Population structure of Glossina palpalis gambiensis (Diptera: Glossinidae) between river basins in Burkina Faso: Consequences for area-wide integrated pest management

African animal trypanosomosis is a major obstacle to the development ofmore efficient and sustainable livestock production systems in West Africa. Riverine tsetse species such as Glossina palpalis gambiensis Vanderplank are their major vectors. A wide variety of control tactics is available to manage these vectors, but their elimination will only be sustainable if control is exercised following area-wide integrated pest management (AW-IPM) principles, i.e. the control effort is targeting an entire tsetse population within a circumscribed area. In the present study, genetic variation at microsatellite DNA loci was used to examine the population structure of G. p. gambiensis inhabiting two adjacent river basins, i.e. the Comoe´ and the Mouhoun River basins in Burkina Faso. A remote sensing analysis revealed that the woodland savannah habitats between the river basins have remained unchanged during the last two decades. In addition, genetic variation was studied in two populations that were separated by a manmade lake originating from a dam built in 1991 on the Comoe´ . Low genetic differentiation was observed between the samples from the Mouhoun and the Comoe´ River basins and no differentiation was found between the samples separated by the dam. The data presented indicate that the overall genetic differentiation of G. p. gambiensis populations inhabiting two adjacent river basins in Burkina Faso is low (FST = 0.016). The results of this study suggest that either G. p. gambiensis populations from the Mouhoun are not isolated from those of the Comoe´ , or that the isolation is too recent to be detected. If elimination of the G. p. gambiensis population from the Mouhoun River basin is the selected control strategy, reinvasion from adjacent river basins may need to be prevented by establishing a buffer zone between the Mouhoun and the other river basin(s).

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Bouyer, Jérémy, Ravel, Sophie, Guerrini, Laure, Dujardin, Jean Pierre, Sidibé, Issa, Vreysen, Marc J.B., Solano, Philippe, De Meeus, Thierry
Format: article biblioteca
Language:eng
Subjects:L72 - Organismes nuisibles des animaux, Glossina palpalis, Trypanosoma, http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_30558, http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_7987, http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_8081,
Online Access:http://agritrop.cirad.fr/553565/
http://agritrop.cirad.fr/553565/1/document_553565.pdf
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Summary:African animal trypanosomosis is a major obstacle to the development ofmore efficient and sustainable livestock production systems in West Africa. Riverine tsetse species such as Glossina palpalis gambiensis Vanderplank are their major vectors. A wide variety of control tactics is available to manage these vectors, but their elimination will only be sustainable if control is exercised following area-wide integrated pest management (AW-IPM) principles, i.e. the control effort is targeting an entire tsetse population within a circumscribed area. In the present study, genetic variation at microsatellite DNA loci was used to examine the population structure of G. p. gambiensis inhabiting two adjacent river basins, i.e. the Comoe´ and the Mouhoun River basins in Burkina Faso. A remote sensing analysis revealed that the woodland savannah habitats between the river basins have remained unchanged during the last two decades. In addition, genetic variation was studied in two populations that were separated by a manmade lake originating from a dam built in 1991 on the Comoe´ . Low genetic differentiation was observed between the samples from the Mouhoun and the Comoe´ River basins and no differentiation was found between the samples separated by the dam. The data presented indicate that the overall genetic differentiation of G. p. gambiensis populations inhabiting two adjacent river basins in Burkina Faso is low (FST = 0.016). The results of this study suggest that either G. p. gambiensis populations from the Mouhoun are not isolated from those of the Comoe´ , or that the isolation is too recent to be detected. If elimination of the G. p. gambiensis population from the Mouhoun River basin is the selected control strategy, reinvasion from adjacent river basins may need to be prevented by establishing a buffer zone between the Mouhoun and the other river basin(s).