A native of South America and the Caribbean, the mosquito was found last year in regularly monitored traps in Florida City and in Broward County. The identity was confirmed through DNA sequencing last year, said Chalmers Vasquez, director of the Miami-Dade County Mosquito Control Research.
“This is a very aggressive mosquito, like the ones that attack people in the Everglades,” he said. That pest, the black salt marsh mosquito, can swarm visitors at certain times of year in the Everglades National Park, where large-scale mosquito control tactics like spraying are not allowed.
While it’s a big biter, the new mosquito may be more limited a threat than the Zika and Dengue-carrying Aedes aegypti, which is highly adapted to urban areas. The Aedes scapularis doesn’t usually live in densely populated areas, he said.
And although the species is known to spread yellow fever, Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus and other human pathogens in its native range, there is no evidence that it poses any risk to human health or to animals in South Florida, Vasquez said.
“This species is not very well established yet, so we have not seen any cases of disease transmission. But we will keep an eye on it as we do with other mosquitoes that live here,” he said. Miami-Dade monitors more than 320 mosquito traps set throughout the county to analyze species and prevalence in different areas.
Health officials reported more than 60 locally transmitted cases of West Nile virus last year after heavy rains led mosquito populations to explode. West Nile is mostly transmitted by the southern house mosquito and other Culex species.
The confirmation of a new bug that is calling South Florida home is yet another reminder that Miami-Dade is a gateway for invasive species. Scientists will now watch how far the Aedes scapularis will spread. The only other time it was confirmed in Florida was in 1945 when three larval specimens were collected in the Florida Keys.
“The Florida Strait was likely a geographic barrier for the species, and now that it has crossed that barrier, Aedes scapularis could potentially spread further northward and westward to fill any contiguous areas that are environmentally suitable,” Reeves told Entomology Today.