“…This feature suggests that triatomines can easily adapt to new blood sources if their natural hosts disappear (as can occur when human and its domestic animals invade new areas), and potentially use human/domestic animals without a real evolutionary cost. Some studies have measured different life‐history traits of triatomines in relation to different blood hosts (Emmanuelle‐Machado et al., ; Gomes, Azambuja, & Garcia, ; Guarneri, Araujo, Diotaiuti, Gontijo, & Pereira, ; Guarneri, Pereira, & Diotaiuti, ; Lunardi, Gomes, Peres Camara, & Arrais‐Silva, ; Martinez‐Ibarra, Grant‐Guillen, Nogueda‐Torres, & Trujillo‐Contreras, ; Martinez‐Ibarra et al., ; Medone, Balsalobre, Rabinovich, Marti, & Menu, ; Nattero, Leonhard, Rodriguez, & Crocco, ; Nattero, Rodriguez, & Crocco, ), as well as blood host preferences (Crocco & Catala, ; Gürtler et al., ; Jiron & Zeledon, ). This kind of studies can shed light on the attractiveness of human and/or domestic animals as blood hosts, as well as the performances and advantages/disadvantages to feed on them, and can thus help predicting the potential for domiciliation of different triatomine populations (Guarneri et al., ).…”