Frontiers in Veterinary Science (Jan 2023)

Potential mosquito vector attraction to- and feeding preferences for pigs in Romanian backyard farms

  • Jonno Jorn Stelder,
  • Andrei Daniel Mihalca,
  • Ann Sofie Olesen,
  • Lene Jung Kjær,
  • Anette Ella Boklund,
  • Thomas Bruun Rasmussen,
  • Mihai Marinov,
  • Vasile Alexe,
  • Oana Maria Balmoş,
  • René Bødker

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2022.1046263
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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IntroductionMosquitoes either biologically or mechanically transmit various vector-borne pathogens affecting pigs. Mosquito species display a wide variety of host preference, as well as host attraction and behaviours. Mosquito species attraction rates to- and feeding rates on pigs or other potential hosts, as well as the seasonal abundance of the mosquito species affects their pathogen transmission potential.MethodsWe caught mosquitoes in experimental cages containing pigs situated in Romanian backyard farms. The host species of blood meals were identified with PCR and sequencing.ResultsHigh feeding preferences for pigs were observed in Aedes vexans (90%), Anopheles maculipennis (80%) and Culiseta annulata (72.7%). However, due to a high abundance in the traps, Culex pipiens/torrentium were responsible for 37.9% of all mosquito bites on pigs in the Romanian backyards, despite low feeding rates on pigs in the cages (18.6%). We also found that other predominantly ornithophilic mosquito species, as well as mosquitoes that are already carrying a blood meal from a different (mammalian) host, were attracted to backyard pigs or their enclosure.DiscussionThese results indicate that viraemic blood carrying, for instance, African swine fever virus, West-Nile virus or Japanese encephalitis virus could be introduced to these backyard pig farms and therefore cause an infection, either through subsequent feeding, via ingestion by the pig or by environmental contamination.

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