Molecular detection of avian parasites in Australian mosquitoes (Culicidae)
Ashleigh M Peck, Alan Lymbery, Siobhon Egan, Amanda Ash

TL;DR
This study used mosquitoes to detect avian parasites in Western Australia, finding new parasite lineages and highlighting Culex mosquitoes as key carriers.
Contribution
The first targeted mosquito-based surveillance of avian blood parasites in Western Australia, identifying novel Plasmodium lineages.
Findings
Avian Haemosporida were detected in 3.9% of mosquito pools, with Culex species being the most common carriers.
Three novel Plasmodium lineages (CULPER01-03) and regionally specific parasite lineages were identified.
Plasmodium falciparum was detected in two mosquito pools, but no Dirofilaria parasites were found.
Abstract
Mosquitoes (Culicidae) are the most important vectors of human and animal diseases globally, making them valuable tools for the molecular surveillance of blood-borne pathogens. By screening mosquito populations, we can evaluate local disease prevalence and ascertain which vector species are involved in local transmission cycles. This study presents the first targeted mosquito-based surveillance of blood parasites in Western Australia. Over a 2-year surveillance program in Perth, Western Australia, 3,288 mosquitoes from 12 species across 5 genera were collected and screened in 461 pools. Parasite prevalence and diversity were evaluated using polymerase chain reaction screening of the Haemosporida cytochrome b gene region, and the Dirofilaria 12S rDNA gene region. Haemosporida were detected in 3.9% of mosquito pools, with 72.2% of positives found in Culex species pools. Avian Haemosporida…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBird parasitology and diseases · Vector-borne infectious diseases · Mosquito-borne diseases and control
