High prevalence of Zika virus infection in populations of Aedes aegypti from South-western Ecuador

Author:

López-Rosero Andrea,Sippy Rachel,Stewart-Ibarra Anna M.,Ryan Sadie J.,Mordecai Erin,Heras Froilán,Beltrán Efraín,Costales Jaime A.,Neira MarcoORCID

Abstract

We performed an arboviral survey in mosquitoes from four endemic Ecuadorian cities (Huaquillas, Machala, Portovelo and Zaruma) during the epidemic period 2016–2018. Collections were performed during the pre-rainy season (2016), peak transmission season (2017) and post-rainy season (2018). Ae. aegypti mosquitoes were pooled by date, location and sex. Pools were screened by RT-PCR for the presence of ZIKV RNA, and infection rates (IRs) per 1,000 specimens were calculated. A total of 2,592 pools (comprising 6,197 mosquitoes) were screened. Our results reveal high IRs in all cities and periods sampled. Overall IRs among female mosquitoes were highest in Machala (89.2), followed by Portovelo (66.4), Zaruma (47.4) and Huaquillas (41.9). Among male mosquitoes, overall IRs were highest in Machala (35.6), followed by Portovelo (33.1), Huaquillas (31.9) and Zaruma (27.9), suggesting that alternative transmission routes (vertical/venereal) can play important roles for ZIKV maintenance in the vector population of these areas. Additionally, we propose that the stabilization of ZIKV vertical transmission in the vector population could help explain the presence of high IRs in field-caught mosquitoes during inter-epidemic periods.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Foundation for the National Institutes of Health

Stanford Woods Institute for the Environment

Stanford University Center for Innovation in Global Health

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

Reference39 articles.

1. Contributions of Genetic Evolution to Zika Virus Emergence.;S-J Hung;Front Microbiol,2021

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