Institute of Integrative and Comparative Biology, University of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9JT, UK.
Infect Genet Evol. 2012 Dec;12(8):1831-41. doi: 10.1016/j.meegid.2012.07.019. Epub 2012 Aug 11.
Host selection in blood-sucking arthropods has important evolutionary and ecological implications for the transmission dynamics, distribution and host-specificity of the parasites they transmit. The black salt-marsh mosquito (Aedes taeniorhynchus Wiedemann) is distributed throughout tropical to temperate coastal zones in the Americas, and continental populations are primarily mammalphilic. It is the only indigenous mosquito in the Galápagos Islands, having colonised the archipelago around 200,000 years ago, potentially adapting its host selection, and in the process, altering the dynamics of vector mediated pathogen interactions in the archipelago. Here, we use blood-meal analysis and PCR-based parasite screening approach to determine the blood-feeding patterns of A. taeniorhynchus in the Galápagos Islands and identify potential parasite transmission with which this mosquito could be involved. Our results show that A. taeniorhynchus feeds equally on mammals and reptiles, and only one avian sample was observed in 190 successful PCR amplifications from blood meals. However, we detected endemic filarial worms and Haemoproteus parasites known to infect various Galápagos bird species in mosquito thoraces, suggesting that feeding on birds must occur at low frequency, and that A. taeniorhynchus may play a role in maintaining some avian vector-borne pathogens, although more work is needed to explore this possibility. We also isolated three different DNA sequences corresponding to hemogregarine parasites of the genus Hepatozoon from mosquito and iguana blood samples, suggesting that more than one species of Hepatozoon parasites are present in Galápagos. Phylogenetic analysis of Hepatozoon 18sRNA sequences indicates that A. taeniorhynchus may have facilitated a recent breakdown in host-species association of formerly isolated Hepatozoon spp. infecting the reptile populations in the Galápagos Islands.
吸血节肢动物的宿主选择对寄生虫的传播动态、分布和宿主特异性具有重要的进化和生态意义,这些寄生虫由吸血节肢动物传播。黑盐水蚊(Aedes taeniorhynchus Wiedemann)分布于美洲的热带至温带沿海地区,其大陆种群主要以哺乳动物为食。它是加拉帕戈斯群岛唯一的本地蚊子,大约在 20 万年前就已经在群岛上定居,可能改变了其宿主选择,并在这个过程中改变了群岛上媒介传播病原体相互作用的动态。在这里,我们使用血液餐分析和基于 PCR 的寄生虫筛查方法来确定加拉帕戈斯群岛上 A. taeniorhynchus 的吸血模式,并确定可能涉及的潜在寄生虫传播。我们的研究结果表明,A. taeniorhynchus 同样以哺乳动物和爬行动物为食,在 190 个成功的 PCR 扩增血液样本中仅观察到一个鸟类样本。然而,我们在蚊子胸部分离出了内寄生线虫和 Haemoproteus 寄生虫,这些寄生虫已知感染了各种加拉帕戈斯鸟类,这表明蚊子以鸟类为食的频率很低,而且 A. taeniorhynchus 可能在维持一些鸟类媒介传播病原体方面发挥作用,尽管需要更多的工作来探索这种可能性。我们还从蚊子和鬣蜥血液样本中分离出了三种不同的血红密螺旋体寄生虫 DNA 序列,这表明在加拉帕戈斯群岛存在不止一种 Hepatozoon 寄生虫。Hepatozoon 18sRNA 序列的系统发育分析表明,A. taeniorhynchus 可能导致了以前感染加拉帕戈斯群岛爬行动物种群的孤立 Hepatozoon spp. 的宿主物种关联的最近破裂。