Carvalho-Pinto & Oliveira 2003 (Article) Malaria
Isoenzymatic Analysis of Four Anopheles (Kerteszia) bellator Dyar & Knab (Diptera: Culicidae) Populations
Author(s):—C.J. Carvalho-Pinto
Corresponding email:—ccb1ccp@ccb.ufsc.br
Publication:—Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz 98(8): 1045-1048. (2003)
Abstract:—Anopheles bellator is a small silvatic bromelia-breeding mosquito and is a primary human malaria vector species in Southern Brazil. The bromelia-breeding habitat of the species should accompany the Atlantic forest coastal distribution, where bromeliads are abundant. Nonetheless, records on An. bellator collections show a gap in the species geographical distribution. An. bellator has been recorded in Southern Brazil and in the Brazilian states of Bahia and Paraíba. It appers again in the island of Trinidad, in Trinidad and Tobago. The aim of this work was to measure gene flow between different populations of An. bellator collected in the northern and southern extremes of the geographic distribution of this species. Mosquitoes were captured in forest borders in Santa Catarina, São Paulo, and Bahia states in Brazil and in the island of Trinidad in Republic of Trinidad and Tobago. Genetic distances varied between 0.076 and 0.680, based on enzymatic profiles from 11 distinct isoenzymes. Results indicate the existence of low-level gene flow between Brazilian populations of An. bellator, and a gene flow was even lower between the Brazilian and the Trinidad populations. This finding lead us to hypothesize that An. bellator did not spread along the coast, but reached northeastern areas through inland routes.
Keywords:—isoenzyme - Anopheles bellator - Kerteszia