Shrinking forests are giving mosquitoes a greater taste for human blood, study suggests
As forests shrink and wildlife disappears, mosquitoes are increasingly turning to people for their blood meals, a shift that raises real concerns about the potential spread of diseases that affect humans. A new study published in the journal Frontiers suggests these buzzing, biting insects are playing a growing role in the increased transmission of Zika, yellow fever, dengue, and other diseases that mosquitoes pass on to people, thanks in part to disappearing habitats.
Deforestation, which is the widespread clearing of forests, and other human activity has vastly reduced local populations of plants and animals while increasing human populations in the same areas, according to the study. Laura Harrington, a Ph.D.-level professor of entomology at Cornell University, told ABC News, "Mosquitoes that are normally feeding on other hosts within the habitat can shift to humans if the habitat is no longer suitable for those hosts and they leave."
Human blood was widely found in nine types of mosquitoes in two formerly uninhabited areas in the state of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, preliminary study results found. This area was once a part of the Atlantic Forest that covered 502,000 square miles. Today, it has shrunk to 29% of its original size as a result of deforestation and development, according to the final study. Sérgio Lisboa Machado, a co-author of the paper and a professor at Federal University of Rio de Janeiro in Brazil, said mosquitoes are opportunists who don't venture far to find food.
"So they start searching for humans because mosquitoes rarely fly very long distances," he told ABC News. "They are not going to pay a lot of energy to find [other food sources]."
More than 17% of all infectious diseases are caused by vector-borne diseases, meaning a disease that's transmitted to humans by a living organism, such as mosquitoes, ticks, and flies, the World Health Organization (WHO) reports. These biting insects cause more than 700,000 deaths globally. Female mosquitoes are the culprit. They must drink blood to get the protein and iron they need to develop their eggs, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Harrington told ABC News, "There is a reproductive drive for them to feed on blood, and if there's no other host there, most mosquitoes would feed on a human."
There are 3,500 mosquito species globally, Harrington said, noting that there are only a handful that truly prefer the taste of human blood over other animals. When given a choice, only a small fraction of mosquito species regularly seek out humans. "It's something that we've known for a long time," Harrington said. "This notion that manipulating the landscape can alter mosquito feeding patterns and sometimes shift feeding patterns towards humans."
Crystal Richards, MD, is a pediatric resident at Columbia University Irving Medical Center and a member of the ABC News Medical Unit.