1. Recent History of Aedes aegypti: Vector Genomics and Epidemiology Records
- Author
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Panayiota Kotsakiozi, Andrea Gloria-Soria, and Jeffrey R. Powell
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Genomics ,Aedes aegypti ,medicine.disease_cause ,Dengue fever ,yellow fever ,03 medical and health sciences ,Epidemiology ,medicine ,Common name ,Chikungunya ,slave trade ,biology ,Yellow fever ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,dengue ,Overview Articles ,Editor's Choice ,030104 developmental biology ,Geography ,Vector (epidemiology) ,Ethnology ,history ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences - Abstract
Aedes aegypti bears the common name “the yellow fever mosquito,” although, today, it is of more concern as the major vector of dengue, chikungunya, and, most recently, Zika viruses. In the present article, we review recent work on the population genetics of this mosquito in efforts to reconstruct its recent (approximately 600 years) history and relate these findings to epidemiological records of occurrences of diseases transmitted by this species. The two sources of information are remarkably congruent. Ae. aegypti was introduced to the New World 400–550 years ago from its ancestral home in West Africa via European slave trade. Ships from the New World returning to their European ports of origin introduced the species to the Mediterranean region around 1800, where it became established until about 1950. The Suez Canal opened in 1869 and Ae. aegypti was introduced into Asia by the 1870s, then on to Australia (1887) and the South Pacific (1904).
- Published
- 2018