Miles Lindsay S, Verrelli Brian C, Adams Richard, Francioli Yannick Z, Card Daren C, Balvin Ondřej, Castoe Todd A, Booth Warren
Department of Entomology, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Blacksburg, VA, USA.
Center for Biological Data Science, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA, USA.
Biol Lett. 2025 May;21(5):20250061. doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2025.0061. Epub 2025 May 28.
There are calls for research into the historical evolutionary relationships between humans and their commensals, as it would greatly inform models that predict the spread of pests and diseases under urban population expansion. The earliest civilizations emerged approximately 10 000 years ago and created conditions ideal for the establishment and spread of commensal urban pests. Commensal relations between humans and pests likely emerged with these early civilizations; however, for most species (e.g. German cockroach and black rat), these relationships have formed relatively recently-within the last 5000 years-raising the question of whether others could have emerged earlier. Following comparative whole genome analysis of bed bugs, , belonging to two genetically distinct lineages, one associated with bats and the other with humans, coupled with demographic modelling, our findings suggests that while their association with humans dates back potentially hundreds of thousands of years, a dramatic change in the effective population size of the human-associated lineage occurred approximately 13 000 years ago; a pattern not found in the bat-associated lineage. The timing and magnitude of the demographic patterns provide compelling evidence that the human-associated lineage closely tracked the demographic history of modern humans and their movement into the first cities. As such, bed bugs may represent the first urban pest insect species.
有人呼吁对人类与其共生生物之间的历史进化关系进行研究,因为这将极大地为预测城市人口扩张情况下害虫和疾病传播的模型提供信息。最早的文明大约在一万年前出现,为城市共生害虫的建立和传播创造了理想条件。人类与害虫之间的共生关系可能随着这些早期文明而出现;然而,对于大多数物种(如德国小蠊和黑鼠)来说,这些关系是在相对较近的时期——在过去5000年内形成的——这就引发了是否有其他物种可能更早出现的问题。在对属于两个基因不同谱系的臭虫进行比较全基因组分析,并结合种群动态建模后,我们的研究结果表明,虽然它们与人类的关联可能追溯到数十万年前,但与人类相关的谱系的有效种群大小在大约13000年前发生了显著变化;这种模式在与蝙蝠相关的谱系中未发现。种群动态模式的时间和规模提供了令人信服的证据,表明与人类相关的谱系紧密跟踪了现代人类的种群历史及其向首批城市的迁移。因此,臭虫可能代表了第一种城市害虫昆虫物种。