Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies, Millbrook, NY, 12545, USA.
Monmouth County Division of Mosquito Control, Tick-Borne Disease Laboratory, New Brunswick, NJ, 08901, USA.
Parasit Vectors. 2018 Apr 10;11(1):218. doi: 10.1186/s13071-018-2779-7.
Temperate urban landscapes support persistent and growing populations of Culex and Aedes mosquito vectors. Large urban mosquito populations can represent a significant risk for transmission of emergent arboviral infection. However, even large mosquito populations are only a risk to the animals they bite. The purpose of this study is to identify and assess spatial patterns of host-use in a temperate urban landscape with heterogeneous socio-economic and ecological conditions.
Mosquito blood meals were collected from neighborhoods categorized along a socio-economic gradient in Baltimore, MD, USA. Blood meal hosts were identified for two Aedes (Ae. albopictus and Ae. japonicus) and three Culex (Cx. pipiens, Cx. restuans and Cx. salinarius) species. The brown rat (Rattus norvegicus) was the most frequently detected host in both Aedes species and Cx. salinarius. Human biting was evident in Aedes and Culex species and the proportion of human blood meals from Ae. albopictus varied significantly with neighborhood socio-economic status. Aedes albopictus was most likely to feed on human blood hosts (at 50%) in residential blocks categorized as having income above the city median, although there were still more total human bites detected from lower income blocks where Ae. albopictus was more abundant. Birds were the most frequently detected Culex blood hosts but were absent from all Aedes sampled.
This study highlights fine-scale variation in host-use by medically important mosquito vectors and specifically investigates blood meal composition at spatial scales relevant to urban mosquito dispersal and human exposure. Further, the work emphasizes the importance of neighborhood economics and infrastructure management in shaping both the relative abundance of vectors and local blood feeding strategies. The invasive brown rat was an important blood source across vector species and neighborhoods in Baltimore. We show that social and economic conditions can be important predictors of transmission potential in urban landscapes and identify important questions about the role of rodents in supporting urban mosquito populations.
温带城市景观为库蚊和伊蚊等蚊虫媒介提供了持久且不断增长的种群。大量城市蚊虫种群可能会对新兴虫媒病毒感染的传播构成重大风险。然而,即使是大量的蚊虫种群也只对它们叮咬的动物构成威胁。本研究旨在确定和评估具有异质社会经济和生态条件的温带城市景观中的宿主利用的空间模式。
在美国马里兰州巴尔的摩市,根据社会经济梯度对居民区进行分类,收集了蚊虫的血餐。鉴定了两种伊蚊(埃及伊蚊和白纹伊蚊)和三种库蚊(库蚊、库蚊和库蚊)的血餐宿主。棕鼠(褐家鼠)是两种伊蚊和库蚊的最常见宿主。在伊蚊和库蚊中都有人类叮咬的证据,埃及伊蚊的人血餐比例与社区社会经济地位有显著差异。在收入高于城市中位数的住宅区,埃及伊蚊最有可能以人类血液为食(占 50%),尽管在埃及伊蚊更为丰富的低收入街区,仍检测到更多的总人类叮咬。鸟类是最常被检测到的库蚊血源,但在所有取样的伊蚊中都没有。
本研究强调了重要医学蚊虫媒介的宿主利用的细微变化,并特别在与城市蚊虫扩散和人类暴露相关的空间尺度上研究了血餐组成。此外,这项工作强调了邻里经济和基础设施管理在塑造媒介的相对丰度和当地吸血策略方面的重要性。入侵的棕鼠是巴尔的摩所有蚊种和社区的重要血液来源。我们表明,社会和经济条件可能是城市景观中传播潜力的重要预测因子,并确定了关于啮齿动物在支持城市蚊虫种群中的作用的重要问题。