Abstract

BackgroundThe German mosquito surveillance instrument ‘Mueckenatlas’ requests the general public to collect and submit mosquito specimens. Among these, increasing numbers of individuals of invasive species have been registered. Specimens of the Asian bush mosquito Aedes japonicus japonicus submitted from German Upper Bavaria, where this species had not previously been recorded, triggered regional monitoring in mid-2015.MethodsThe search for Ae. j. japonicus breeding sites and developmental stages concentrated on cemeteries in the municipality of origin of the submitted specimens and, subsequently, in the whole region. A virtual grid consisting of 10 × 10 km2 cells in which up to three cemeteries were checked, was laid over the region. A cell was considered positive as soon as Ae. j. japonicus larvae were detected, and regarded negative when no larvae could be found in any of the cemeteries inspected. All cells surrounding a positive cell were screened accordingly. A subset of collected Aedes j. japonicus specimens was subjected to microsatellite and nad4 sequence analyses, and obtained data were compared to individuals from previously discovered European populations.ResultsBased on the grid cells, an area of approximately 900 km2 was populated by Ae. j. japonicus in Upper Bavaria and neighbouring Austria. Genetic analyses of microsatellites and nad4 gene sequences generated one genotype out of two previously described for Europe and three haplotypes, one of which had previously been found in Europe only in Ae. j. japonicus samples from a population in East Austria and Slovenia. The genetic analysis suggests the new population is closely related to the Austrian/Slovenian population.ConclusionAs Ae. j. japonicus is well adapted to temperate climates, it has a strong tendency to expand and to colonise new territories in Central Europe, which is facilitated by human-mediated, passive transportation. The new population in Upper Bavaria/Austria is the seventh separate population described in Europe. According to our data, it originated from a previously detected population in eastern Austria/Slovenia and not from an introduction event from abroad. The dispersal and population dynamics of Ae. j. japonicus should be thoroughly surveyed, as this species is a potential vector of disease agents.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13071-016-1447-z) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • The German mosquito surveillance instrument ‘Mueckenatlas’ requests the general public to collect and submit mosquito specimens

  • Aedes j. japonicus immature specimens were found in nine grid cells, corresponding to an infested area of about 900 km2 stretching from Upper Bavaria to the Austrian federal state of Salzburg (Fig. 2)

  • Among the analysed individuals, three nad4 haplotypes were found: the ubiquitous H1 (5 individuals), as well as H9 (10 individuals) and H10 (14 individuals), the latter previously described only in the population occurring in southeastern Austria and Slovenia [33]

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Summary

Introduction

The German mosquito surveillance instrument ‘Mueckenatlas’ requests the general public to collect and submit mosquito specimens. Specimens of the Asian bush mosquito Aedes japonicus japonicus submitted from German Upper Bavaria, where this species had not previously been recorded, triggered regional monitoring in mid-2015. Japonicus is native to east Asia (Japan, Korea, southern China, southeastern Russia) where it colonises regions climatically similar to central Europe [13]. It has been transported intercontinentally by air and sea since the early 1990s and was demonstrated as invasive in the late 1990s in the US where it is widely distributed [14]

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