Savannah River Ecology Lab, University of Georgia, Aiken, SC, 29801, USA; Warnell School of Forestry and Natural Resources, University of Georgia, Athens, GA, 30602, USA.
Savannah River Ecology Lab, University of Georgia, Aiken, SC, 29801, USA.
Environ Pollut. 2021 Jan 15;269:116213. doi: 10.1016/j.envpol.2020.116213. Epub 2020 Dec 2.
Metal pollution is a growing concern that affects the health of humans and animals globally. Copper is an essential insect micronutrient required for respiration, pigmentation and oxidative stress protection but can also act as a potentially toxic trace element. While several studies have focused on the negative fitness effects of copper on the aquatic larvae of mosquitoes, the effects of larval copper exposure on adult mosquito fitness (i.e., survival and fecundity) and their ability to transmit parasites (i.e., vector competence) remains unclear. Here, using a well-studied model vector-parasite system, the mosquito Aedes aegypti and parasite Dirofilaria immitis, we show that sublethal copper exposure in larval mosquitoes alters adult female fecundity and vector competence. Specifically, mosquitoes exposed to copper had a hormetic fecundity response and mosquitoes exposed to 600 μg/L of copper had significantly fewer infective parasite larvae than control mosquitoes not exposed to copper. Thus, exposure of mosquito larvae to copper levels far below EPA-mandated safe drinking water limits (1300 μg/L) can impact vector-borne disease dynamics not only by reducing mosquito abundance (through increased larval mortality), but also by reducing parasite transmission risk. Our results also demonstrated that larval copper is retained through metamorphosis to adulthood in mosquitoes, indicating that these insects could transfer copper from aquatic to terrestrial foodwebs, especially in urban areas where they are abundant. To our knowledge this is the first study to directly link metal exposure with vector competence (i.e., ability to transmit parasites) in any vector-parasite system. Additionally, it also demonstrates unequivocally that mosquitoes can transfer contaminants from aquatic to terrestrial ecosystems. These results have broad implications for public health because they directly linking contaminants and vector-borne disease dynamics, as well as linking mosquitoes and contaminant dynamics.
金属污染是一个日益严重的问题,影响着全球人类和动物的健康。铜是昆虫呼吸、色素形成和氧化应激保护所必需的微量营养素,但也可以作为一种潜在的有毒微量元素。虽然有几项研究集中在铜对蚊子水生幼虫的负面影响上,但幼虫铜暴露对成年蚊子适应性(即生存和繁殖力)及其传播寄生虫的能力(即媒介效能)的影响尚不清楚。在这里,我们使用一种经过充分研究的模型载体-寄生虫系统,即埃及伊蚊和寄生虫犬恶丝虫,表明亚致死浓度的铜暴露会改变幼虫蚊子的成年雌性繁殖力和媒介效能。具体来说,暴露于铜的蚊子表现出激素样繁殖力反应,而暴露于 600μg/L 铜的蚊子携带的感染性寄生虫幼虫明显少于未暴露于铜的对照蚊子。因此,蚊子幼虫暴露于远远低于 EPA 规定的安全饮用水限值(1300μg/L)的铜水平,不仅可以通过增加幼虫死亡率来降低蚊子数量,从而影响虫媒疾病动态,还可以降低寄生虫传播风险。我们的研究结果还表明,铜在蚊子的变态过程中被保留到成年期,这表明这些昆虫可以将铜从水生食物网转移到陆地食物网,特别是在它们大量存在的城市地区。据我们所知,这是第一项直接将金属暴露与任何载体寄生虫系统中的媒介效能(即传播寄生虫的能力)联系起来的研究。此外,它还明确表明,蚊子可以将污染物从水生生态系统转移到陆地生态系统。这些结果对公共卫生具有广泛的意义,因为它们直接将污染物和虫媒疾病动态联系起来,以及将蚊子和污染物动态联系起来。