Human biting mosquitoes and implications for West Nile virus transmission

dc.contributor.author

Uelmen, Johnny A

dc.contributor.author

Lamcyzk, Bennett

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Irwin, Patrick

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Bartlett, Dan

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Stone, Chris

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Mackay, Andrew

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Arsenault-Benoit, Arielle

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Ryan, Sadie J

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Mutebi, John-Paul

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Hamer, Gabriel L

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Fritz, Megan

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Smith, Rebecca L

dc.date.accessioned

2023-04-14T20:26:19Z

dc.date.available

2023-04-14T20:26:19Z

dc.date.issued

2023-12-01

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2023-04-14T20:25:57Z

dc.description.abstract

Background: West Nile virus (WNV), primarily vectored by mosquitoes of the genus Culex, is the most important mosquito-borne pathogen in North America, having infected thousands of humans and countless wildlife since its arrival in the USA in 1999. In locations with dedicated mosquito control programs, surveillance methods often rely on frequent testing of mosquitoes collected in a network of gravid traps (GTs) and CO2-baited light traps (LTs). Traps specifically targeting oviposition-seeking (e.g. GTs) and host-seeking (e.g. LTs) mosquitoes are vulnerable to trap bias, and captured specimens are often damaged, making morphological identification difficult. Methods: This study leverages an alternative mosquito collection method, the human landing catch (HLC), as a means to compare sampling of potential WNV vectors to traditional trapping methods. Human collectors exposed one limb for 15 min at crepuscular periods (5:00–8:30 am and 6:00–9:30 pm daily, the time when Culex species are most actively host-seeking) at each of 55 study sites in suburban Chicago, Illinois, for two summers (2018 and 2019). Results: A total of 223 human-seeking mosquitoes were caught by HLC, of which 46 (20.6%) were mosquitoes of genus Culex. Of these 46 collected Culex specimens, 34 (73.9%) were Cx. salinarius, a potential WNV vector species not thought to be highly abundant in upper Midwest USA. Per trapping effort, GTs and LTs collected > 7.5-fold the number of individual Culex specimens than HLC efforts. Conclusions: The less commonly used HLC method provides important insight into the complement of human-biting mosquitoes in a region with consistent WNV epidemics. This study underscores the value of the HLC collection method as a complementary tool for surveillance to aid in WNV vector species characterization. However, given the added risk to the collector, novel mitigation methods or alternative approaches must be explored to incorporate HLC collections safely and strategically into control programs. Graphical Abstract: [Figure not available: see fulltext.].

dc.identifier.issn

1756-3305

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/27048

dc.language

en

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Springer Science and Business Media LLC

dc.relation.ispartof

Parasites and Vectors

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10.1186/s13071-022-05603-1

dc.title

Human biting mosquitoes and implications for West Nile virus transmission

dc.type

Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Uelmen, Johnny A|0000-0003-3057-5107

pubs.issue

1

pubs.organisational-group

Duke

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Trinity College of Arts & Sciences

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Staff

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Evolutionary Anthropology

pubs.publication-status

Accepted

pubs.volume

16

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