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Survey of Surveillance Records of Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus from 1960 to Present

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Journal of Medical Entomology Advance Access published June 9, 2016

Journal of Medical Entomology, 2016, 1–7
doi: 10.1093/jme/tjw072
Research article

Rapid Communication

Reported Distribution of Aedes (Stegomyia) aegypti and
Aedes (Stegomyia) albopictus in the United States,
1995-2016 (Diptera: Culicidae)
Micah B. Hahn,1 Rebecca J. Eisen,1 Lars Eisen,1 Karen A. Boegler,1 Chester G. Moore,2
Janet McAllister,1 Harry M. Savage,1 and John-Paul Mutebi1,3
1

Division of Vector-Borne Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 3156 Rampart Road, Fort Collins, Colorado 80521
([email protected]; [email protected]; [email protected]; [email protected]; [email protected]; [email protected]; [email protected]) 2Department of
Microbiology, Immunology and Pathology, Colorado State University, 3195 Rampart Road, Fort Collins, Colorado 80523
([email protected]), and 3Corresponding author, e-mail: [email protected].

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Received 28 March 2016; Accepted 18 April 2016

Abstract
Aedes (Stegomyia) aegypti (L.) and Aedes (Stegomyia) albopictus (Skuse) transmit arboviruses that are increasing threats to human health in the Americas, particularly dengue, chikungunya, and Zika viruses. Epidemics of
the associated arboviral diseases have been limited to South and Central America, Mexico, and the Caribbean
in the Western Hemisphere, with only minor localized outbreaks in the United States. Nevertheless, accurate
and up-to-date information for the geographical ranges of Ae. aegypti and Ae. albopictus in the United States is
urgently needed to guide surveillance and enhance control capacity for these mosquitoes. We compiled county
records for presence of Ae. aegypti and Ae. albopictus in the United States from 1995-2016, presented here in
map format. Records were derived from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention ArboNET database,
VectorMap, the published literature, and a survey of mosquito control agencies, university researchers, and
state and local health departments. Between January 1995 and March 2016, 183 counties from 26 states and the
District of Columbia reported occurrence of Ae. aegypti, and 1,241 counties from 40 states and the District of
Columbia reported occurrence of Ae. albopictus. During the same time period, Ae. aegypti was collected in 3 or
more years from 94 counties from 14 states and the District of Columbia, and Ae. albopictus was collected during 3 or more years from 514 counties in 34 states and the District of Columbia. Our findings underscore the
need for systematic surveillance of Ae. aegypti and Ae. albopictus in the United States and delineate areas with
risk for the transmission of these introduced arboviruses.
Key words: Aedes aegypti, Aedes albopictus, surveillance, distribution, United States

Arboviruses transmitted by the yellow fever mosquito, Aedes
(Stegomyia) aegypti (L.), and the Asian tiger mosquito, Aedes
(Stegomyia) albopictus (Skuse), are increasing threats to human
health in the Americas. The re-emergence of dengue viruses in the
Western Hemisphere during the 1980s and 1990s was followed by
the emergence of chikungunya virus in 2013 and Zika virus in 2015
(Brathwaite et al. 2012, Weaver and Forrester 2015, Zanluca et al.
2015). Epidemics of dengue, chikungunya, and now Zika have
swept through or are sweeping through South America, Central
America, Mexico, and the Caribbean (San Martın et al. 2010,
Johansson et al. 2014, Hennessey et al. 2016). Yellow fever virus remains a concern with sporadic yellow fever outbreaks in South
America (Barrett and Higgs 2007, Gardner and Ryman 2010).
Both Ae. aegypti and Ae. albopictus are established in the United
States (Darsie and Ward 2005, Kraemer et al. 2015). Aedes aegypti
most likely has been present, permanently or intermittently, in the

southeastern United States since the 17th century and is the suspected vector of the yellow fever and dengue outbreaks that occurred in the eastern part of the country from 1650 to the early 20th
century (Eisen and Moore 2013). A multi-state survey in 1964
showed this mosquito to still be present in 203 counties across 10
states in the Southeast (Morlan and Tinker 1965). Recently, Ae.
aegypti has become established in the Southwest, including Arizona
and California, and is sporadically reported from Mid-Atlantic
states and Washington, D.C. (Eisen and Moore 2013, Kraemer et al.
2015, Porse et al. 2015, Lima et al. 2016). The first established population of Ae. albopictus in the continental United States was recorded from Texas in 1985 (Sprenger and Wuithiranyagool 1986).
The mosquito thereafter spread rapidly across the Southeast to later
reach the southern portions of the Northeast and Upper Midwest as
well as the Pacific Coast (Moore 1999, Kraemer et al. 2015, Porse
et al. 2015). Both mosquito species are at the northern limits of their

Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Entomological Society of America 2016.
This work is written by US Government employees and is in the public domain in the US.

1

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geographical ranges in the continental United States, but the range
of Ae. albopictus is much broader; it exists as both tropical and temperate populations (Nawrocki and Hawley 1987), and it is capable
of establishing overwintering populations farther north compared
with Ae. aegypti (Darsie and Ward 2005, Kraemer et al. 2015).
The emerging threats of dengue, chikungunya, and Zika virus
diseases have highlighted the need for accurate and up-to-date records for the geographical ranges of Ae. aegypti and Ae. albopictus
to guide ongoing efforts to strengthen mosquito surveillance and
control capacity (World Health Organization 2009, PAHO / CDC
2011), and to serve as the basis for model-based predictions of future spread of these important arbovirus vectors. We therefore have
compiled county records for presence of Ae. aegypti and Ae. albopictus in the United States from 1995 to 2016. These data were used
to develop contemporary county-scale distribution maps of each
species.

Journal of Medical Entomology, 2016, Vol. 0, No. 0

Selection of Time Period and Criteria for Mosquito
Presence Classifications

Survey for Additional Collection Records

We included collection records from 1995 to the present (March
2016, henceforth referred to as 2016) from several primary and secondary data sources to identify counties that have reported contemporary collections of Ae. aegypti or Ae. albopictus and thus likely
represent the current distributions of these mosquitoes. Aedes
aegypti or Ae. albopictus was considered “present” in a county in a
given calendar year if at least one specimen of any life stage of the
mosquito was collected, using any collection method, during that
year. We further classified counties with reported Ae. aegypti or Ae.
albopictus based on whether a species was collected in 1, 2, or 3 or
more years, with no distinction of whether or not collection years
were consecutive. This was done to distinguish between counties in
which Ae. aegypti or Ae. albopictus were collected in a single year
and counties where these mosquito species have been reported in
multiple years between 1995 and 2016, indicating either established
populations or introduction of the species in more than one year. A
county was classified as having “no reported records” for a species
if there were no collection records for that species between 1995
and 2016. However, a classification of no reported records for a
county should not necessarily be interpreted as the given species
being absent in that county.

Compilation of Preexisting Collection Records
We extracted records for reported occurrence of Ae. aegypti or Ae.
albopictus between 2000 and 2015 in the United States from the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) ArboNET surveillance system database, which was established in 2000 following
the introduction of West Nile virus to the United States in 1999
(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 2014). Additional mosquito surveillance records for 2015 may be entered into the surveillance system for the next few weeks, as the 2015 data are still
provisional, but we extracted all available records for 2015 that
were in the database as of 10 March 2016. ArboNET is the national
surveillance database maintained by the CDC for nationally notifiable arboviral diseases. In addition to human cases of arboviral disease, state health departments can voluntarily report data for virus
infection in birds and domestic animals and for collected and/or
tested mosquitoes. The ArboNET records for mosquitoes include
the county and date of collection. We also extracted collection records for Ae. aegypti or Ae. albopictus between 1995 and 1 March

We also designed an online survey, using GoogleForms, to compile
additional county-level collection records for Ae. aegypti and Ae.
albopictus in the United States between 2000 and 2016, corresponding to the time period data were captured in ArboNET. The survey
was designed to capture contemporary surveillance records from
vector control districts, university researchers, and local health departments that were not submitted to ArboNET, which is designed
to collect information only from state health departments. A cover
letter explained the purpose of the project and asked for voluntary
contributions of collection records for these two mosquito species.
The link to the online survey was widely disseminated to stakeholders with the aid of the Entomological Society of America (ESA),
the American Mosquito Control Association (AMCA), the National
Association of Vector-Borne Disease Control Officials (NAVCO),
the Society for Vector Ecology (SOVE), the American Society of
Tropical Medicine and Hygiene (ASTMH), the National
Association of County and City Health Officials (NACCHO), and
the National Pesticide Information Center (NPIC). We also contacted individual mosquito researchers as well as commercial mosquito control companies and local mosquito control organizations,
such as the Florida Mosquito Control Association, which publishes
WingBeats, a widely read periodical for mosquito control
professionals.
The survey tool compiled contact and affiliation information for
the person entering records, as well as county-level records by year
for Ae. aegypti or Ae. albopictus. If no records were reported for
one or both species in the county, respondents had the option to
check a box to indicate the absence of collection records. However,
given the lack of systematic sampling efforts, locations of absence
data are not shown on our maps. The survey opened 8 February
2016 and responses were requested by 1 March 2016, but the survey
tool was available beyond that date. Responses reported here extend
through 16 March 2016.

Management of Collection Record Database
Because our database was compiled from multiple data sources, we
standardized the spatial scale and time period of the collection records. Kraemer et al. (2015) geocoded each of the collection locations either with a latitude and longitude or as the centroid of a
larger polygon when finer-scale geo-location was not possible.

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Materials and Methods

2016 from VectorMap, an open-source, online database of global
geo-referenced mosquito collection records managed by the Walter
Reed Biosystematics Unit in the Smithsonian Institution (Foley et al.
2016). In addition, we extracted collection records between 1995
and 2014 in the United States from Kraemer et al. (2015). Kraemer
et al. (2015) presented a global compendium of Ae. aegypti and Ae.
albopictus records from 1960 to 2014 from peer-reviewed literature
and unpublished sources such as national entomological surveys and
expert networks.
We also performed literature searches in PubMed and Scopus using the search terms “Aedes aegypti” or “Aedes albopictus” or
“Stegomyia” and “United States” between 1 January 2013 and 7
March 2016 to identify collection records that were too recent to be
included by Kraemer et al. (2015). We limited the language to
English. Records were included in our database if the descriptions of
collection location and time period in the article allowed for determination of county and year of collection and if that collection year
was in 1995 or later. Full references for each published record in the
final database are included in Supplementary Tables 1 and 2.

Journal of Medical Entomology, 2016, Vol. 0, No. 0

3
as southern Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio. By this time, records were
reported as far north as Massachusetts, New York, and New
Hampshire. In addition, Ae. albopictus had been introduced to
southern California several times via cargo shipments from the
South Pacific region by 2004, but in 2001, a shipment from China
of infested “lucky bamboo” resulted in 15 local infestations in six
counties in the region (Zhong et al. 2013). By 2009, the number of
counties in which occurrence of Ae. albopictus was reported had increased to 1,093 (Fig. 2c). Other than documenting the presence of
the Ae. albopictus in Arizona and New Mexico, the reported distribution of the mosquito did not change substantially during this time
period. Additional records were reported along the East Coast,
southern Indiana, and Missouri. Between 1 January 1995 and
March 2016, occurrence of Ae. albopictus was reported from 1,241
counties from 40 states and the District of Columbia (Fig. 2d).
During the same time period, Ae. albopictus was collected during 3
or more years from 514 counties in 34 states and the District of
Columbia (Fig. 2d). Ae. albopictus has been consistently reported
from most of the Southeast, South Central, and Mid-Atlantic states
as well as along the southern Ohio River Valley. Reports for Ae.
albopictus are more sporadic in the western United States than Ae.
aegypti, but there have been consistent reports of the mosquito from
southern California and southwestern Arizona.

Results

Discussion

Number of Counties and States With Reported
Occurrence of Aedes aegypti

Collection records of Ae. aegypti from 1 January 1995 to March
2016 are concentrated in Florida, Texas, Arizona, and California,
with more sporadic records in the Southern, Mid-Atlantic, and
Midwestern states. A previous extensive multi-state surveillance effort conducted in 1964 in preparation of a planned Ae. aegypti eradication program showed that this mosquito was widely distributed
across the southeastern United States at that time (Morlan and
Tinker 1965). The program to eradicate Ae. aegypti from the continental United States never reached its ultimate goal and was terminated in 1969 due to lack of funds (Slosek 1986). No subsequent
surveillance effort in the United States has come close to rivaling the
intensity of the 1964 survey for Ae. aegypti. Sporadic contemporary
collections of Ae. aegypti along the mid-Atlantic Coast are not surprising, as this mosquito historically caused yellow fever outbreaks
as far north as New York and Boston (Patterson 1992, Reiter 2001).
Perhaps the most concerning development for Ae. aegypti is its establishment in the Southwest, most recently in California in 2013.
The discovery of established populations of Ae. aegypti in central
and southern California resulted in a substantial, and still ongoing,
public health response that has included enhanced human and mosquito surveillance, education, and intensive mosquito control (Porse
et al. 2015).
Records for Ae. albopictus from 1 January 1995 to March 2016
show that this mosquito covers similar areas in the western United
States as Ae. aegypti but has a much wider geographic distribution
in the East, reaching as far north as Illinois, Ohio, and Pennsylvania
and the New England coast. It is not clear whether this recent invader, which was introduced into the United States in 1985 and in
several subsequent introductions (Moore et al. 1988, Moore 1999,
Kuno 2012), has yet to become established across the full geographical range within which it can persist or if it is still expanding its
range. Although the climate in some newly invaded areas is conducive to reproduction and survival of this mosquito, in other areas,
harsh winters may prevent survival of overwintering eggs into the
spring. In addition, effective and timely vector control may eliminate
highly localized introductions, for example, in tire facilities.

Between 1 January 1995 and 31 December 1999, occurrence of Ae.
aegypti was reported from 11 counties in Arizona, Texas, and
Florida (Fig. 1a) . By 2004, occurrence of Ae. aegypti was reported
from 80 counties (Fig. 1b) and records were added along the southern tier as well as sporadically along the East coast. Notably, by
2004, records of Ae. aegypti were being reported in the MidAtlantic region focused around Washington, D.C. By 2009, the
number of counties from which the occurrence of Ae. aegypti was
reported had increased to 109 (Fig. 1c), but the reported geographic
distribution of the mosquito had not changed appreciably. Between
1 January 1995 and March 2016, occurrence of Ae. aegypti was reported from 183 counties in 26 states and the District of Columbia
(Fig. 1d). During the same time period, Ae. aegypti was collected in
3 or more years from 94 counties from 14 states and the District of
Columbia (Fig. 1d). Since 1995, Ae. aegypti has been documented
along much of the southern tier of the United States, including
southern California, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Louisiana, and
Florida. There also have been sporadic collections of Ae. aegypti
from other parts of the Southeast and the Mid-Atlantic states, as
well as in geographic outliers in Colorado, Kansas, Michigan, and
New Hampshire.

Number of Counties and States With Reported
Occurrence of Aedes albopictus
Between 1 January 1995 and 31 December 1999, occurrence of Ae.
albopictus was reported from 370 counties (Fig. 2a). During this
time period, Ae. albopictus was documented predominately in the
southeastern United States, but with reported records as far west as
Kansas, Oklahoma, and Texas and as far north as New Jersey. By
2004, occurrence of Ae. albopictus was reported from 973 counties
(Fig. 2b). Collection records for Ae. albopictus increased substantially during this time period, expanding the documented distribution in the Southeast, South Central, and Mid-Atlantic states as well

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We extracted their records that occurred in the United States between 1995 and 2014, and then we spatially joined each record to
the county that contained its x, y coordinates. If the record was identified as either the centroid of a county polygon or coordinates from
an exact collection location in their database, we included it in our
database. For records where the coordinates were obtained through
other matching methods, we reviewed the original citation to verify
that the coordinates were matched to the appropriate county. We
followed a similar methodology for extracting the relevant mosquito
collection locations from the VectorMap database between 1995
and 2016 and linking them to a county. The ArboNET data were
already at the county scale.
We then generated two datasets, one that contained all the Ae.
aegypti collection records and one with all of the Ae. albopictus collection records. These datasets contained the county and year of
mosquito collection. To avoid duplicates, we extracted only one record for each county in a given year for each mosquito species.
Finally, we calculated the number of years of collection records reported for each county for each species and used the resulting
county-level databases of collection records for Ae. aegypti and Ae.
albopictus to join the county data by FIPS codes in ArcGIS 10.3
(ESRI, Redlands, CA) and map the number of years each species has
been reported by county.

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Journal of Medical Entomology, 2016, Vol. 0, No. 0

1995 - 1999

A

1995 - 2016

D

B

Number of years with at
least one mosquito reported
No reported records
1 year
2 years
3 or more years

1995 - 2009

C

Fig. 1. Maps showing the reported occurrence of Ae. aegypti by county between 1 January 1995 and March 2016 in the United States. (A) Reported occurrence
from 1 January 1995 through 1999, (B) reported occurrence from 1 January 1995 through 2004, (C) reported occurrence from 1 January 1995 through 2009, and
(D) reported occurrence from 1 January 1995 through March 2016, representing the best knowledge of the current distribution of this mosquito based on collection records. Counties shown in white had no reported Ae. aegypti presence records within the specified time period. Counties shown in yellow had Ae. aegypti
presence records for 1 year within the specified time period, those shown in orange had 2 years of presence records within the specified time period, and those
shown in red had 3 or more years of presence records within the specified time period.

The county records for Ae. aegypti and Ae. albopictus presented
here represent our best knowledge of the current distributions of
these mosquitoes, but we caution that, at the national scale, the presented data should be viewed as compilations of records based on
convenience sampling rather than representing systematic surveys.
Particularly between 1995 and 2004, the substantial increase in the
number of counties reporting these two species is likely due, in large
part, to an increase in surveillance rather than expansion of the geographic distribution of the mosquitoes. Moreover, these data represent presence rather than abundance of the mosquitoes, and it
should not be assumed that the climate across counties in which the
mosquitoes are present provides similar potential for population establishment and expansion. Areas of interest for enhanced Ae.
aegypti surveillance include states in which it is firmly established
(Florida, Texas, Arizona and California) as well as New Mexico, the
other Gulf Coast states, and the Atlantic Coast states where it was
present historically. Areas of interest for enhanced Ae. albopictus
surveillance include the northern range margins across the country
as well as states with less than expected coverage based on records
for surrounding states such as Georgia, Arkansas, and Kentucky.
Ideally, surveillance programs should include the collection of both

vector distribution and vector abundance data, as measured by repeated and regular use of standardized collection methods such as
the BG-Sentinel trap (Biogents, Germany) or ovicups (Focks 2003).
Vector abundance data would be essential to evaluate source reduction and other larval control efforts and to provide thresholds for
adulticide applications. Intensive surveillance in response to a potential or known introduction of an Ae. (Stegomyia)-vectored virus
such as Zika virus or a dengue virus (e.g., in response to the investigation of a suspect or established locally acquired case or successful
virus introduction) should include virus testing of mosquito pools to
verify local transmission and to determine the infection rate to direct
and evaluate vector control operations (Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention 2016).
Lack of collection records for Ae. aegypti or Ae. albopictus from
a given county should not be interpreted as absence of that mosquito, especially if the mosquito has been collected from nearby
areas. Conversely, collection records from a county does not necessarily imply that the mosquito is present throughout that county, especially for large and climatically diverse counties in the western
United States. Moreover, counties that have 3 or more years of collection records for a given species do not necessarily have established

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1995 - 2004

Journal of Medical Entomology, 2016, Vol. 0, No. 0

1995 - 1999

5

A

1995 - 2016

D

B

Number of years with at
least one mosquito reported
No reported records
1 year
2 years
3 or more years

1995 - 2009

C

Fig. 2. Maps showing the reported occurrence of Ae. albopictus by county between 1 January 1995 and March 2016 in the United States. (A) Reported occurrence
from 1 January 1995 through 1999, (B) reported occurrence from 1 January 1995 through 2004, (C) reported occurrence from 1 January 1995 through 2009, and
(D) reported occurrence from 1 January 1995 through March 2016, representing the best knowledge of the current distribution of this mosquito based on collection records. Counties shown in white had no reported Ae. albopictus presence records within the specified time period. Counties shown in yellow had Ae. albopictus presence records for 1 year within the specified time period, those shown in orange had 2 years of presence records within the specified time period, and
those shown in red had 3 or more years of presence records within the specified time period.

populations of that species. For example, extreme outliers to the
north (e.g., Minnesota) or in the central, intermountain west (e.g.,
Colorado) for both species are commonly associated with repeated
introductions to tire facilities (Reiter 1998, Bennett et al. 2005,
Neitzel et al. 2009). Finally, based on differences in the intensity and
spatial coverage of the surveillance effort and the collection methods
used, our maps showing collection records of Ae. aegypti or Ae.
albopictus from 1 January 1995 to March 2016 should not be
viewed as directly comparable with maps that include data from earlier time periods (Morlan and Tinker 1965, Moore 1999, Darsie
and Ward 2005, Eisen and Moore 2013, Kraemer et al. 2015).
Due to their unique biology, the container-inhabiting, day-active, and predominantly human-biting Ae. aegypti are only rarely
collected in surveillance efforts that target Culex vectors of West
Nile virus or non-container breeding Aedes mosquitoes. The intensified surveillance for mosquitoes and mosquito-borne viruses that resulted from the 1999 introduction of West Nile virus to the United
States therefore had very limited potential for generating data for
the occurrence of Ae. aegypti and Ae. albopictus. Nonetheless, occasional records of Ae. aegypti and Ae. albopictus were reported to
ArboNET and are reported here. Appropriate surveillance for Ae.

aegypti and Ae. albopictus can include the passive collection of eggs
from ovitraps, active collection of larvae or pupae from artificial
containers and water-holding tree holes or other water-holding
plants, passive collection of adults using Stegomyia-appropriate
traps (e.g., the BG-Sentinel trap for females seeking a bloodmeal
host, or a gravid trap for females seeking an artificial container in
which to lay their eggs), or active collection of adults during the day
using mechanical aspirators (World Health Organization 2009).
Because of their close association with humans, surveillance for Ae.
aegypti should be conducted near human dwellings, for example, by
placing traps just outside homes or schools, by collecting larvae and
pupae from artificial containers near homes or in other key container-rich environments (e.g., tire dumps and cemeteries), and by
aspiration of adults near home entry points. Surveillance for Ae.
albopictus needs to be much broader because this species is found
both near and far from human dwellings.
Other considerations for surveillance of Ae. aegypti and Ae.
albopictus include subtle differences in the biology of these mosquitoes and between-species competition for container habitats. In settings where the number of containers available for oviposition is
limited, Ae. albopictus immatures can under some circumstances

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1995 - 2004

6

Acknowledgments
We thank J. Lehman and N. Lindsey of the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention for summary data from ArboNET and the large number of state
and local health departments, mosquito control agencies, and universities that
submitted records to the U.S. Stegomyia survey.

Supplementary Data
Supplementary data are available at Journal of Medical Entomology online.

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outcompete Ae. aegypti (Juliano 2010), potentially leading to local
disappearance of Ae. aegypti. Perhaps more important from a surveillance standpoint, these two mosquitoes tend to segregate in their
habitat choices, with Ae. aegypti being more common in high-density urban settings and Ae. albopictus predominating in lower-density urban and semirural settings, although in some areas, these two
species have been found to coexist in urban areas (Leisnham and
Juliano 2009, Reiskind and Lounibos 2013, Leisnham et al. 2014).
This spatial and temporal variability needs to be accounted for if a
surveillance program aims to capture high-quality data for both Ae.
aegypti and Ae. albopictus. And although some artificial breeding
sites such as tires or planters are exploited by some Culex spp. as
well as Ae. aegypti and Ae. albopictus, it also should be noted that
surveillance for some Culex vectors of West Nile virus, such as
Culex tarsalis Coquillett and Culex nigripalpus (Theobald), often
targets open water larval development sites located in natural habitats not frequented by Ae. aegypti and Ae. albopictus. When trap
grids are established for surveillance of Culex adults, specific trap locations are chosen to maximize trap catches based on presence of
Culex larval development sites and perceived dispersal corridors
from those emergence sites, again leading to low potential for collection of Ae. aegypti and Ae. albopictus.
Although the presence of Ae. aegypti and Ae. albopictus sets the
stage for local arbovirus transmission, other factors limit the potential for transmission of dengue, chikungunya, yellow fever, and Zika
viruses in the United States. Factors that reduce the intensity of transmission of arboviruses by Ae. aegypti and Ae. albopictus in the continental United States include 1) less than optimal temperatures during
much of the year restricting the potential for mosquito population
growth compared with settings where they can proliferate yearround; 2) well-developed sanitation services and reliable access to
piped water reducing accumulation of water-storage containers serving as larval development sites; 3) high-quality housing, air-conditioning, and use of screens and doors that prevent entry of Ae. aegpyti
and Ae. albopictus females into buildings and thus reduce humanmosquito contact; 4) capacity for rapid detection of human disease
cases as well as timely mosquito-based virus surveillance to facilitate
early mosquito control response; and 5) availability of financial resources for rapid, intensive response to localized outbreaks (Halstead
2008, Gubler 2011, Eisen et al. 2014, Monaghan et al. 2016).
From a historical perspective, Ae. aegypti most likely was the
primary vector in major epidemics of yellow fever and dengue that
occurred across the eastern United States during the 18th and 19th
centuries. These epidemics ceased in the 20th century, most likely
due to changes to ship design and sailing patterns, urban improvements (particularly to piped water supplies), increasing use of window screens, and, following the realization in 1900 that a mosquito
transmits the causative agent of yellow fever, mosquito control efforts (Patterson 1992, Reiter 2001, Eisen and Moore 2013).
Following a long period without recognized endemic dengue virus
transmission in the continental United States, small outbreaks of autochthonous dengue occurred in southern Texas in 2004 and 2005
and southern Florida from 2009 to 2011 (Brunkard et al. 2007,
Adalja et al. 2012, Radke et al. 2012). During the chikungunya outbreak in the Western Hemisphere in 2013 and 2014, 11 autochthonous cases of the disease were identified in Florida (Kendrick et al.
2014). Despite these limited examples of local transmission, large
outbreaks of arboviruses transmitted by Ae. aegypti and Ae. albopictus are unlikely to recur in the continental United States unless
socioeconomic conditions deteriorate to mimic those seen in previous centuries or if other modes of transmission for these viruses became more widespread (Foy et al. 2011, Musso et al. 2015).

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