Abstract

BackgroundThe Asian tiger mosquito, Aedes albopictus, has spread around the world. The migration was mainly mediated by maritime transportations. This species is known as an efficient vector for arboviruses, and it was responsible for the recent dengue outbreak in Tokyo, Japan. As the vector competence varies among geographical populations, and insecticide resistant populations have emerged, it is important to reveal their movements. The present study uses molecular techniques to search for a sign of introduction of an exotic population in three major international seaports on Kyushu Island.Methodology/principal findingsAdults of Ae. albopictus were sampled around the international seaports of Fukuoka, Kitakyushu, and Nagasaki. Pairwise fixation indexes were estimated between the sampled populations based on 13 microsatellite markers. There was no clear genetic differentiation between distant and port populations in Kitakyushu and Nagasaki. However, the analysis found one distinct group near the container terminal in Fukuoka, which handles international freight containers mainly from adjacent countries. DNA samples were also obtained from Goto, Tsushima, Honshu, Ryukyu, Thailand, and the Philippines; and a cluster analysis and discriminant analysis revealed that the distinct group in Fukuoka did not belong to these groups. Combined with the results of phylogenetic analysis based on CO1, these results implied that this group originated from one Asian temperate region outside of Japan. Neutrality test and mismatch distribution analysis suggested that the establishment of this group was not recent.Conclusions/significanceThe present study found a sign of Ae. albopictus introduction from a temperate region of Asia through maritime freight container transportation. The genetically distinct group found in Fukuoka likely originated from a temperate region outside of Japan. Maritime container transportation may introduce to Japan mosquitoes with greater vector competence/insecticide resistance. This is the first study to describe the spatial population structure of Ae. albopictus in Japan using molecular techniques.

Highlights

  • The Asian tiger mosquito, Aedes albopictus (Skuse, 1894), is indigenous to East Asia [1,2]

  • The present study found a sign of Ae. albopictus introduction from a temperate region of Asia through maritime freight container transportation

  • As vector competence varies among different populations and the knock down resistance gene has been reported from some populations outside Japan, the risk of introducing mosquitoes with greater vector competence/insecticide resistance needs to be considered

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Summary

Introduction

The Asian tiger mosquito, Aedes albopictus (Skuse, 1894), is indigenous to East Asia [1,2]. The species was imported to the USA through the used tire trade with container ships [6]. The mosquito was further introduced to neighboring countries from the USA by subsequent transport of some of the imported tires [6]. The Asian tiger mosquito, Aedes albopictus, has spread around the world. The migration was mainly mediated by maritime transportations. This species is known as an efficient vector for arboviruses, and it was responsible for the recent dengue outbreak in Tokyo, Japan.

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