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Orientation of agents of wound myiasis to hosts and artificial stimuli in Hungary.

Abstract
The orientation of adults of the myiasis species Wohlfahrtia magnifica and Lucilia sericata to artificial visual stimuli (cloth targets) and olfactory stimuli ('swormlure-4', a potent screwworm attractant), was studied in sheep pastures near to Sárbogard in Hungary. Experiments with odour-baited cloth targets, enclosed in electrocuting grids, demonstrated that colour was an important factor influencing catches on targets: a black target caught most flies of both species, with other colours in the following order of effectiveness, blue > white > yellow. Wohlfahrtia magnifica did not respond to swormlure-4 in the strong manner that L.sericata did. The sex ratios of W.magnifica caught on targets (67.2% males) and hand-netted from fence posts (68.8% males) were similar and biased towards males, whereas that of L.sericata on targets was strongly biased towards females (15.6% males), indicating a fundamental difference in the response of these two myiasis species towards the swormlure-baited targets. The orientation of these two species towards hosts was also recorded together with that of a third species, Phormia regina. Electric nets placed beside infested sheep caught significantly more flies of all three species than those placed beside uninfested sheep or in the absence of sheep. The sex ratio of W.magnifica caught around infested sheep was the reverse of that on targets, with 68.5% females. Wohlfahrtia magnifica responded more strongly to healthy, uninfested sheep than did L. sericata and P.regina. The potential for use of targets both for population monitoring and control is discussed.
AuthorsM J Hall, R Farkas, F Kelemen, M J Hosier, J M el-Khoga
JournalMedical and veterinary entomology (Med Vet Entomol) Vol. 9 Issue 1 Pg. 77-84 (Jan 1995) ISSN: 0269-283X [Print] England
PMID7696692 (Publication Type: Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't)
Topics
  • Animals
  • Color
  • Diptera (physiology)
  • Female
  • Host-Parasite Interactions
  • Hungary
  • Male
  • Myiasis (parasitology)
  • Odorants
  • Orientation
  • Sex Ratio
  • Sheep
  • Sheep Diseases (parasitology)
  • Vision, Ocular (physiology)

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