ERGO - Environmental Research Group Oxford, c/o Department Zoology, Mansfield Road, Oxford OX1 3SZ, United Kingdom.
Waen Associates, Y Waen, Islaw'r Dref, Dolgellau, Gwynedd LL40 1TS, United Kingdom.
Sci Total Environ. 2022 Nov 15;847:157566. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.157566. Epub 2022 Jul 28.
The global distribution of the yellow fever mosquito Aedes aegypti is the subject of considerable attention because of its pivotal role as a biological vector of several high profile disease pathogens including dengue, chikungunya, yellow fever, and Zika viruses. There is also a lot of interest in the projected future species' distribution. However, less effort has been focused on its historical distribution, which has changed substantially over the past 100 years, especially in southern Europe where it was once widespread, but largely disappeared by the middle of the 20th century. The present work utilises all available historical records of the distribution of Ae. aegypti in southern Europe, the Near East within the Mediterranean Basin and North Africa from the late 19th century until the 1960's to construct a spatial distribution model using matching historical climatic and demographic data. The resulting model was then implemented using current climate and demographic data to assess the potential distribution of the vector in the present. The models were rerun with several different assumptions about the thresholds that determine habitat suitability for Ae. aegypti. The historical model matches the historical distributions well. When it is run with current climate values, the predicted present day distribution is somewhat broader than it used to be particularly in north-west France, North Africa and Turkey. Though it is beginning to reappear in the eastern Caucasus, this 'potential' distribution clearly does not match the actual distribution of the species, which suggests some other factors are responsible for its absence. Future distributions based on the historical model also do not match future distributions derived from models based only on present day vector distributions, which predict little or no presence in the Mediterranean Region. At the same time, the vector is widespread in the USA which is predicted to consolidate its range there in future. This contradiction and the implication for possible re-invasion of Europe are discussed.
黄热病蚊埃及伊蚊的全球分布是一个备受关注的问题,因为它作为几种高知名度疾病病原体(包括登革热、基孔肯雅热、黄热病和寨卡病毒)的生物传播媒介起着关键作用。人们也对未来物种分布的预测非常感兴趣。然而,人们对其历史分布的关注较少,过去 100 年来,它的分布发生了很大变化,特别是在曾经广泛分布的南欧,到 20 世纪中叶,它已基本消失。本研究利用了 19 世纪末至 20 世纪 60 年代在南欧、地中海盆地的近东和北非的所有可用的埃及伊蚊分布的历史记录,利用历史气候和人口数据构建了一个空间分布模型。然后,使用当前的气候和人口数据来实现该模型,以评估该媒介在当前的潜在分布。该模型使用了几种不同的关于确定埃及伊蚊栖息地适宜性的阈值的假设进行了重新运行。历史模型很好地匹配了历史分布。当使用当前的气候值运行该模型时,预测的当今分布范围比过去稍宽,特别是在法国西北部、北非和土耳其。尽管它开始在东高加索重新出现,但这种“潜在”分布显然与该物种的实际分布不匹配,这表明其他一些因素是其缺失的原因。基于历史模型的未来分布也与仅基于当前媒介分布的模型得出的未来分布不匹配,后者预测在地中海地区几乎没有或没有存在。与此同时,该媒介在美国广泛存在,预计未来在那里的范围将扩大。这一矛盾以及对欧洲可能再次入侵的影响进行了讨论。