Low effective population sizes in Amblyomma variegatum in West Africa: implication for the sustainability of acaricide-based control programs

Effective population sizes have rarely been estimated in ticks despite the importance of this parameter for evaluating the evolutionary and adaptive potential of tick popula-tions. This work was aimed at evaluating the effective population sizes of Amblyomma variegatum. In addition to the direct losses it imposes on livestock, this tick is the main vector of Ehrlichia ruminantium, the agent of heartwater (cowdriosis) that induces up to 80% mortality in susceptible sheep and goats. The usage of acaricide footbaths seems as the most accurate way to protect livestock from all the deleterious effects of A. varie-gatum. The durability of such a protection would depend on the potential of A. variega-tum to evolve acaricide resistances. We developed microsatellite markers to estimate the effective population sizes of A. variegatum in three neighbor villages from Burkina Faso. As sampling involved two tick generations, effective population sizes were in-dependently estimated by two methods insensitive to heterozygosity: the first one is based on linkage disequilibrium analysis within sampling while the second uses the changes in allele frequencies across generations. Both methods estimated the number of reproducing ticks as ranging from two to a few tens reproductive adults per village and cohort. Such small estimates plead for low probabilities of both apparition and se-lection for acaricide resistance mutants, a result congruent with the rarity of records of acaricide resistance in A. variegatum. This situation will be compared with that of the southern cattle tick Rhipicephalus microplus that show much larger effective pop-ulation sizes and numerous reports of acaricide resistances. Meanwhile, we will also examine how the biology of A. variegatum can explain such low estimates in effective population sizes.

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Main Authors: Huber, Karine, Jacquet, Stéphanie, Rivallan, Ronan, Adakal, Hassane, Vachiéry, Nathalie, Risterucci, Ange-Marie, Chevillon, Christine
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Published: ESOVE
Online Access:http://agritrop.cirad.fr/589976/
http://agritrop.cirad.fr/589976/1/ID589976.pdf
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spelling dig-cirad-fr-5899762023-10-10T06:40:11Z http://agritrop.cirad.fr/589976/ http://agritrop.cirad.fr/589976/ Low effective population sizes in Amblyomma variegatum in West Africa: implication for the sustainability of acaricide-based control programs. Huber Karine, Jacquet Stéphanie, Rivallan Ronan, Adakal Hassane, Vachiéry Nathalie, Risterucci Ange-Marie, Chevillon Christine. 2018. In : 21st E-SOVE (European Society for Vector Ecology) Meeting Abstract Book. Arthropod Vector Science for the benefit of society: Educate, Empathize, Engage. ESOVE. Palermo : ESOVE, Résumé, 120. E-SOVE (European Society for Vector Ecology) Meeting. 21, Palermo, Italie, 22 Octobre 2018/26 Octobre 2018. Low effective population sizes in Amblyomma variegatum in West Africa: implication for the sustainability of acaricide-based control programs Huber, Karine Jacquet, Stéphanie Rivallan, Ronan Adakal, Hassane Vachiéry, Nathalie Risterucci, Ange-Marie Chevillon, Christine eng 2018 ESOVE 21st E-SOVE (European Society for Vector Ecology) Meeting Abstract Book. Arthropod Vector Science for the benefit of society: Educate, Empathize, Engage Effective population sizes have rarely been estimated in ticks despite the importance of this parameter for evaluating the evolutionary and adaptive potential of tick popula-tions. This work was aimed at evaluating the effective population sizes of Amblyomma variegatum. In addition to the direct losses it imposes on livestock, this tick is the main vector of Ehrlichia ruminantium, the agent of heartwater (cowdriosis) that induces up to 80% mortality in susceptible sheep and goats. The usage of acaricide footbaths seems as the most accurate way to protect livestock from all the deleterious effects of A. varie-gatum. The durability of such a protection would depend on the potential of A. variega-tum to evolve acaricide resistances. We developed microsatellite markers to estimate the effective population sizes of A. variegatum in three neighbor villages from Burkina Faso. As sampling involved two tick generations, effective population sizes were in-dependently estimated by two methods insensitive to heterozygosity: the first one is based on linkage disequilibrium analysis within sampling while the second uses the changes in allele frequencies across generations. Both methods estimated the number of reproducing ticks as ranging from two to a few tens reproductive adults per village and cohort. Such small estimates plead for low probabilities of both apparition and se-lection for acaricide resistance mutants, a result congruent with the rarity of records of acaricide resistance in A. variegatum. This situation will be compared with that of the southern cattle tick Rhipicephalus microplus that show much larger effective pop-ulation sizes and numerous reports of acaricide resistances. Meanwhile, we will also examine how the biology of A. variegatum can explain such low estimates in effective population sizes. conference_item info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject Conference info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion http://agritrop.cirad.fr/589976/1/ID589976.pdf text Cirad license info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess https://agritrop.cirad.fr/mention_legale.html info:eu-repo/semantics/reference/purl/https://www.aedescost.eu/sites/default/files/2019-07/Scientific%20Programme%20-%20Palermo%2C%20Italy%20%E2%80%93%2021-26%20October%202018.pdf
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libraryname Biblioteca del CIRAD Francia
language eng
description Effective population sizes have rarely been estimated in ticks despite the importance of this parameter for evaluating the evolutionary and adaptive potential of tick popula-tions. This work was aimed at evaluating the effective population sizes of Amblyomma variegatum. In addition to the direct losses it imposes on livestock, this tick is the main vector of Ehrlichia ruminantium, the agent of heartwater (cowdriosis) that induces up to 80% mortality in susceptible sheep and goats. The usage of acaricide footbaths seems as the most accurate way to protect livestock from all the deleterious effects of A. varie-gatum. The durability of such a protection would depend on the potential of A. variega-tum to evolve acaricide resistances. We developed microsatellite markers to estimate the effective population sizes of A. variegatum in three neighbor villages from Burkina Faso. As sampling involved two tick generations, effective population sizes were in-dependently estimated by two methods insensitive to heterozygosity: the first one is based on linkage disequilibrium analysis within sampling while the second uses the changes in allele frequencies across generations. Both methods estimated the number of reproducing ticks as ranging from two to a few tens reproductive adults per village and cohort. Such small estimates plead for low probabilities of both apparition and se-lection for acaricide resistance mutants, a result congruent with the rarity of records of acaricide resistance in A. variegatum. This situation will be compared with that of the southern cattle tick Rhipicephalus microplus that show much larger effective pop-ulation sizes and numerous reports of acaricide resistances. Meanwhile, we will also examine how the biology of A. variegatum can explain such low estimates in effective population sizes.
format conference_item
author Huber, Karine
Jacquet, Stéphanie
Rivallan, Ronan
Adakal, Hassane
Vachiéry, Nathalie
Risterucci, Ange-Marie
Chevillon, Christine
spellingShingle Huber, Karine
Jacquet, Stéphanie
Rivallan, Ronan
Adakal, Hassane
Vachiéry, Nathalie
Risterucci, Ange-Marie
Chevillon, Christine
Low effective population sizes in Amblyomma variegatum in West Africa: implication for the sustainability of acaricide-based control programs
author_facet Huber, Karine
Jacquet, Stéphanie
Rivallan, Ronan
Adakal, Hassane
Vachiéry, Nathalie
Risterucci, Ange-Marie
Chevillon, Christine
author_sort Huber, Karine
title Low effective population sizes in Amblyomma variegatum in West Africa: implication for the sustainability of acaricide-based control programs
title_short Low effective population sizes in Amblyomma variegatum in West Africa: implication for the sustainability of acaricide-based control programs
title_full Low effective population sizes in Amblyomma variegatum in West Africa: implication for the sustainability of acaricide-based control programs
title_fullStr Low effective population sizes in Amblyomma variegatum in West Africa: implication for the sustainability of acaricide-based control programs
title_full_unstemmed Low effective population sizes in Amblyomma variegatum in West Africa: implication for the sustainability of acaricide-based control programs
title_sort low effective population sizes in amblyomma variegatum in west africa: implication for the sustainability of acaricide-based control programs
publisher ESOVE
url http://agritrop.cirad.fr/589976/
http://agritrop.cirad.fr/589976/1/ID589976.pdf
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