A statistical evaluation of the population dynamics of R. neivai is based on six cohorts experiments conducted under controlled laboratory conditions. Two blood sources were offered to animals: rabbit and hen. Egg hatching, nymphal development time and mortality, adult longevity and age-specific mortality, female age-specific fecundity and fertility were determined. In addition, some population parameters were evaluated, such as: life expectancy, intrinsic rate of natural increase, net reproduction rate, finite rate of increase, reproductive value and stable age distribution. Life cycle was longer in the animals fed on rabbit, nymphal survival was slightly higher in the individuals fed on hen. Age of first reproduction was lower in the insects fed on hen, but reproductive output and total number of reproductive weeks were greater in the cohorts fed on rabbit. Intrinsic and finite rate of increase were greater in the animals fed on hen. Generation time was slightly greater in the cohorts fed on rabbit. Net reproduction rate was similar on both blood sources, although it was slightly bigger in the individuals fed on rabbit. Reproductive value in the insects fed on rabbit was twice as much as the registered in the animals fed on hen.
Conditioning methodologies associated with the psychology of learning are suggested as a new strategy to investigate behavior of the assassin bug Rhodnius prolixus, which is the main vector of Chagas disease in Venezuela. Chagas disease is the fourth leading cause of death in Latin America, as it causes severe chronic illness and approximately 43,000 deaths per year. To illustrate this strategy, two preliminary experiments are reported. In the first, Pavlovian conditioning was examined by pairing an olfactory conditioned stimulus with a temperature unconditioned stimulus. A temperature of 42 degrees C elicits a complex behavioral sequence in R. prolixus consisting of proboscis extension and crawling. Over the course of 12 training trials, this behavioral sequence was not elicited by an olfactory conditioned stimulus. In the second experiment, a latent inhibition paradigm was used to pre-expose R. prolixus to an olfactory conditioned stimulus before pairing the odor with temperature. Over the course of training, an effect of pre-exposure was found. Suggestions for research are discussed and potential conditioned and unconditioned stimuli identified.
Two experiments are described investigating learning and orientation in the triatomine Rhodnius prolixus. In experiment 1, Pavlovian conditioning was investigated. The experiment differed from our previous work in that the intensity of the conditioned and unconditioned stimuli were reduced and the number of training trials increased. Once again, no evidence for Pavlovian conditioning was found. In experiment 2, an "orientation arena" was developed in which the orientation of R. prolixus to a human forearm was investigated when an area of the forearm was impregnated with the odor of ruda or almizcle compared to a forearm with no odor. The various paths of the animal from the bottom of the arena until ascending and piercing the forearm, located at the top of the arena, was scored using a grid system and videotaped. The results indicated that under the no odor condition R. prolixus predominately travels in a straight line from the bottom of the arena to the top where the forearm is located. In contrast, the most variable number of paths occurred with exposure to ruda. Exposure to almizcle elicited straight line paths but other paths were evident, although not as variable as that observed with ruda.
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