Ecology and Health Laboratory, Wellington School of Medicine and Health Sciences, University of Otago, Wellington, New Zealand.
Ecohealth. 2009 Jun;6(2):229-38. doi: 10.1007/s10393-009-0238-9. Epub 2009 May 15.
Human activities have been causing dramatic and unprecedented changes to the Earth's ecosystems, and are a primary factor associated with biological invasions. Disturbed and fragmented habitats allow some vector mosquitoes to thrive. The New Zealand landscape has been extensively modified since the arrival of humans, and there is accumulating evidence that the distribution of mosquitoes is being altered as a result of anthropogenic environmental changes. This study aimed to assess whether forest habitat size affected the community composition of mosquitoes, and whether the density of the introduced brushtail possum would benefit exotic mosquito species that feed primarily on mammal hosts. Extensive sampling of the mosquito community was carried out using dry ice-baited light traps, oviposition traps, and larval surveys. The results provided the first experimental evidence in New Zealand that changes in forest habitat size affect the indigenous and introduced mosquito fauna differently. The proportion of native species making up the mosquito community appears to be steadily reduced as native forest habitats become smaller. In contrast, the opposite pattern appears to occur for the introduced vector Aedes notoscriptus. Although there was a trend indicating that possums may have a negative impact on a native species (Culex pervigilans), the impact of these animals on the mosquito fauna remains unclear. The evidence suggests that the conservation of large pristine forest ecosystems in New Zealand could have human health implications.
人类活动已经对地球生态系统造成了巨大且前所未有的改变,并且是生物入侵的主要因素之一。受干扰和破碎化的栖息地使一些病媒蚊子得以大量繁殖。自人类到达以来,新西兰的景观已经发生了广泛的改变,越来越多的证据表明,由于人为的环境变化,蚊子的分布正在发生改变。本研究旨在评估森林栖息地大小是否会影响蚊子的群落组成,以及引入的帚尾袋貂的密度是否会有利于主要以哺乳动物为宿主的外来蚊子物种。本研究使用干冰诱饵灯诱捕器、产卵陷阱和幼虫调查对蚊子群落进行了广泛的采样。研究结果首次在新西兰提供了实验证据,表明森林栖息地大小的变化会对本地和引入的蚊子区系产生不同的影响。构成蚊子群落的本地物种的比例似乎随着本地森林栖息地的变小而稳步减少。相比之下,引入的病媒蚊子 Aedes notoscriptus 似乎出现了相反的模式。尽管有趋势表明负鼠可能对一种本地物种(库蚊属 Culex pervigilans)产生负面影响,但这些动物对蚊子区系的影响仍不清楚。有证据表明,保护新西兰大而原始的森林生态系统可能会对人类健康产生影响。