Bluetongue virus Culicoides variipennis attacks in swarms with the
Bluetongue virus; this can be devastating to livestock and is the most economically important
arthropod borne animal diseases in the United States.
C. variipennis transmits the Bluetongue virus, found in North America from latitude 40° N to 35° S. However, the virus is absent from northeast United States because the cold weather does not allow for the vector of the Bluetongue disease. On average, the virus costs $125 million due to the restriction of movement on livestock to countries that are free of the virus. The
C. variipennis can transmit diseases if the population density is greater than one per 3.57 km2; however, this can be reduced if the area is treated with
insecticide. When the
C. variipennis infects
sheep, the sheep experience swelling of the tongue and erosions in the mouth and throat, often leading to the death of sheep, abortion, and deformed lambs. When infected with Bluetongue virus,
cattle experience similar symptoms such as abortion and
stillborn calves, but it is often less severe compared to sheep. The
gut barrier in
C. variipennis allows for some prevention of infection of Bluetongue virus via blood meals. Both poor nutrition as a larva and more quantity in blood meal means a higher likelihood of being infected. When naturally infected with Bluetongue virus, the
C. variipennis contains the Bluetongue Virus in the
thorax, and then is secreted by the fly's saliva while blood feeding for the next 7–10 days, but is only first detected within 4 days. When the
C. variipennis is persistently infected, especially in lab, with Bluetongue virus, the anterior and posterior
midgut, in addition to the foregut/midgut junction show the most signs of infection. There are also affected cells in the gut cells that then affect the
haemocoel and then are detected in a few
fat body cells. There is also small detection in low-level range of secondary organs’ fat body cells, but high concentration in the tissues of the organs. While the
C. variipennis is orally infected with the Bluetongue virus, the anterior and posterior midgut and the foregut/midgut junction cells show infection. There is no evidence for the Bluetongue virus to be transmitted
transovarial from infected females to progeny.
Heleidomermis magnapapula (nematode) The nematode
Heleidomermis magnapapula is a
parasite of
C. variipennis. The second stage juvenile
H. magnapapula enters in the larval
C. variipennis, develops, molts into an adult, and exits the host, killing the host as it exits. This parasitism of
H. magnapapula and
C. variipennis is commonly found in the Chino Basin in California
Riverside County and the
Allegheny,
Thompson and
Cayuga areas of New York. ==References==