Literature detail

West Nile virus epidemics in North America are driven by shifts in mosquito feeding behavior.

A Marm Kilpatrick1 Laura D Kramer Matthew J Jones Peter P Marra Peter Daszak
Affiliations 1 institutions
  1. The Consortium for Conservation Medicine, New York, New York, United States of America. [email protected]
PMID 16494532 2006 PLoS Biol eng ppublish
PubMed DOI Browse context

Article

Publication summary

West Nile virus (WNV) has caused repeated large-scale human epidemics in North America since it was first detected in 1999 and is now the dominant vector-borne disease in this continent. Understanding the factors that determine the intensity of the spillover of this zoonotic pathogen from birds to humans (via mosquitoes) is a prerequisite for predicting and preventing human epidemics. We integrated mosquito feeding behavior with data on the population dynamics and WNV epidemiology of mosquitoes, birds, and humans. We show that Culex pipiens, the dominant enzootic (bird-to-bird) and bridge (bird-to-human) vector of WNV in urbanized areas in the northeast and north-central United States, shifted its feeding preferences from birds to humans by 7-fold during late summer and early fall, coinciding with the dispersal of its preferred host (American robins, Turdus migratorius) and the rise in human WNV infections. We also show that feeding shifts in Cx. tarsalis amplify human WNV epidemics in Colorado and California and occur during periods of robin dispersal and migration. Our results provide a direct explanation for the timing and intensity of human WNV epidemics. Shifts in feeding from competent avian hosts early in an epidemic to incompetent humans after mosquito infection prevalences are high result in synergistic effects that greatly amplify the number of human infections of this and other pathogens. Our results underscore the dramatic effects of vector behavior in driving the transmission of zoonotic pathogens to humans.

Animals Base Sequence Birds Culicidae DNA, Viral Feeding Behavior Food Chain Humans North America Time Factors Urban Population West Nile Fever West Nile virus Zoonoses

Structured evidence records

Evidence records

5 total
2 records
Extraction confidence 0.90
Key finding

Culex pipiens shifted its feeding from American robins to humans during late summer and early fall, coinciding with robin dispersal and increased human West Nile virus infections in the northeastern and north-central United States.

Virus
Location
Supporting text

Culex pipiens, the dominant enzootic (bird-to-bird) and bridge (bird-to-human) vector of WNV in urbanized areas in the northeast and north-central United States, shifted its feeding preferences from birds to humans by 7-fold during late summer and early fall, coinciding with the dispersal of its preferred host (American robins, Turdus migratorius) and the rise in human WNV infections.

Method
integration of mosquito feeding behavior and population dynamics data
Geographic raw
northeast and north-central United States
Country inferred
United States
Extraction confidence 0.85
Key finding

Feeding shifts in Culex tarsalis during robin dispersal and migration amplify human West Nile virus epidemics in Colorado and California.

Virus
Location
Supporting text

Feeding shifts in Cx. tarsalis amplify human WNV epidemics in Colorado and California and occur during periods of robin dispersal and migration.

Method
integration of mosquito feeding behavior and population dynamics data
Geographic raw
Colorado and California
Country inferred
United States
2 records
Extraction confidence 0.80
Key finding

Culex pipiens mosquitoes were monitored for feeding behavior and West Nile virus epidemiology, revealing a seasonal shift from birds to humans correlated with human epidemic intensity.

Virus
Location
Supporting text

We integrated mosquito feeding behavior with data on the population dynamics and WNV epidemiology of mosquitoes, birds, and humans. We show that Culex pipiens, the dominant enzootic (bird-to-bird) and bridge (bird-to-human) vector of WNV in urbanized areas in the northeast and north-central United States, shifted its feeding preferences from birds to humans by 7-fold during late summer and early fall.

Geographic raw
northeast and north-central United States
Country inferred
United States
Extraction confidence 0.80
Key finding

Culex tarsalis mosquitoes in Colorado and California were monitored for changes in feeding behavior linked to West Nile virus amplification and bird migration periods.

Virus
Location
Supporting text

We also show that feeding shifts in Cx. tarsalis amplify human WNV epidemics in Colorado and California and occur during periods of robin dispersal and migration.

Geographic raw
Colorado and California
Country inferred
United States
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.95
Key finding

Bird-to-human spillover of West Nile virus occurred via mosquito feeding shifts from birds to humans.

Virus
Location
Supporting text

Culex pipiens, the dominant enzootic (bird-to-bird) and bridge (bird-to-human) vector of WNV in urbanized areas in the northeast and north-central United States, shifted its feeding preferences from birds to humans by 7-fold during late summer and early fall, coinciding with ... the rise in human WNV infections.

Method
mosquito feeding behavior analysis; epidemiological modeling
Study design
field surveillance
Transmission direction
animal-to-human
Geographic raw
northeast and north-central United States
Country inferred
United States