Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Carina Zittra is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Carina Zittra.


Parasites & Vectors | 2015

Screening blood-fed mosquitoes for the diagnosis of filarioid helminths and avian malaria.

Carina Zittra; Zsanett Kocziha; Szilárd Pinnyei; Josef Harl; Katrin Kieser; Alice Laciny; Barbara Eigner; Katja Silbermayr; Georg Gerhard Duscher; Éva Fok; Hans-Peter Fuehrer

BackgroundBoth Dirofilaria repens and recently D. immitis are known to be endemic in Hungary. As one of several recent cases, the fatal case of a dog infested with D. immitis in Szeged, Southern Hungary, received attention from the media. Hence it was decided to catch mosquitoes in the garden where the dog lived to screen for filarioid helminths and Plasmodium spp. using molecular tools.MethodsMosquitoes were caught in Szeged, in the garden where the infected dog was kept, in July 2013 with M-360 electric mosquito traps and were stored in ethanol until further procedure. Female mosquitoes were classified to genus level by morphology. Each mosquito was homogenized and analyzed for filarioid helminths and avian malaria using standardized PCR techniques. Positive mosquito samples were further identified to species level by comparing a section of the mitochondrial COI gene to GenBank® entries.ResultsIn this study, 267 blood-fed mosquitoes were caught in July 2013 in Szeged. Subsequent molecular screening revealed that not only D. immitis was present in the analyzed specimens but also DNA of D. repens, Setaria tundra and Plasmodium spp. was confirmed.ConclusionsThe analysis of blood-fed mosquitoes for the diagnosis of Dirofilaria spp. and other mosquito-borne pathogens seems to be an adequate technique to evaluate if filarioid helminths are present in a certain area. Usually only unfed female mosquitoes are analyzed for epidemiological studies. However, blood-fed mosquitoes can only be used for screening if a pathogen is present because the role of the mosquito as vector cannot be classified (blood of bitten host). Furthermore, Setaria tundra was confirmed for the first time in Hungary.


Medical and Veterinary Entomology | 2016

Direct PCR of indigenous and invasive mosquito species: a time‐ and cost‐effective technique of mosquito barcoding

A. Werblow; Eva Flechl; S. Klimpel; Carina Zittra; Karin Lebl; K. Kieser; A. Laciny; Katja Silbermayr; C. Melaun; Hans-Peter Fuehrer

Millions of people die each year as a result of pathogens transmitted by mosquitoes. However, the morphological identification of mosquito species can be difficult even for experts. The identification of morphologically indistinguishable species, such as members of the Anopheles maculipennis complex (Diptera: Culicidae), and possible hybrids, such as Culex pipiens pipiens/Culex pipiens molestus (Diptera: Culicidae), presents a major problem. In addition, the detection and discrimination of newly introduced species can be challenging, particularly to researchers without previous experience. Because of their medical importance, the clear identification of all relevant mosquito species is essential. Using the direct polymerase chain reaction (PCR) method described here, DNA amplification without prior DNA extraction is possible and thus species identification after sequencing can be achieved. Different amounts of tissue (leg, head; larvae or adult) as well as different storage conditions (dry, ethanol, −20 and −80 °C) and storage times were successfully applied and showed positive results after amplification and gel electrophoresis. Overall, 28 different indigenous and non‐indigenous mosquito species were analysed using a gene fragment of the COX1 gene for species differentiation and identification by sequencing this 658‐bp fragment. Compared with standard PCR, this method is time‐ and cost‐effective and could thus improve existing surveillance and control programmes.


Parasites & Vectors | 2017

Landscape structure affects distribution of potential disease vectors (Diptera: Culicidae)

Carina Zittra; Simon Vitecek; Adelheid G. Obwaller; Heidemarie Rossiter; Barbara Eigner; Thomas Zechmeister; Johann Waringer; Hans-Peter Fuehrer

BackgroundVector-pathogen dynamics are controlled by fluctuations of potential vector communities, such as the Culicidae. Assessment of mosquito community diversity and, in particular, identification of environmental parameters shaping these communities is therefore of key importance for the design of adequate surveillance approaches. In this study, we assess effects of climatic parameters and habitat structure on mosquito communities in eastern Austria to deliver these highly relevant baseline data.MethodsFemale mosquitoes were sampled twice a month from April to October 2014 and 2015 at 35 permanent and 23 non-permanent trapping sites using carbon dioxide-baited traps. Differences in spatial and seasonal abundance patterns of Culicidae taxa were identified using likelihood ratio tests; possible effects of environmental parameters on seasonal and spatial mosquito distribution were analysed using multivariate statistical methods. We assessed community responses to environmental parameters based on 14-day-average values that affect ontogenesis.ResultsAltogether 29,734 female mosquitoes were collected, and 21 of 42 native as well as two of four non-native mosquito species were reconfirmed in eastern Austria. Statistical analyses revealed significant differences in mosquito abundance between sampling years and provinces. Incidence and abundance patterns were found to be linked to 14-day mean sunshine duration, humidity, water–level maxima and the amount of precipitation. However, land cover classes were found to be the most important factor, effectively assigning both indigenous and non-native mosquito species to various communities, which responded differentially to environmental variables.ConclusionsThese findings thus underline the significance of non-climatic variables for future mosquito prediction models and the necessity to consider these in mosquito surveillance programmes.


Parasites & Vectors | 2017

Mosquitoes in the Danube Delta: searching for vectors of filarioid helminths and avian malaria

Angela Monica Ionică; Carina Zittra; Victoria Wimmer; Natascha Leitner; Jan Votýpka; David Modrý; Andrei Daniel Mihalca; Hans-Peter Fuehrer

BackgroundMosquitoes are arthropods of major importance to animal and human health because they are able to transmit pathogenic agents such as filarioids (Spirurida), vector-borne nematodes, which reside in the tissues of vertebrates. In Europe, recent research has mostly focused on mosquito-borne zoonotic species, while others remain neglected. Mosquitoes are also vectors of avian malaria, which has an almost worldwide distribution, and is caused by several Plasmodium species and lineages, the most common being P. relictum. The Danube Delta region of Romania is one of the most important stopover sites for migratory birds. The local mosquito fauna is diverse and well represented, while filarial infections are known to be endemic in domestic dogs in this area. The aim of the present study was thus to assess the potential vector capacity for various filarial helminths and avian malaria of mosquitoes trapped in the Danube Delta.MethodsIn July 2015, mosquitoes were collected at seven sites located in and around a rural locality in the Danube Delta region of Romania, using CO2-baited traps and hand aspirators. Additionally, a trap was placed next to a microfilaremic dog co-infected with Dirofilaria repens and D. immitis. All randomly trapped mosquitoes were identified to the species level and pooled according to date, sampling site, and taxon. Three hundred individual mosquitoes sampled next to the microfilaremic dog were processed individually and divided into abdomen and thorax/head. Following DNA extraction, all samples were screened for the presence of DNA of filarioid helminths and avian malaria agents by PCR techniques.ResultsAll 284 pools (a total of 5855 mosquitoes) were negative for filarioid DNA. One pool of Culex modestus mosquitoes was positive for Plasmodium sp. lineage Donana03. In the individually extracted mosquitoes, one abdomen of Aedes vexans was positive for D. repens DNA, one thorax/head of Ae. vexans was positive for DNA of Setaria labiatopapillosa, and two thorax/head of Cx. pipiens f. pipiens were positive for P. relictum lineage pSGS1.ConclusionThe present study suggests the vector competence of Cx. modestus and Cx. pipiens for avian Plasmodium including pathogenic species P. relictum and Ae. vexans for mammalian filarioids. Moreover, it indicates the role of Cx. pipiens f. pipiens as a potential natural vector of P. relictum lineage pSGS1 in nature.


Aquatic Insects | 2014

Species inventory, ecology, and seasonal distribution patterns of Culicidae (Insecta: Diptera) in the National Park Donau-Auen (Lower Austria)

Carina Zittra; Johann Waringer

In order to improve the limited database on species inventories and ecology of Culicidae in Austria, we monitored hydrological and physico-chemical parameters of breeding habitats of the Culicidae species of Danubean wetlands from March to October 2011 in the National Park Donau-Auen (Lower Austria). A total of 34 eggrafts, 1022 larval, 80 pupal, and 221 adult Culicidae were collected. We detected 15 mosquito species belonging to the genera Anopheles Meigen, 1818, Culex Linnæus, 1758, Culiseta Felt, 1904, Coquillettidia Dyar, 1905, Aedes Meigen, 1818 and Ochlerotatus Lynch Arribalzaga, 1891. In the larval and pupal stage, Ochlerotatus geniculatus (Olivier, 1791) (64.1%) and Culex territans Walker, 1856 (18.7%) were most abundant. Based on abiotic and biotic parameters, sampling sites were grouped into four clusters. The results show that water level and -persistence, pH, conductivity, and phosphate concentrations had a significant influence on species distribution, and that floodplain dynamics are a key factor for the seasonal and spatial distribution of mosquito larvae in the National Park.


PLOS ONE | 2018

Trypanosomatid parasites in Austrian mosquitoes

Ellen Schoener; Sarah Susanne Uebleis; Claudia Cuk; Michaela Nawratil; Adelheid G. Obwaller; Thomas Zechmeister; Karin Lebl; Jana Rádrová; Carina Zittra; Jan Votýpka; Hans-Peter Fuehrer

Trypanosomatid flagellates have not been studied in Austria in any detail. In this study, specific nested PCR, targeted on the ribosomal small subunit, was used to determine the occurrence and diversity of trypanosomatids in wild-caught mosquitoes sampled across Eastern Austria in the years 2014−2015. We collected a total of 29,975 mosquitoes of 19 species divided in 1680 pools. Of these, 298 (17.7%), representing 12 different mosquito species, were positive for trypanosomatid DNA. In total, seven trypanosomatid spp. were identified (three Trypanosoma, three Crithidia and one Herpetomonas species), with the highest parasite species diversity found in the mosquito host Coquillettidia richiardii. The most frequent parasite species belonged to the mammalian Trypanosoma theileri/cervi species complex (found in 105 pools; 6.3%). The avian species T. culicavium (found in 69 pools; 4.1%) was only detected in mosquitoes of the genus Culex, which corresponds to their preference for avian hosts. Monoxenous trypanosomatids of the genus Crithidia and Herpetomonas were found in 20 (1.3%) mosquito pools. One third (n = 98) of the trypanosomatid positive mosquito pools carried more than one parasite species. This is the first large scale study of trypanosomatid parasites in Austrian mosquitoes and our results are valuable in providing an overview of the diversity of these parasites in Austria.


Parasitology Research | 2017

First record of Orthopodomyia pulcripalpis (Rondani, 1872) (Diptera: Culicidae) in Austria

Carina Zittra; Adelheid G. Obwaller; Victoria Wimmer; Dominik Berer; Barbara Eigner; Hans-Peter Fuehrer

During a three-year mosquito monitoring from 2014 to 2016, the strictly ornithophilic, originally Mediterranean species Orthopodomyia pulcripalpis (Rondani, 1872) was collected as single specimen for the first time in Austria in the district of Penzing in Vienna. Morphological species determination was confirmed by analysis of the mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase subunit I gene. We thus not only confirm the existence of another mosquito species in Austria, but also add a new genus to the Austrian Culicidae taxa list.


Canadian Journal of Infectious Diseases & Medical Microbiology | 2018

Xenomonitoring of Mosquitoes (Diptera: Culicidae) for the Presence of Filarioid Helminths in Eastern Austria

Sarah S. Übleis; Claudia Cuk; Michaela Nawratil; Julia Butter; Ellen Schoener; Adelheid G. Obwaller; Thomas Zechmeister; Georg Gerhard Duscher; Franz Rubel; Karin Lebl; Carina Zittra; Hans-Peter Fuehrer

Information on mosquito-borne filarioid helminths in Austria is scarce, but recent discoveries of Dirofilaria repens indicate autochthonous distribution of this parasite in Eastern Austria. In the current xenomonitoring study, more than 48,000 mosquitoes were collected in Eastern Austria between 2013 and 2015, using different sampling techniques and storage conditions, and were analysed in pools with molecular tools for the presence of filarioid helminth DNA. Overall, DNA of D. repens, Setaria tundra, and two unknown filarioid helminths were documented in twenty mosquito pools within the mitochondrial cox1 gene (barcode region). These results indicate that S. tundra, with roe deer as definite hosts, is common in Eastern Austria, with most occurrences in floodplain mosquitoes (e.g., Aedes vexans). Moreover, DNA of D. repens was found in an Anopheles plumbeus mosquito close to the Slovakian border, indicating that D. repens is endemic in low prevalence in Eastern Austria. This study shows that xenomonitoring is an adequate tool to analyse the presence of filarioid helminths, but results are influenced by mosquito sampling techniques, storage conditions, and molecular protocols.


Parasites & Vectors | 2016

Ecological characterization and molecular differentiation of Culex pipiens complex taxa and Culex torrentium in eastern Austria

Carina Zittra; Eva Flechl; Michael Kothmayer; Simon Vitecek; Heidemarie Rossiter; Thomas Zechmeister; Hans-Peter Fuehrer


Parasitology Research | 2015

Mosquitoes (Diptera: Culicidae) and their relevance as disease vectors in the city of Vienna, Austria

Karin Lebl; Carina Zittra; Katja Silbermayr; Adelheid G. Obwaller; Dominik Berer; Katharina Brugger; Melanie Walter; Beate Pinior; Hans-Peter Fuehrer; Franz Rubel

Collaboration


Dive into the Carina Zittra's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Hans-Peter Fuehrer

University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Adelheid G. Obwaller

United Kingdom Ministry of Defence

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Karin Lebl

University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Barbara Eigner

University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Claudia Cuk

University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ellen Schoener

University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Eva Flechl

University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Franz Rubel

University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Katja Silbermayr

University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Michaela Nawratil

University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge