Abstract: | A Saskatchewan strain of the mosquito Culex tarsalis, transmitted a local strain of western equine encephalitis virus from chick to chick, between four and 44 days after an infective blood meal. At incubation temperatures of 69 and 75°F, 120 transmissions occurred out of a possible 141, and all but seven of these were by single infected mosquitoes. At 75°F virus titers in individual mosquitoes were more uniform and transmission was more efficient, than at 69°F, although infection rates were similar at both temperatures. The minimum concentration of virus required to infect 50% of C.tarsalis was 102.5 intracerebral three-week old mouse LD50 per 0.03 ml of donor blood. These findings provide direct evidence that C. tarsalis of Saskatchewan is a highly efficient vector of western equine encephalitis virus. |