Article

Ecology of Amblyomma neumanni (Acari: Ixodidae).

Instituto Nacional de Tecnología Agropecuaria, Estación Experimental Agropecuaria Rafaela, CC 22, CP 2300 Rafaela, Santa Fe, Argentina.
Acta tropica (impact factor: 2.22). 06/2009; 111(3):226-36. DOI:10.1016/j.actatropica.2009.04.013 pp.226-36
Source: PubMed

ABSTRACT The life cycle of Amblyomma neumanni was described studying the seasonal distribution of free-living stages and parasitic phases during two consecutive years. Development periods of engorged ticks under different photoperiod conditions were recorded. Larvae of A. neumanni have the peak of abundance in autumn. Nymphs reach the peak in winter. Females were collected on cattle from autumn to late spring. The seasonal distribution pattern of females showed a bimodal curve, with a peak in autumn and other during early and middle spring. The engorged females exposed at shortest photoperiod regimen (10 h light-14 h dark) under both laboratory and field conditions undergo morphogenetic diapause, expressed as a delay in the oviposition. It is concluded that females of A. neumanni that feed and copulate in autumn undergo morphogenetic diapause, and they will lay eggs in spring, simultaneously with the females that feed and copulate in this season. Climate niche analysis shows that adequate suitability for A. neumanni depends mainly from temperature (mean, absolute maximum and minimum, and mean temperature in wettest and driest quarters) as well as from rainfall in warmest and coldest quarters. Sequences of 16S rDNA gene belonging to different populations of A. neumanni, showed no intraspecific genetic differentiation.

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Keywords

16S rDNA gene
 
A. neumanni
 
absolute maximum
 
Amblyomma neumanni
 
bimodal curve
 
Climate niche analysis
 
consecutive years
 
Development periods
 
different photoperiod conditions
 
different populations
 
engorged females
 
field conditions
 
free-living stages
 
intraspecific genetic differentiation
 
life cycle
 
morphogenetic diapause
 
parasitic phases
 
seasonal distribution
 
seasonal distribution pattern
 
shortest photoperiod regimen