Mosquitoes have been biting individuals for greater than one million years and possibly for much longer.
An evaluation of 38 fashionable mosquitoes’ DNA suggests an ancestral mosquito species developed a desire for feeding on early people between 2.9 and 1.6 million years in the past, researchers write February 26 in Scientific Stories.
The crew studied 11 mosquito species from the Anopheles leucosphyrus group, chosen as a result of they gave a very good overview of all the group’s genetics. Some species have been “anthropophilic” mosquitoes — human feeders — together with Anopheles dirus and Anopheles baimaii, each of which unfold malaria, whereas others fed solely on nonhuman primates (largely monkeys) or on each.
The crew used the genetic information to reconstruct the bugs’ evolutionary historical past from the mutation charges of their genes. That permit the researchers estimate when mosquitoes first bit people and the place — a submerged landmass referred to as Sundaland, the remnants of which at the moment are the Malay Peninsula, Borneo, Sumatra and Java. The leucosphyrus group was the primary to adapt to chew people, whereas different forms of mosquitoes acquired this desire solely within the final 10,000 years.
“We weren’t anticipating this group to have originated so way back,” says evolutionary biologist Catherine Walton of the College of Manchester in England. “Essentially the most parsimonious clarification is that it was in response to those early hominins arriving.”
Earlier than people arrived, the mosquitoes had fed solely on the blood of nonhuman primates within the rainforest cover. This was the bugs’ “ancestral conduct,” and former research point out biting nonhuman primates started greater than 3.6 million years in the past.
Archaeologists nonetheless debate when the primary human ancestors from Africa unfold into Asia. However the brand new examine of mosquito genetics independently means that the motion occurred round 1.8 million years in the past, and it matches a current examine that dates the oldest Homo erectus skulls in China to about the identical time.
H. erectus should have lived in Southeast Asia in massive numbers to drive the mosquitoes’ biting adaptation, which appears to have been primarily based on the early human’s distinctive odor. “You want an abundance of Homo erectus to actually get an evolutionary change happening,” Walton says.
And whereas solely about 100 of the estimated 3,600 fashionable mosquito species have advanced to chew people, the bugs have been ruining quiet evenings ever since.

