Abstract
Colonies of Aedes aegypti have been reported at increasingly southern locations. Is this feature a manifestation of climate change or the result of the mosquito’s adaptation? Answering the question requires the testing and comparison of results produced under different, competing, hypotheses. We address the problem using “AedesBA”, a detailed model of the mosquito Aedes aegypti that has been under development for about 20 years. The aim of the model is to promote understanding. We incorporate the recently discovered biological behavior of this mosquito: diapause. Namely, this is the laying of resistance eggs when the day light shortens, entering into the unfavorable season for reproduction in temperate climates, as described from laboratory experiments. When the model is challenged to answer the questions posed, it suggests that climate change, as experienced during the time of the field records, does not explain the observations. Furthermore, the standard climate change argument does not support a detailed analysis. In contrast, we find that while diapause is not expected to be a trait that is selected by natural conditions in a subtropical climate (simulations for Resistencia, AR), within temperate climates such as in Buenos Aires city (AR), there is pressure favoring the selection of the trait. As we move southward (the cities of Dolores, Azul, Tandil, and Mar del Plata), the pressure increases, while the probability of Aedes aegypti to become established in them decreases, being in accordance with the field observations. The model shows in addition that the field-observable effects of diapause depend on weather variables, especially precipitation, and the dynamics of the nutritional resources in the breeding sites.
Subject
General Mathematics,Engineering (miscellaneous),Computer Science (miscellaneous)
Reference59 articles.
1. An Account of Dr. Louis-Daniel Beauperthuy: A Pioneer in Yellow Fever Research;Agramonte;Boston Med. Surg. J.,1908
2. Yellow Fever: Its Transmission By Means of the Culex Mosquito;Finlay;Am. J. Med. Sci.,1886
3. Mosquitoes considered as transmitters of yellow fever and malaria;Finlay;Psyche,1899
4. The Etiology of Yellow Fever—A Preliminary Note;Reed;Public Health Pap. Rep.,1900
5. Carter, H.R. (1931). Yellow Fever: An Epidemiological and Historical Study of Its Place of Origin, The Williams & Wilkins Company.