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Using Bloodmeal Analysis to Assess Disease Risk to Wildlife at the New Northern Limit of a Mosquito Species
Authors:Andrea Egizi  Ellen S Martinsen  Holly Vuong  Kelly I Zimmerman  Ary Faraji  Dina M Fonseca
Institution:1.Center for Vector Biology, Department of Entomology,Rutgers University,New Brunswick,USA;2.Tick-Borne Disease Laboratory,Monmouth County Mosquito Control Division,Tinton Falls,USA;3.Center for Conservation Genomics,Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute,Washington,USA;4.National Youth Science Forum,Acton,Australia;5.Department of Earth and Environmental Studies,Montclair State University,Montclair,USA;6.Salt Lake City Mosquito Abatement District,Salt Lake City,USA
Abstract:The historically southeastern mosquito species Culex erraticus has over the last 30 years undergone a marked expansion north. We evaluated this species’ potential to participate in local disease cycles in the northeastern USA by identifying the vertebrate sources of blood in Cx. erraticus specimens from New Jersey. We found that the majority of bloodmeals (92.6%) were derived from birds, followed by 6.8% from mammals (of which half were human), and a single amphibian bloodmeal from a spring peeper (0.56%). Medium- and large-sized water birds from the order Pelecaniformes made up 60.4% of the bird species and 55.9% of all identified hosts. This group of birds is known enzootic hosts of arboviruses such as eastern equine encephalitis virus, for which Cx. erraticus is a competent vector. Additionally, we screened blooded mosquitoes for avian malaria parasites and identified three different lineages of Plasmodium, including what may represent a new Plasmodium species (likely a wetland bird specialist) in bloodmeals from Green Herons, a Great Egret, and a Double-Crested Cormorant. Our results support the utility of mosquito bloodmeals as sources of information about circulating wildlife pathogens and reveal the potential of range-expanding species to intensify local zoonoses and bridge enzootic pathogens to humans.
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