In the summer of 2005, the Asian tiger mosquito, Aedes albopictus (Skuse) (Diptera: Culicidae) was found for the first time in the Netherlands. It was collected on the premises of several horticultural companies that import the ornamental plant Dracaena sanderiana (Sparagalus: Dracaenaceae [Agavaceae]), known as Lucky bamboo, from southern China, an area endemic for this mosquito species and for arboviruses transmitted by this vector. Here we report the results of a 1-year survey of the distribution and vector status of Ae. albopictus in Lucky bamboo nurseries in the Netherlands (July 2006-June 2007). As it had been established previously that the presence of this species was linked to the import of Lucky bamboo, the survey was conducted only on sites owned by relevant import companies. In total, 569 adult Ae. albopictus were collected with mosquito traps from 15 of the 17 (88%) glasshouses used by Lucky bamboo importers, none of which were found to be infected with dengue virus. On two occasions there was evidence that Ae. albopictus had escaped from the glasshouses, but, overall, there was no evidence that a population had become established in the greenhouses or elsewhere.
During the northern Europe epidemic of bluetongue (BT), Onderstepoort-type blacklight traps were used to capture Culicoides Latreille (Diptera: Ceratopogonidae) biting midges weekly between November 2006 and December 2008 on 21 livestock farms in the Netherlands. Proven and potential vectors for the bluetongue virus (BTV) comprised almost 80% of the midges collected: the Obsoletus complex, constituting C. obsoletus (Meigen) and C. scoticus Downes & Kettle (44.2%), C. dewulfi Goetghebuer (16.4%), C. chiopterus (Meigen) (16.3%) and C. pulicaris (Linnaeus) (0.1%). Half of the 24 commonest species of Culicoides captured completed only one (univoltine) or two (bivoltine) generations annually, whereas multivoltine species (including all BTV vectors) cycled through five to six generations (exceeding the one to four generations calculated in earlier decades). Whether this increment signals a change in the phenology of northern Europe Culicoides or simply is an adaptive response that manifests during warmer episodes, thus heightening periodically the incursive potential of midge-borne arboviruses, remains to be clarified. Culicoides duddingstoni Kettle & Lawson, C. grisescens Edwards, C. maritimus Kieffer, C. pallidicornis Kieffer and C. riethi Kieffer are new records for the biting midge fauna of the Netherlands. It is suggested that C. punctatus (Meigen) be added to the European list of vector Culicoides.
Abstract. Using a combination of different methods to investigate the suitability of a fragment of the cytochrome c oxidase I gene (COI), we succeeded in partially resolving phylogenetic relationships in Delphacidae from the level of species to subfamily. Spectral analysis applied to the relatively noisy COI data proved to be especially useful. It clearly showed when phylogenetic signals were not completely randomized and it was very helpful for identifying problem areas in the dataset. Relationships among the four sampled subfamilies were completely resolved. In contrast to the tree based on morphological characters, we found evidence that Asiraca and Ugyops are sister groups (supporting monophyly of Asiracinae) and that Stenocraninae are the sister group of Kelisiinae. Contradictory signals were observed within Delphacini, but there are characters that support a close relationship between Conomelus and Megamelus. Other than this, the COI data gave support for the monophyly of Kelisiinae, Delphacinae, Chloriona and Javesella. Although third codon positions may appear to be saturated within the`modern' Delphacidae (Delphacini), they still contain important phylogenetic signals at the deepest taxonomic level. The easiest explanation for this is the difference in amino acid usage between Asiracinae and non-Asiracinae. Overall, this fragment of the COI gene seems to be useful for a rather wide taxonomic range in Delphacidae, except maybe for resolving generic relationships in the large tribe Delphacini.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.