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Multiple Trypanosoma infections are common amongst Glossina species in the new farming areas of Rufiji district, Tanzania

BACKGROUND: Tsetse flies and trypanosomiasis are among several factors that constrain livestock development in Tanzania. Over the years Rufiji District was excluded from livestock production owing to tsetse fly infestation, however, a few years ago there was an influx of livestock following eviction...

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Autores principales: Malele, Imna I, Magwisha, Henry B, Nyingilili, Hamisi S, Mamiro, Kamilius A, Rukambile, Elipidius J, Daffa, Joyce W, Lyaruu, Eugene A, Kapange, Lupakisyo A, Kasilagila, Gideon K, Lwitiko, Nicodemus K, Msami, Halifa M, Kimbita, Elikira N
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3251545/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22093363
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1756-3305-4-217
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author Malele, Imna I
Magwisha, Henry B
Nyingilili, Hamisi S
Mamiro, Kamilius A
Rukambile, Elipidius J
Daffa, Joyce W
Lyaruu, Eugene A
Kapange, Lupakisyo A
Kasilagila, Gideon K
Lwitiko, Nicodemus K
Msami, Halifa M
Kimbita, Elikira N
author_facet Malele, Imna I
Magwisha, Henry B
Nyingilili, Hamisi S
Mamiro, Kamilius A
Rukambile, Elipidius J
Daffa, Joyce W
Lyaruu, Eugene A
Kapange, Lupakisyo A
Kasilagila, Gideon K
Lwitiko, Nicodemus K
Msami, Halifa M
Kimbita, Elikira N
author_sort Malele, Imna I
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Tsetse flies and trypanosomiasis are among several factors that constrain livestock development in Tanzania. Over the years Rufiji District was excluded from livestock production owing to tsetse fly infestation, however, a few years ago there was an influx of livestock following evictions aimed at conserving the Usangu wetlands. METHODS: A study was conducted to determine the efficiency of available traps for catching tsetse flies, Glossina species infesting the area, their infection rates and Trypanosoma species circulating in the area. Trapping was conducted during the semi dry season for a total of 30 days (ten days each month) during the onset of the dry season of May - July 2009. Harvested flies after every 24 hours were dissected and examined under a light microscope for trypanosome infections and whole fly DNA was extracted from 82 flies and analyzed for trypanosomes by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) using different sets of primers. RESULTS: The proportions of total tsetse catches per trap were in the following decreasing order S3 (33%), H-Trap (27%), Pyramidal (19%), sticky panel (11%) and biconical trap (10%). Of the 1200 trapped flies, 75.6% were identified as Glossina pallidipes, 11.7% as G. brevipalpis, 9.6% as G. austeni and 3.0% G. morsitans morsitans. Dissections revealed the overall infection rate of 6.6% (13/197). Whole DNA was extracted from 82 tsetse flies and the prevalence of trypanosomes circulating in the area in descending order was 92.7% (76/82) for T. simiae; 70.7% (58/82) for T. brucei types; 48.8% (40/82) for the T. vivax types and 32.9% (27/82) for the T. congolense types as determined by PCR. All trypanosome types were found in all tsetse species analysed except for the T. congolense types, which were absent in G. m. morsitans. None of the T. brucei positive samples contained human infective trypanosomes by SRA - PCR test CONCLUSION: All tsetse species found in Rufiji are biologically important in the transmission of animal trypanosomiasis and the absence of T. congolense in G. m. morsitans could be a matter of chance only. Therefore, plans for control should consider all tsetse species.
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spelling pubmed-32515452012-01-05 Multiple Trypanosoma infections are common amongst Glossina species in the new farming areas of Rufiji district, Tanzania Malele, Imna I Magwisha, Henry B Nyingilili, Hamisi S Mamiro, Kamilius A Rukambile, Elipidius J Daffa, Joyce W Lyaruu, Eugene A Kapange, Lupakisyo A Kasilagila, Gideon K Lwitiko, Nicodemus K Msami, Halifa M Kimbita, Elikira N Parasit Vectors Research BACKGROUND: Tsetse flies and trypanosomiasis are among several factors that constrain livestock development in Tanzania. Over the years Rufiji District was excluded from livestock production owing to tsetse fly infestation, however, a few years ago there was an influx of livestock following evictions aimed at conserving the Usangu wetlands. METHODS: A study was conducted to determine the efficiency of available traps for catching tsetse flies, Glossina species infesting the area, their infection rates and Trypanosoma species circulating in the area. Trapping was conducted during the semi dry season for a total of 30 days (ten days each month) during the onset of the dry season of May - July 2009. Harvested flies after every 24 hours were dissected and examined under a light microscope for trypanosome infections and whole fly DNA was extracted from 82 flies and analyzed for trypanosomes by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) using different sets of primers. RESULTS: The proportions of total tsetse catches per trap were in the following decreasing order S3 (33%), H-Trap (27%), Pyramidal (19%), sticky panel (11%) and biconical trap (10%). Of the 1200 trapped flies, 75.6% were identified as Glossina pallidipes, 11.7% as G. brevipalpis, 9.6% as G. austeni and 3.0% G. morsitans morsitans. Dissections revealed the overall infection rate of 6.6% (13/197). Whole DNA was extracted from 82 tsetse flies and the prevalence of trypanosomes circulating in the area in descending order was 92.7% (76/82) for T. simiae; 70.7% (58/82) for T. brucei types; 48.8% (40/82) for the T. vivax types and 32.9% (27/82) for the T. congolense types as determined by PCR. All trypanosome types were found in all tsetse species analysed except for the T. congolense types, which were absent in G. m. morsitans. None of the T. brucei positive samples contained human infective trypanosomes by SRA - PCR test CONCLUSION: All tsetse species found in Rufiji are biologically important in the transmission of animal trypanosomiasis and the absence of T. congolense in G. m. morsitans could be a matter of chance only. Therefore, plans for control should consider all tsetse species. BioMed Central 2011-11-17 /pmc/articles/PMC3251545/ /pubmed/22093363 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1756-3305-4-217 Text en Copyright ©2011 Malele et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Malele, Imna I
Magwisha, Henry B
Nyingilili, Hamisi S
Mamiro, Kamilius A
Rukambile, Elipidius J
Daffa, Joyce W
Lyaruu, Eugene A
Kapange, Lupakisyo A
Kasilagila, Gideon K
Lwitiko, Nicodemus K
Msami, Halifa M
Kimbita, Elikira N
Multiple Trypanosoma infections are common amongst Glossina species in the new farming areas of Rufiji district, Tanzania
title Multiple Trypanosoma infections are common amongst Glossina species in the new farming areas of Rufiji district, Tanzania
title_full Multiple Trypanosoma infections are common amongst Glossina species in the new farming areas of Rufiji district, Tanzania
title_fullStr Multiple Trypanosoma infections are common amongst Glossina species in the new farming areas of Rufiji district, Tanzania
title_full_unstemmed Multiple Trypanosoma infections are common amongst Glossina species in the new farming areas of Rufiji district, Tanzania
title_short Multiple Trypanosoma infections are common amongst Glossina species in the new farming areas of Rufiji district, Tanzania
title_sort multiple trypanosoma infections are common amongst glossina species in the new farming areas of rufiji district, tanzania
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3251545/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22093363
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1756-3305-4-217
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