Department of Medical Entomology, National Institute of Infectious Diseases, Shinjuku, Tokyo, 162-8640, Japan.
Program for Nurturing Global Leaders in Tropical and Emerging Communicable Diseases, Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, Nagasaki University, Nagasaki, Nagasaki, 852-8523, Japan.
Parasit Vectors. 2021 Sep 26;14(1):494. doi: 10.1186/s13071-021-04995-w.
In Hokkaido, northern island of Japan, at least seven cases of falciparum malaria were reported by 1951. A survey conducted at that time was unsuccessful in implicating any mosquito species as the possible vector. Although active anopheline mosquito surveillance continued until the middle of the 1980s, there is very limited information on their current status and distribution in Japan. Therefore, this study is an update on the current status and distribution of anopheline mosquitoes in Hokkaido based on a 15-year entomological surveillance between 2001 and 2015.
A survey of mosquitoes was conducted at 22 sites in Hokkaido, Japan, from 2001 to 2015. Adult mosquitoes were collected from cowsheds, lakesides, shrubs, and habitats ranging from open grassland to coniferous forest using a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) miniature light trap enhanced with dry ice, aspirators, and sweeping nets. Larvae were collected from lakes, ponds, swamps, stagnant and flowing rivers, and paddy fields. All specimens were morphologically identified and subjected to polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-based sequence analysis of the internal transcribed spacer 2 ( ITS2) region of rDNA. Phylogenetic trees were reconstructed using the neighbor-joining method with the Kimura 2-parameter model on MEGA X version 10.2.2.
A total of 46 anopheline specimens were used for the phylogenetic analysis. During the survey, a new member of the Anopheles hyrcanus group, An. belenrae, was discovered in eastern Hokkaido in 2004. Anopheles belenrae has since then been consistently found and confirmed to inhabit only this area of Japan. Four members of the An. hyrcanus group, namely An. belenrae, An. engarensis, An. lesteri, and An. sineroides, have been found in Hokkaido. The results also suggest that An. sinensis, formerly a dominant species throughout Japan, has become a rarely found species, at least currently in Hokkaido.
The updated distribution of anopheline mosquitoes in Hokkaido, Japan, showed considerable differences from that observed in previous surveys conducted from 1969 to 1984. In particular, areas where An. sinensis was previously distributed may have been greatly reduced in Hokkaido. The phylogenetic analysis revealed a novel An. hyrcanus group member identified as An. belenrae, described in South Korea in 2005. It is interesting that An. belenrae was confirmed to inhabit only eastern Hokkaido, Japan.
在日本北海道,至少有 7 例恶性疟病例于 1951 年报告。当时进行的一项调查未能确定任何蚊子种类可能是潜在的传播媒介。尽管在 20 世纪 80 年代中期之前一直在进行活跃的按蚊监测,但有关其在日本当前状况和分布的信息非常有限。因此,本研究基于 2001 年至 2015 年的 15 年昆虫学监测,更新了北海道按蚊的现状和分布。
2001 年至 2015 年期间,在日本北海道的 22 个地点进行了蚊子调查。使用疾病控制和预防中心(CDC)的微型冰上诱捕器、吸气器和扫网从牛舍、湖边、灌木丛和从开阔草原到针叶林的各种栖息地收集成蚊。从湖泊、池塘、沼泽、静止和流动的河流以及稻田中收集幼虫。所有标本均通过形态学鉴定,并进行了 rDNA 内转录间隔区 2(ITS2)的聚合酶链反应(PCR)-基于序列分析。使用 MEGA X 版本 10.2.2 的邻接法和 Kimura 2-参数模型重建了系统发育树。
共使用了 46 只按蚊标本进行了系统发育分析。在调查期间,于 2004 年在北海道东部发现了一个新的疟蚊属 Hyrcanus 组成员,即疟蚊属贝伦雷亚。此后,疟蚊属贝伦雷亚一直在该地区被发现并确认仅在日本的这一地区栖息。在北海道发现了疟蚊属 Hyrcanus 组的四个成员,即疟蚊属贝伦雷亚、疟蚊属恩加伦斯、疟蚊属莱斯蒂和疟蚊属辛内罗斯。结果还表明,以前在日本占主导地位的疟蚊属辛内罗斯已成为一种罕见的物种,至少目前在北海道是如此。
日本北海道按蚊的最新分布与 1969 年至 1984 年进行的先前调查相比存在相当大的差异。特别是,以前疟蚊属辛内罗斯分布的地区在北海道可能已经大大减少。系统发育分析显示,一种新的疟蚊属 Hyrcanus 组成员被鉴定为疟蚊属贝伦雷亚,该成员于 2005 年在韩国被描述。有趣的是,疟蚊属贝伦雷亚被证实仅栖息在日本北海道东部。