扩大对北美北极地区蚊子(双翅目:库蚊科)和加利福尼亚血清群病毒分布的了解。

IF 2
Carol-Anne Villeneuve, Jumari Snyman, Louwrens P Snyman, Géraldine G Gouin, Emily Jenkins, Valeria Martinez, Tom Hobman, Anil Kumar, Isabelle Dusfour, Nicolas Lecomte, Patrick A Leighton
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引用次数: 0

摘要

气候变化正在重塑北极生态系统,增加了由加利福尼亚血清群(CSG)病毒(包括詹姆斯敦峡谷病毒(JCV)和雪鞋兔病毒(SSHV))等病原体引起的媒介传播疾病的风险。尽管出现了新的公共卫生威胁,但关于北极蚊子种群和CSG病毒流行率的数据仍然有限。为了解决这一差距,我们在加拿大北部和美国的8个地点开展了一项为期3年的蚊子监测计划,通过使用蝴蝶网的标准化协议,让当地社区成员参与蚊子收集。从4038只蚊中鉴定出18种,其中美根伊蚊属17种。我们还报道了伊蚊Howard, Dyar, & Knab(1913),隐纹伊蚊Vockeroth(1954)和斯宾塞伊蚊(Theobald, 1901)的新分布记录。在7个站点的10种蚊子中检测到JCV,而在单个站点仅检测到1种SSHV。值得注意的是,JCV在Ae。伊蚊、斑伊蚊(Walker, 1948)和斑伊蚊于1919年首次在北美出现。在Nunavut的Cambridge Bay检测到JCV,仅有3种北极蚊种存在,没有一种被认为是潜在的JCV媒介。这一发现提出了可能存在未记录的媒介物种或以前未被认识到的北极蚊子传播作用。JCV跨物种和地点的广泛分布表明存在广泛的地方性传播,强调需要重新评估北极蚊子在快速变化的气候中作为疾病媒介的潜力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Expanding knowledge of mosquito (Diptera: Culicidae) and California serogroup viruses distributions in the North American Arctic.

Climate change is reshaping Arctic ecosystems, heightening the risk of vector-borne diseases caused by pathogens such as California serogroup (CSG) viruses, including Jamestown Canyon virus (JCV) and Snowshoe Hare virus (SSHV). Despite their emerging public health threat, data on Arctic mosquito populations and CSG virus prevalence remain limited. To address this gap, we conducted a 3-yr mosquito surveillance program at 8 sites across northern Canada and the United States, engaging local community members in mosquito collection through a standardized protocol using a butterfly net. From 4,038 sampled mosquitoes, we identified 18 species-17 of which were from the genus Aedes Meigen, 1818. We also reported new distribution records for Aedes euedes Howard, Dyar, & Knab, 1913, Aedes implicatus Vockeroth, 1954, and Aedes spencerii (Theobald, 1901). JCV was detected in 10 mosquito species across 7 sites, while SSHV was detected in just one species at a single site. Notably, JCV was found in Ae. euedes, Aedes impiger (Walker, 1948), and Aedes pionips Dyar, 1919 for the first time in North America. JCV was detected in Cambridge Bay, Nunavut, where only 3 Arctic mosquito species were present, none of which are recognized as potential JCV vectors. This finding raises the possibility of undocumented vector species or a previously unrecognized transmission role for Arctic mosquitoes. The broad distribution of JCV across species and locations suggests widespread enzootic transmission, underscoring the need to reassess the potential of Arctic mosquitoes as disease vectors in a rapidly changing climate.

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