated to dog presence or a history of canine leishmaniasis. Within house plots, sand fly density was highest in traps closest to walls. Furthermore, the study provides a guideline for insect density assessment and reporting and is envisioned as a building block towards the development of a pan-European database for robust investigation of environmental determinants of sand fly distribution.

Highlights

  • Phlebotomine sand flies (Diptera: Psychodidae) are endemic in tropical and subtropical latitudes as well as the Mediterranean subregion, where they are vectors of life-threatening Leishmania spp. (Kinetoplastida: Trypanosomatidae) and arboviruses (Phlebovirus, Vesiculovirus, and Orbivirus) (Akhoundi et al 2016)

  • Among the twelve sand fly species described in Spain (Gil Collado et al 1989; Martínez Ortega et al 1992), Phlebotomus perniciosus and Phlebotomus ariasi are vectors of L. infantum, and the former is the predominant species in southeast Spain (Risueño et al 2017)

  • The first objective of the present study is to provide an insight into the spatial distribution of P. perniciosus and other sand fly species in periurban residential properties located in the outskirts of Murcia City

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Summary

Introduction

Phlebotomine sand flies (Diptera: Psychodidae) are endemic in tropical and subtropical latitudes as well as the Mediterranean subregion, where they are vectors of life-threatening Leishmania spp. (Kinetoplastida: Trypanosomatidae) and arboviruses (Phlebovirus, Vesiculovirus, and Orbivirus) (Akhoundi et al 2016). Sand flies are considered to have low specificity for Phleboviruses (Ayhan and Charrel 2017), and six viral isolates were detected in P. perniciosus in a human leishmaniasis outbreak in a residential area in the outskirts of Madrid (Arce et al 2013; Remoli et al 2016). This unprecedented outbreak highlights the potential risks of leishmaniasis associated with environmental changes in the natural environment of sand fly vectors. The precise locations are not well characterized, and to the best of our knowledge, there are no studies describing vector density and its relationship with environmental variables from these periurban settings

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