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Dive into the research topics where Didier Crochet is active.

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Featured researches published by Didier Crochet.


Parasites & Vectors | 2011

Assessment of vector/host contact: comparison of animal-baited traps and UV-light/suction trap for collecting Culicoides biting midges (Diptera: Ceratopogonidae), vectors of Orbiviruses

Elvina Viennet; Claire Garros; Renaud Lancelot; Xavier Allene; Laëtitia Gardes; Ignace Rakotoarivony; Didier Crochet; Jean Claude Delecolle; Catherine Moulia; Thierry Baldet; Thomas Balenghien

BackgroundThe emergence and massive spread of bluetongue in Western Europe during 2006-2008 had disastrous consequences for sheep and cattle production and confirmed the ability of Palaearctic Culicoides (Diptera: Ceratopogonidae) to transmit the virus. Some aspects of Culicoides ecology, especially host-seeking and feeding behaviors, remain insufficiently described due to the difficulty of collecting them directly on a bait animal, the most reliable method to evaluate biting rates.Our aim was to compare typical animal-baited traps (drop trap and direct aspiration) to both a new sticky cover trap and a UV-light/suction trap (the most commonly used method to collect Culicoides).Methods/resultsCollections were made from 1.45 hours before sunset to 1.45 hours after sunset in June/July 2009 at an experimental sheep farm (INRA, Nouzilly, Western France), with 3 replicates of a 4 sites × 4 traps randomized Latin square using one sheep per site. Collected Culicoides individuals were sorted morphologically to species, sex and physiological stages for females. Sibling species were identified using a molecular assay. A total of 534 Culicoides belonging to 17 species was collected. Abundance was maximal in the drop trap (232 females and 4 males from 10 species) whereas the diversity was the highest in the UV-light/suction trap (136 females and 5 males from 15 species). Significant between-trap differences abundance and parity rates were observed.ConclusionsOnly the direct aspiration collected exclusively host-seeking females, despite a concern that human manipulation may influence estimation of the biting rate. The sticky cover trap assessed accurately the biting rate of abundant species even if it might act as an interception trap. The drop trap collected the highest abundance of Culicoides and may have caught individuals not attracted by sheep but by its structure. Finally, abundances obtained using the UV-light/suction trap did not estimate accurately Culicoides biting rate.


Medical and Veterinary Entomology | 2013

Host preferences of Palaearctic Culicoides biting midges: implications for transmission of orbiviruses

Elvina Viennet; Claire Garros; Laëtitia Gardes; Ignace Rakotoarivony; Xavier Allene; Renaud Lancelot; Didier Crochet; Catherine Moulia; Thierry Baldet; Thomas Balenghien

Feeding success depends on host availability, host defensive reactions and host preferences. Host choice is a critical determinant of the intensity at which pathogens are transmitted. The aim of the current study was to describe host preferences of Palaearctic Culicoides species (Diptera: Ceratopogonidae) Latreille using traps baited with the five different host species of poultry, horse, cattle, sheep and goat. Collections were carried out nightly in July and August 2009 in western France with three replicates of a 5 × 5 randomized Latin square (five sites, five hosts). Moreover, an ultraviolet (UV) light/suction trap was operated during host‐baited collections to correlate Culicoides biting rates and UV light/suction trap catches. A total of 660 Culicoides belonging to 12 species, but comprised mainly of Culicoides scoticus Downes and Kettle, Culicoides dewulfi Goetghebuer and Culicoides obsoletus Meigen, were collected on animal baits. Abundance was highest for the horse, which accounted for 95% of all Culicoides caught, representing 10 species. The horse, the largest bait, was the most attractive host, even when abundance data were corrected by weight, body surface or Kleibers scaling factor. Culicoides obsoletus was the only dominant species attracted by birds. Both C. scoticus and C. dewulfi were collected mainly from the upper body of the horse. Finally, the quantification of host preferences allows for discussion of implications for the transmission of Culicoides‐borne pathogens such as bluetongue virus.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Host-Seeking Activity of Bluetongue Virus Vectors: Endo/Exophagy and Circadian Rhythm of Culicoides in Western Europe

Elvina Viennet; Claire Garros; Ignace Rakotoarivony; Xavier Allene; Laëtitia Gardes; Jonathan Lhoir; Ivanna Fuentes; Roger Venail; Didier Crochet; Renaud Lancelot; Mickaël Riou; Catherine Moulia; Thierry Baldet; Thomas Balenghien

Feeding success of free-living hematophagous insects depends on their ability to be active when hosts are available and to reach places where hosts are accessible. When the hematophagous insect is a vector of pathogens, determining the components of host-seeking behavior is of primary interest for the assessment of transmission risk. Our aim was to describe endo/exophagy and circadian host-seeking activity of Palaearctic Culicoides species, which are major biting pests and arbovirus vectors, using drop traps and suction traps baited with four sheep, as bluetongue virus hosts. Collections were carried out in the field, a largely-open stable and an enclosed stable during six collection periods of 24 hours in April/May, in late June and in September/October 2010 in western France. A total of 986 Culicoides belonging to 13 species, mainly C. brunnicans and C. obsoletus, was collected on animal baits. Culicoides brunnicans was clearly exophagic, whereas C. obsoletus was able to enter stables. Culicoides brunnicans exhibited a bimodal pattern of host-seeking activity with peaks just after sunrise and sunset. Culicoides obsoletus was active before sunset in spring and autumn and after sunset in summer, thus illustrating influence of other parameters than light, especially temperature. Description of host-seeking behaviors allowed us to discuss control strategies for transmission of Culicoides-borne pathogens, such as bluetongue virus. However, practical vector-control recommendations are difficult to provide because of the variation in the degree of endophagy and time of host-seeking activity.


Veterinary Microbiology | 2017

Fetopathic effects of experimental Schmallenberg virus infection in pregnant goats

Eve Laloy; Emmanuel Bréard; Sascha Trapp; Nathalie Pozzi; Mickaël Riou; Céline Barc; Sylvain Breton; Rémi Delaunay; Nathalie Cordonnier; Sophie Chateau-Joubert; Didier Crochet; Julie Gouzil; Typhaine Hébert; Maxime Raimbourg; C. Viarouge; D. Vitour; B. Durand; C. Ponsart; Stéphan Zientara

Schmallenberg virus (SBV) is an emerging virus responsible for congenital malformations in the offspring of domestic ruminants. It is speculated that infection of pregnant dams may also lead to a significant number of unrecognized fetal losses during the early period of gestation. To assess the pathogenic effects of SBV infection of goats in early pregnancy, we inoculated dams at day 28 or 42 of gestation and followed the animals until day 55 of gestation. Viremia in the absence of clinical signs was detected in all virus-inoculated goats. Fetal deaths were observed in several goats infected at day 28 or 42 of gestation and were invariably associated with the presence of viral genomic RNA in the affected fetuses. Among the viable fetuses, two displayed lesions in the central nervous system (porencephaly) in the presence of viral genome and antigen. All fetuses from goats infected at day 42 and the majority of fetuses from goats infected at day 28 of gestation contained viral genomic RNA. Viral genome was widely distributed in these fetuses and their respective placentas, and infectious virus could be isolated from several organs and placentomes of the viable fetuses. Our results show that fetuses of pregnant goats are susceptible to vertical SBV infection during early pregnancy spanning at least the period between day 28 and 42 of gestation. The outcomes of experimental SBV infection assessed at day 55 of gestation include fetal mortalities, viable fetuses displaying lesions of the central nervous system, as well as viable fetuses without any detectable lesion.


International pest control | 2011

Assessment of vector/host contact: Comparison of animal-baited traps and UV-light/suction trap for collecting Culicoides biting midges

Elvina Viennet; Claire Garros; Renaud Lancelot; Laëtitia Gardes; Ignace Rakotoarivony; Didier Crochet; Jean-Claude Delécolle; Catherine Moulia; Thierry Baldet; Thomas Balenghien


Archive | 2010

Assessment of the vector/host contact: comparison of animal baited-traps to collect #Culicoides#, bluetongue virus vectors

Elvina Viennet; Claire Garros; Xavier Allene; Laëtitia Gardes; Ignace Rakotoarivony; Didier Crochet; Catherine Moulia; Thierry Baldet; Thomas Balenghien


1st International Workshop on Veterinary Biosignals and Biodevices | 2018

Non-invasive Core Temperature Transponders as a Problem Alert in Sheep Farming Management

Caroline Chylinski; Jacques Cortet; Didier Crochet; Pierre Sarradin; J. Cabaret


Archive | 2012

Assessment of the host/vector contact for Palaearctic #Culicoides# biting midges (Diptera: Ceratopogonidae). Implications for Orbivirus transmission

Elvina Viennet; Thomas Balenghien; Xavier Allene; Ignace Rakotoarivony; Didier Crochet; Jean Claude Delecolle; Renaud Lancelot; Catherine Moulia; Thierry Baldet; Claire Garros


Archive | 2011

Vector-host relationship assessment : comparison of two animal baited-traps in the collection of bluetongue virus vectors

Elvina Viennet; Claire Garros; Didier Crochet; Renaud Lancelot; Catherine Moulia; Thierry Baldet; Thomas Balenghien


Ecohealth | 2011

Endo/exophagy and circadian rhythm of culicoides biting midges (Diptera: Ceratopogonidae), vectors of bluetongue virus

Elvina Viennet; Claire Garros; Didier Crochet; Renaud Lancelot; Catherine Moulia; Thierry Baldet; Thomas Balenghien

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Claire Garros

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Renaud Lancelot

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Thomas Balenghien

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Elvina Viennet

Australian National University

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Ignace Rakotoarivony

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Laëtitia Gardes

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Xavier Allene

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Thierry Baldet

Institut de recherche pour le développement

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Thierry Baldet

Institut de recherche pour le développement

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