Abstract
BackgroundCulicoides biting midges are incriminated as biological vectors of a number of viruses, e.g. bluetongue virus. In order to define vector-free periods/areas and to assess the vectorial role of the various Culicoides species, a comprehensive knowledge on their spatio-temporal occurrence is required.MethodsBiting midges were monitored on farm sites with livestock in the defined climatic regions, including high altitudes, of Switzerland by overnight trapping at 12 locations once a week over three years using UV-light traps. Based on morphological features, they were separated into three groups (i.e. Obsoletus, Pulicaris, other Culicoides spp.), and identification to the species level was achieved by protein profiling using MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry.ResultsAround 550,000 biting midges in total were collected, revealing a dominance (82 to 99%) of the Obsoletus group species up to an altitude of 1,200 m and of the Pulicaris group species above 1,500 m (85% at the highest trapping site at 2,130 m). The maximum number of midges collected in a summer night (756 to 19,682) as well as the total number of midges caught over three years (from 6,933 to 149,439) varied highly among the sites, whereas the annual variation in total midge abundance at the locations was statistically insignificant. MALDI-TOF MS of 100 randomly selected individual biting midges per trapping site yielded high quality spectra for 1,187 of the 1,200 (98.9%) specimens of which 1,173 could be assigned to one of the 15 Culicoides species for which biomarker mass sets are available in the reference database.ConclusionsThere are no biting midge-free zones in all of the agriculturally utilized areas (including alpine summer pastures) of Switzerland. Annual variations of midge numbers at the sampled locations were low, indicating that monitoring of midges should preferably be done by investigating a large number of sites for one season instead of few locations for extended periods of time. High throughput species identification of midges by MALDI-TOF MS is feasible, and this technique adds to other recently developed methods for the identification of midges (PCRs in various formats, interactive identification keys), facilitating epidemiological and biological in-depth studies of these important insects.
Highlights
Culicoides biting midges are incriminated as biological vectors of a number of viruses, e.g. bluetongue virus
The unexpected and explosive outbreak of the bluetongue disease in Northern and Central Europe in 2006 triggered Europe-wide activities to monitor the biological vectors of the disease, biting midges of the genus Culicoides (Diptera, Ceratopogonidae), with the primary aim to define vector-free periods [1,2,3,4,5]
An Orthobunya virus has emerged in Europe (‘Schmallenberg virus’), causing fever, diarrhoea, malformed new-borns and abortion [12], and this virus is assumed to be transmitted by biting midges and/or mosquitoes in analogy to the known vectors of related viruses [13]
Summary
Culicoides biting midges are incriminated as biological vectors of a number of viruses, e.g. bluetongue virus. Biting midges of another Ceratopogonidae genus (Forcipomyia, subgenus Lasiohelea), have recently been incriminated as vectors of protozoan parasites of the genus Leishmania in Australia [14]. In addition to their emerging role as vectors, biting midges are a well-known nuisance pest in many parts of the world, and they can cause insect bite hypersensitivity (‘sweet itch’), in equids, but the species that cause the clinical symptoms under field conditions are not known [15]
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