Houston Chronicle Sunday

More U.S. states face risk from Zika virus

Another mosquito, ‘the Asian tiger,’ now a carrier; species hit Houston in 1985

- By Nick Miroff

For the first time in the Western Hemisphere, researcher­s have detected the Zika virus in Aedes albopictus, the mosquito species known as the “Asian tiger,” a finding that increases the number of U.S. states potentiall­y at risk for transmissi­on of the disease.

During the summer months when U.S. mosquito population­s are at their peak, albopictus is more ubiquitous than the Aedes aegypti mosquito that has been the primary vector of the spread of Zika elsewhere in the Americas. Unlike the aegypti mosquito, which is mostly present in southern United States and along the Gulf Coast, the albopictus has a range as far north as New England and the lower Great Lakes.

The discovery was reported recently by the Pan American Health Organizati­on after researcher­s in Mexico confirmed the presence of Zika in Asian tiger mosquitoes captured in the state of San Luis Potosi and sent them to government labs for testing.

U.S. health officials say they had anticipate­d the finding and have already encouraged states within the range of the Asian tiger mosquito to prepare for Zika. Scientists had previously identified the Asian tiger as the primary vector for Zika during a 2007 outbreak in the West African country of Gabon.

U.S. health officials say the latest discovery should serve as a wake-up call to state and local government­s that have assumed their population­s were too far north to be at risk.

“There are officials who have been saying we don’t have Aedes aegypti, so we don’t need to be worried or have a plan,” said Janet McAllister, an entomologi­st at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. “What CDC is saying is: You need a plan in place because albopictus could transmit Zika in your area, and you need to take it seriously.”

‘More aggressive biter’

While the methods for eliminatin­g the aegypti and albopictus mosquitoes are similar, they are not identical, experts say, because the two species have significan­tly different behavioral and breeding patterns.

Unlike the aegypti mosquito, which thrives in urban areas by laying eggs in discarded food containers and old tires, the Asian tiger mosquito lives outdoors, laying its eggs in tree stumps and holes, McAllister said.

It doesn’t try to follow humans indoors and prefers leafy forests to dense urban environmen­ts. It’s especially fond of suburban back yards and sprawling city parks.

Marcos Espinal, director of communicab­le diseases at the Pan American Health Organizati­on, said researcher­s are still trying to determine how effectivel­y the Asian tiger can spread disease compared to aegypti.

McAllister said there are several reasons to doubt that the Asian tiger mosquito will be able to drive the kind of Zika outbreak ravaging Brazil, where more than 1,000 infants have been born with undersize heads and severe brain damage probably caused by a Zika-related infection during the early stages of fetal developmen­t.

For one, the albopictus mosquito is “a more aggressive biter,” McAllister said, as it feeds on humans, raccoons, squirrels or any other warmbloode­d animal it finds.

“Once it starts taking a blood meal, it will stay on that person until it’s completely full,” she said, instead of jumping from person to person — precisely the promiscuou­s behavior that makes the aegypti species so effective at spreading infections.

Distinctiv­e coloring

The aegypti variety is much more adapted to humans, she said, as it flies low around human ankles to avoid detection, then eats quick, short meals that reduce its chances of getting swatted.

“It won’t take a complete blood meal if people are actively moving around, so that’s what makes aegypti a super-spreader,” McAllister said.

Specimens of the Asian tiger species found in the United States have been traced back to northern Japan, reflecting the mosquito’s ability to survive colder weather.

With a distinctiv­e blackand-white coloring, the species was first detected in North America at the Port of Houston in 1985, and later showed up in the Port of Los Angeles.

In both instances, scientists suspect the larvae arrived in shipments of used tires.

There have been no reports of Zika transmissi­on by mosquitoes in the 50 U.S. states, but the CDC has warned that is likely to change as insect population­s increase with warmer weather.

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