Acceso abierto·Documento·2010·Inglés

Sex, Subdivision, and Domestic Dispersal of Trypanosoma cruzi Lineage I in Southern Ecuador

Sofía Ocaña-Mayorga; Martin Llewellyn; Jaime A. Costales; Michael A. Miles; Mario J. Grijalva

Openalex

Resumen

These data represent novel population-level evidence of an extant capacity for sex among natural cycles of T. cruzi transmission. As such they have dramatic implications for our understanding of the fundamental genetics of this parasite. Our data also elucidate local disease transmission, whereby passive anthropogenic domestic mammal and triatomine dispersal across our study area is likely to account for the rapid domestic/peridomestic spread of the parasite. Finally we discuss how this, and the observed subdivision between sympatric sylvatic and domestic/peridomestic foci, can inform efforts at Chagas disease control in Ecuador.

Cómo citar

Sofía Ocaña-Mayorga, & Martin Llewellyn, & Jaime A. Costales, & Michael A. Miles, & Mario J. Grijalva (2010). Sex, Subdivision, and Domestic Dispersal of Trypanosoma cruzi Lineage I in Southern Ecuador. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0000915