Mosquitos are the deadliest animal on the planet, killing hundreds of thousands of people every year by transmitting malaria, dengue fever and a host of other deadly diseases. Understanding how the bugs first got the taste for human blood has long intrigued scientists, and could help us better fight the spread of mosquito-borne disease. And now, a new study suggests that some mosquitos’ thirst for human blood may be truly primeval, stretching back as far as 1.8 million years ago—a time when our ancient human ancestor, Homo erectus, may have been flourishing.
In the study published Thursday in Scientific Reports, a team of international researchers analyzed the DNA of 40 mosquitos from 11 species of the Anopheles leucosphyrus group that are found in Southeast Asia. What makes this group of mosquito species so special is that some species have a strong preference for human blood, while others mostly feast on other primates like monkeys, gibbons and orangutans, says Upasana Shyamsunder Singh, a postdoctoral scholar at Vanderbilt University, and lead author on the study.
The team calculated that the mosquitos likely developed their “anthropophily”—their taste for human blood—at a point some 2.9 to 1.6 million years ago. This overlaps with the same period in which some scientists believe Homo erectus, an early hominin, arrived in the region.
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“The switch to human feeding was much older than we expected and so could not have been in response to the arrival of anatomically modern humans,” says Catherine Walton, a study co-author and a senior lecturer in earth and environmental sciences at the University of Manchester in the U.K.
For mosquitos to have made a switch from other primates to hominins, then ancient humans like Homo erectus “must not only have been present in this place and at this time, but abundant,” she says.
The results aren’t just relevant for researchers studying human evolution; they’re also an important signal for epidemiologists looking to understand mosquito-borne diseases. These insects are still evolving, and humans are increasingly encroaching on wild areas—more mosquitos could continue to adapt to prefer feasting on us over other animals.
“We are effectively creating novel selective pressures and we should expect mosquitos to respond to these,” Walton says.
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