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| INTRODUCTION   Medical Entomology (Contact)          Please CLICK on underlined links for details:   Arthropods & Disease     Aspects
  of Disease Transmission     Key References          Arthropoda
  play a role in human welfare that is poorly understood by the general public.
  Most oceanic animal life is not the larger fishes and mammals, but tiny
  animals that make up the greater part of the plankton:  the free-swimming, minute Crustacea on which
  other inhabitants rely for food. These free-living plant-feeding scavengers
  occur in vast numbers and interact with other animals to reduce the numbers
  of those that expire. Similarly the insects exhibit a more dominant role.
  Because of their large numbers and high adaptation for survival they outrank
  in abundance other animal or plant associations.  It has been impossible to estimate the number of ants that
  populate fields and hillsides or the plant lice that derive sustenance from
  wild and cultivated plants. The role that insects play in agriculture and
  commerce is especially underestimated for the losses agriculture suffers from
  their destructive feeding. But for human welfare the insects especially are
  of paramount importance as they can regularly affect human's very existence
  or retard advances in the development of some of the earth's most fertile
  regions.  Governments have fallen due
  to the ravages of diseases spread by arthropods.  A notable example is the defeat of the British Army during the
  American Revolutionary War due to a widespread epidemic of malaria among the British
  troops.  The Americans were able to
  rely heavily on the labors of the African population for food and supplies
  because they had a built in resistance to the disease from millennia of
  coexistence in Africa.            Medical entomology and parasitology
  are important academic fields for zoologists, physicians and the public.
  There is a constant need for more knowledge of the interrelations, which
  arthropods play in the spread, and maintenance of plant, animal, and human
  diseases. Insects especially have gradually made governments devote resources
  to long delayed studies.  Some of the
  prominent early researchers in this field may be viewed at <Researchers>.          There are many important diseases
  associated with arthropods.  Some of
  the more important ones include Malaria, Piroplasmosis, Trypanosomiasis, Yellow
  Fever, Plague, Dengue, Phlebotomus Disease, Spirochetal Diseases,
  Tsutsugamushi Disease, Kedani Fever, Flood Fever, Japanese River Fever, Rocky
  Mountain Spotted Fever, Typhus Fever, Tularemia, and Onchocerciasis.           It is important also to consider the
  mechanical movement of pathogenic organisms by insects, especially filth
  flies. Since early times ordinary people and physicians associated flies with
  disease outbreaks. An abundance of flies during summer was associated with an
  unhealthy autumn.  There are also
  animal diseases other than those of man, where insects are involved and which
  influence human welfare.  For example,
  insects play an important role as vectors of plant diseases thereby affecting
  the food supply. In the gut of many insects are found representatives of the
  protozoan family Trypanosomidae, with generic names Crithidia, Herpetomonas, Phytomonas,
  Leishmania, Leptomonas.  The relationships of some of these forms to animal and plant
  diseases are known but the majority of them remain undetermined. The problem
  of isolating and culturing these forms, and of determining their relation to
  the insects, to other animals, and to plants is extremely difficult. However,
  progress has been accelerating with the development of DNA analyses, and we
  may expect more exact information in the future.   ASPECTS
  OF DISEASE TRANSMISSION          In the study of insect-borne disease, particularly
  one in which the insect serves as the definitive or intermediate host,
  certain important considerations are essential.  Some of the more important features of the various factors
  involved are (1) the parasite or etiological agent; (2) the definitive host.
  and the definitive reservoirs or non-reservoirs; (3) the method of
  transmission; (4) the intermediate host and the intermediate reservoirs or
  no-reservoirs; (5) the method of transmission.          There is a lack of understanding,
  however, even of the better-known insect-borne diseases.  For instance, in malaria is is apparent
  that the only definite host reservoirs are Anopheles
  spp. mosquitoes, but how long they can remain infected is still uncertain.
  The number of Anopheles species
  that can act and the conditions under which they may serve as definitive
  hosts are still not well known, though much progress has been made toward
  solving these problems. In yellow fever the parasitic agent is a virus; but
  the animal reservoirs been determined only since the late 1800's.  Also, not all the mosquito transmitters
  have been recognized. Many problems of sleeping sickness remain
  unsolved.  However, data on all known
  insect-borne diseases can be assembled and the numerous unsolved problems
  pointed out. The literature dealing with medical entomology, parasitology,
  and preventative medicine is vast, and bacteriology and veterinary medicine
  should be included,     
  Key References:     <medvet.ref.htm>        Matheson, R. 1950. 
  Medical Entomology.  Comstock
  Publ. Co, Inc.  610 p.       Service, M.  2008.  Medical
  Entomology For Students.  Cambridge
  Univ. Press.  289 p       Legner,
  E. F.  1995.  Biological control of Diptera of medical
  and veterinary importance.  J. Vector
  Ecology 20(1): 59-120.       Legner, E. F..  2000. 
  Biological control of aquatic Diptera.  p. 847-870. 
  Contributions to a Manual of Palaearctic Diptera,            Vol.
  1, Science  Herald, Budapest.  978 p.   |