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ECOLOGY AND PARASITOLOGICAL ANALYSIS OF HORSE FLIES (DIPTERA: TABANIDAE) IN ANTIOQUIA, COLOMBIA
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Tabanidae) and ticks were conducted in the Caucasia municipality, Antioquia,
Colombia. Tabanids were caught on horses during daylight using hand nets and pots at
the ecotone zone between secondary forests and paddock habitats. Ticks were collected
directly from cattle by hand. The purpose of the study was to identify possible vectors
of bovine trypanosomosis, and register the diversity and abundance of tabanids in
the zone. The arthropods were brought to the laboratory for taxonomic determination
and protozooans searching in proboscis, midgut, and salivary glands of flies. In
the case of ticks, protozoans were searched in hemolymph. One hundred and forty
tabanids belonging to four genera and nine species were caught. Among the species,
Lepiselaga crassipes was the most abundant (43.6%), with the highest abundance
in July and a biting peak at 14:00 h. The highest diversity of tabanids was observed
during September. Three tabanids were found infected with flagellates morphologically
compatible with Trypanosoma vivax. 315 ticks belonging to Boophilus microplus
species were collected, all of them negative to flagellates. These results suggest T.
vivax transmission by tabanids in the study area. However, the specific status of
the parasites should be determined by molecular techniques and the transmission
mechanism should be established too by controlled studies
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