Culicoides variipennis and bluetongue-virus epidemiology in the United States

Annu Rev Entomol. 1996:41:23-43. doi: 10.1146/annurev.en.41.010196.000323.

Abstract

The bluetongue viruses are transmitted to ruminants in North America by Culicoides variipennis. US annual losses of approximately $125 million are due to restrictions on the movement of livestock and germplasm to bluetongue-free countries. Bluetongue is the most economically important arthropod-borne animal disease in the United States. Bluetongue is absent in the northeastern United States because of the inefficient vector ability there of C. variipennis for bluetongue. The vector of bluetongue virus elsewhere in the United States is C. variipennis sonorensis. The three C. variipennis subspecies differ in vector competence for bluetongue virus in the laboratory. Understanding C. variipennis genetic variation controlling bluetongue transmission will help identify geographic regions at risk for bluetongue and provide opportunities to prevent virus transmission. Information on C. variipennis and bluetongue epidemiology will improve trade and provide information to protect US livestock from domestic and foreign arthropod-borne pathogens.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Bluetongue / epidemiology*
  • Bluetongue / prevention & control
  • Bluetongue / virology
  • Bluetongue virus*
  • Ceratopogonidae*
  • Insect Vectors*
  • United States