Centre for Monitoring of Vectors, Food and Consumer Product Safety Authority, P.O. Box 9102, 6700 HC, Wageningen, The Netherlands.
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Yale University, New Haven, CT, 06511, USA.
Parasit Vectors. 2017 Dec 8;10(1):603. doi: 10.1186/s13071-017-2555-0.
Air-borne introduction of exotic mosquitoes to Schiphol airport in the Netherlands has been considered plausible based upon findings of mosquitoes in aircraft cabins during 2008, 2010 and 2011. Beginning in 2013, surveillance efforts at Schiphol had focused on promptly detecting accidental introductions at the airport facilities in order to quickly react and avoid temporary proliferation or establishment of mosquito populations, identify the origin of the introductions, and avoid potential transmission of vector-borne diseases.
BG-Mosquitaire mosquito traps were set at the most likely locations for arrival of the invasive Aedes mosquitoes as part of the mosquito monitoring program at Schiphol airport. Samples were collected bi-weekly. Upon detection of exotic specimens, information about the origin of the flights arriving to the particular location at the airport where specimens were captured was requested from airport authorities. The GIS tool Intersect was then used to identify airports of origin common to positive trapping locations during the specific trapping period. Captured Aedes aegypti mosquitoes were subsequently genotyped at 12 highly polymorphic microsatellite markers and compared to a reference database of 79 populations around the world to further narrow down their location of origin.
In 2016, six adult yellow fever mosquitoes were captured indoors and outdoors at the airport of Schiphol in the Netherlands confirming, for the first time, air-borne transport of this mosquito vector species into Europe. Mosquitoes were captured during three time periods: June, September and October. Containers carried by aircrafts are considered the most likely pathway for this introduction. GIS analysis and genetic assignment tests on these mosquitoes point to North America or the Middle East as possible origins, but the small sample size prevents us from reliably identifying the geographic origin of this introduction.
The arrival of Ae. aegypti mosquitoes to Schiphol airport from flights arriving from overseas, demonstrates the potential risk of international flights to public health as carriers of arthropod vectors of disease. The results strongly suggest that disinsection of containers and their storage compartments inside the aircrafts could contribute to preventing future introductions of mosquito vectors. Invasive mosquito species introduced by aircrafts from overseas could become seasonally established during the warmer months in Europe, or permanently in certain climatically suitable areas for the species, with major consequences for human health.
2008 年、2010 年和 2011 年在飞机机舱内发现蚊子后,人们认为将外来蚊子引入荷兰史基浦机场的空气传播途径是合理的。从 2013 年开始,史基浦的监测工作重点是及时发现机场设施中的意外引入,以便快速做出反应,避免蚊子种群的暂时扩散或建立,确定引入的来源,并避免潜在的虫媒疾病传播。
作为史基浦机场蚊子监测计划的一部分,BG-Mosquitaire 诱蚊器被设置在最有可能到达入侵的埃及伊蚊的地方。每两周收集一次样本。一旦发现外来标本,就会向机场当局请求有关到达机场特定地点的航班的来源信息,这些航班捕获了标本。然后使用 GIS 工具 Intersect 来识别在特定诱捕期内阳性诱捕地点的共同起源机场。随后,对捕获的埃及伊蚊进行 12 个高度多态性微卫星标记的基因分型,并与全球 79 个种群的参考数据库进行比较,以进一步缩小其来源地。
2016 年,在荷兰史基浦机场室内外共捕获 6 只成年黄热病蚊子,首次证实这种蚊子媒介物种通过空气传播进入欧洲。蚊子在 6 月、9 月和 10 月三个时期被捕获。飞机携带的容器被认为是这种引入的最可能途径。对这些蚊子进行 GIS 分析和遗传分配测试表明,北美的可能性更大美洲或中东,但由于样本量小,我们无法可靠地确定这次引入的地理来源。
从海外航班抵达史基浦机场的埃及伊蚊的到来,表明国际航班对公共卫生的潜在风险,因为它们是疾病节肢动物媒介的携带者。结果强烈表明,对飞机内容器及其储存隔间进行消毒可能有助于防止未来蚊子媒介的引入。从海外飞机引入的入侵蚊子物种可能会在欧洲温暖的月份季节性建立,或者在某些对该物种气候适宜的地区永久建立,这对人类健康将产生重大影响。