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History of domestication and spread of Aedes aegypti--a review.

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TLDR
This work integrates the available information including genetics, behaviour, morphology, ecology and biogeography of the mosquito, with human history to reach a realistic and comprehensive understanding of this important vector of yellow fever, dengue and Chikungunya.
Abstract
The adaptation of insect vectors of human diseases to breed in human habitats (domestication) is one of the most important phenomena in medical entomology. Considerable data are available on the vector mosquito Aedes aegypti in this regard and here we integrate the available information including genetics, behaviour, morphology, ecology and biogeography of the mosquito, with human history. We emphasise the tremendous amount of variation possessed by Ae. aegypti for virtually all traits considered. Typological thinking needs to be abandoned to reach a realistic and comprehensive understanding of this important vector of yellow fever, dengue and Chikungunya.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Population genetics of the Asian tiger mosquito Aedes albopictus, an invasive vector of human diseases

TL;DR: The large but sometimes dispersed literature about the population genetics of A. albopictus is reviewed and the main genetic characteristics of natural populations are summarized and synthesized regarding the worldwide structuring of the vector.
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Challenges and Opportunities in Controlling Mosquito-Borne Infections

TL;DR: How new interventions offer the promise of considerable future reductions in disease burden is discussed, however, it is emphasized that intervention programmes need to be underpinned by rigorous trials and quantitative epidemiological analyses.
Journal ArticleDOI

Yellow fever in Africa and the Americas: a historical and epidemiological perspective

TL;DR: Based on a review of the global history of yellow fever and its epidemiology, the authors deliver some recommendations for improving the prevention of epidemics.
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Yellow fever cases in Asia: primed for an epidemic

TL;DR: The potential for a yellow fever outbreak in Asia is discussed with reference to the ecological and historical forces that have shaped global yellow fever epidemiology, and the limitations of surveillance and vector control in the region are highlighted.
References
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Book

Plagues and Peoples

TL;DR: Professor McNeill, through an accumulation of evidence, demonstrates the central role of pestilence in human affairs and the extent to which it has changed the course of history.
Journal ArticleDOI

Invasions by insect vectors of human disease

TL;DR: Propagule pressure, previous success, and adaptations to human habits appear to favor successful invasions by vectors, such as anthropophilic fleas, lice, kissing bugs, and mosquitoes.
Book

Genetic Maps: Locus Maps of Complex Genomes

TL;DR: Human genome research is one of the dominant themes of science in the 1990s and new technologies and concepts are emerging from the analysis of other organisms' genes and chromosomes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Flavivirus susceptibility in Aedes aegypti.

TL;DR: A population genetic model for vector competence is proposed and recent progress in testing this model is discussed and approaches being taken to identify the genes that may control flavivirus susceptibility in Ae.
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