Bacterial and eukaryote microbiomes of mosquito habitats in dengue-endemic southern Taiwan
Journal
Journal of Asia-Pacific Entomology
Journal Volume
22
Journal Issue
2
Pages
471-480
Date Issued
2019
Author(s)
Abstract
Mosquitoes interact with the microbiome of the waters where they oviposit in several ways. Past work suggests adult mosquitoes can detect certain microbes that stimulate oviposition. The presence or absence of certain microbes in water containers thus can attract or repel mosquito species to different containers. I hypothesized that these relationships could be detected via metagenomics. I focused on two container breeders that coexist in Southern Taiwan: the dengue vector Aedes aegypti and the less competent vector Ae. albopictus. In addition to culturing, I performed 16S and 18S rDNA metagenomics assays, the latter of which had never been applied to mosquito waters before, to identify the microbial diversity of artificial containers with and without mosquito larvae. I found no correlation between mosquito presence to any features of the containers or to their microbiomes, which instead correlated strongly with location. Microbial diversity across containers was highly variable, even within the same location, with multiple taxa only found in single containers. This variability is reasonable, because mosquito gut microbiomes are also extremely variable. The possibility remains that microbes in natural containers differ significantly from those in artificial containers, and that these differences drive Aedes preferences for human-associated containers. Broad, single-microbe experimental work is recommended to identify possible attractant or repellent microbial taxa. ? 2019 Korean Society of Applied Entomology
SDGs
Type
journal article