2008
DOI: 10.1017/s003118200800468x
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How do ectoparasitic nycteribiids locate their bat hosts?

Abstract: Nycteribiids (Diptera: Nycteribiidae) are specific haematophagous ectoparasites of bats, which spend nearly all their adult lives on hosts. However, females have to leave bats to deposit their larva on the walls of the roosts, where they later emerge as adult flies. Nycteribiids had thus to evolve efficient sensorial mechanisms to locate hosts from a distance. We studied the sensory cues involved in this process, experimentally testing the role of specific host odours, and general cues such as carbon dioxide, … Show more

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Cited by 17 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…Miniopterus schreibersii is the main bat host for N. schmidlii and P. conspicua . Furthermore, P. conspicua and P. dufourii sometimes choose non-primary hosts if the opportunity arises [ 54 ]. Four P. conspicua bat flies and one specimen of N. schmidlii from the same Miniopterus schreibersii bat were found infected with A. nycteribiae .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Miniopterus schreibersii is the main bat host for N. schmidlii and P. conspicua . Furthermore, P. conspicua and P. dufourii sometimes choose non-primary hosts if the opportunity arises [ 54 ]. Four P. conspicua bat flies and one specimen of N. schmidlii from the same Miniopterus schreibersii bat were found infected with A. nycteribiae .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Only female bat flies will temporarily leave their hosts to deposit a single prepupa on the bat roost wall, the only developmental stage of a bat fly spent off host (Marshall ). After emergence from the pupa the imago uses carbon dioxide, as well as body heat and odour to locate a bat host (Lourenço and Palmeirim ). It is unknown whether the same cues are used to discriminate between hosts.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Both nycteribiid species spend most of their adult lives in the fur of M. schreibersii, and they are host specific; N. schmidlii is part of the typical parasitic fauna of M. schreibersii and P. conspicua is only accidentally found on bats of other species (Balcells 1968;Imaz et al 1999;Estrada-Peña et al 1991a;Lourenço and Palmeirim 2008). Nycteribiids undergo adenotrophic viviparity (i.e., the complete larval life cycle occurs within the female uterus) and have a single offspring which develops though three nymphal instars (Marshall 1981).…”
Section: The Model Systemmentioning
confidence: 99%