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Insights into the recent emergence and expansion of eastern equine encephalitis virus in a new focus in the Northern New England USA

Abstract

Background

Eastern equine encephalomyelitis virus (EEEV) causes a highly pathogenic zoonosis that circulates in an enzootic cycle involving the ornithophagic mosquito, Culiseta melanura, and wild passerine birds in freshwater hardwood swamps in the northeastern U.S. Epidemic/epizootic transmission to humans/equines typically occurs towards the end of the transmission season and is generally assumed to be mediated by locally abundant and contiguous mammalophagic “bridge vector” mosquitoes.

Methods

Engorged mosquitoes were collected using CDC light, resting box, and gravid traps during epidemic transmission of EEEV in 2012 in Addison and Rutland counties, Vermont. Mosquitoes were identified to species and blood meal analysis performed by sequencing mitochondrial cytochrome b gene polymerase chain reaction products. Infection status with EEEV in mosquitoes was determined using cell culture and RT-PCR assays, and all viral isolates were sequenced and compared to other EEEV strains by phylogenetic analysis.

Results

The host choices of 574 engorged mosquitoes were as follows: Cs. melanura (n = 331, 94.3 % avian-derived, 5.7 % mammalian-derived); Anopheles quadrimaculatus (n = 164, 3.0 % avian, 97.0 % mammalian); An. punctipennis (n = 56, 7.2 % avian, 92.8 % mammalian), Aedes vexans (n = 9, 22.2 % avian, 77.8 % mammalian); Culex pipiens s.l. n = 6, 100 % avian); Coquillettidia perturbans (n = 4, 25.0 % avian, 75.0 % mammalian); and Cs. morsitans (n = 4, 100 % avian). A seasonal shift in blood feeding by Cs. melanura from Green Heron towards other avian species was observed. EEEV was successfully isolated from blood-fed Cs. melanura and analyzed by phylogenetic analysis. Vermont strains from 2012 clustered with viral strains previously isolated in Virginia yet were genetically distinct from an earlier EEEV isolate from Vermont during 2011.

Conclusions

Culiseta melanura acquired blood meals primarily from birds and focused feeding activity on several competent species capable of supporting EEEV transmission. Culiseta melanura also occasionally obtained blood meals from mammalian hosts including humans. This mosquito species serves as the primary vector of EEEV among wild bird species, but also is capable of occasionally contributing to epidemic/epizootic transmission of EEEV to humans/equines. Other mosquito species including Cq. perturbans that feed more opportunistically on both avian and mammalian hosts may be important in epidemic/epizootic transmission under certain conditions. Phylogenetic analyses suggest that EEEV was independently introduced into Vermont on at least two separate occasions.

Background

Eastern Equine Encephalitis virus (EEEV) (Alphavirus: Togaviridae) is a highly pathogenic virus that circulates in an enzootic cycle involving the ornithophagic mosquito, Culiseta melanura (Coquillett) and wild passerine (perching) birds in mostly freshwater hardwood swamps in the northeastern United States [16]. Historically, epizootics in equines and epidemics in humans occurred intermittently; however, during the last decade, we have observed increases in the frequency and amplitude of virus activity, and a northward expansion of its geographic range [7]. Increased virus detection has been reported from the northeastern states: New York, New Hampshire, and Massachusetts, and more recently from Vermont, Connecticut, and Maine [718].

Vermont is a newly emergent region for EEEV activity that is located on the northern boundary of the geographic range of the virus. EEEV was first isolated in Vermont during a 2011 outbreak on an Emu, Dromaius novaehollandiae (Latham), farm in Rutland County [18]. The first confirmed human cases of EEE occurred in the state during the subsequent year and the virus was also detected in Cs. melanura pools from the same region of Vermont [18]. Neutralizing antibodies to EEEV were also found during a serosurvey of white-tailed deer, Odocoileus virginianus (Zimmermann), and moose, Alces americanus (Clinton), sampled throughout Vermont [19, 20]. Otherwise, little is known concerning the ecology of the virus in this region of the U.S.

Culiseta melanura is widely recognized as a principal vector of EEEV in enzootic cycling among wild birds; however, its potential contribution to epidemic/epizootic transmission to humans/equines is not clearly understood. Recent studies indicate that a small percentage of these mosquitoes will occasionally feed on mammalian hosts, thus qualifying this species as a potential vector to humans/equines [17, 21, 22]. Other mosquito species, such as Aedes vexans (Meigen), Coquillettidia perturbans (Walker), Aedes canadensis (Theobald), and Aedes sollicitans (Walker) with tendencies to primarily feed on mammals, or opportunistically on both avian and mammalian hosts, have also been implicated with epidemic/epizootic transmission of EEEV on the basis of their vector competence, local abundance, geographic distribution, host feeding patterns, and/or virus isolation during epidemics [8, 14, 2129].

The current research initiative was undertaken to 1) characterize the host-feeding patterns of Cs. melanura and evaluate its role in enzootic maintenance of EEEV in wild bird populations during an epidemic in Vermont, 2) assess the potential involvement of Cs. melanura in epidemic/epizootic transmission to humans and equines, and 3) identify key avian species as hosts for mosquitoes which also support amplification of EEEV. Accordingly, blood-fed mosquitoes were collected from EEEV transmission foci in Addison and Rutland counties, Vermont, and analyzed for the host source by sequencing mitochondrial cytochrome b gene. We report the isolation of EEEV from Cs. melanura with the identification of the vertebrate host species on which they had fed. Phylogenetic analysis was also conducted to compare and evaluate the relationships among EEEV isolates from mosquitoes in the region and gain insights into the temporal and spatial introduction of EEEV to Vermont.

Methods

Study area

Study was conducted in Addison and Rutland counties, Vermont (Fig. 1). Addison County has a total area of 2,090 km2 with 292 km2 (14 %) of wetlands. The county is situated on the west line of Vermont state and nearly in the center north and south; between 43° 50′ and 44° 10′ N. Rutland County has a total area of 2,450 km2 with 270 km2 (11 %) of wetlands. Otter Creek is the primary stream, which runs through the two counties from the south to the north. There are extensive wetlands surrounding the north-flowing Otter Creek basin, subject to periodic flooding. The most dominant hardwood swamp in this region consists of red maple, Acer rubrum Linnaeus, and black ash, Fraxinus nigra Marshall. Some red maple/ sphagnum swamps have formed in isolated wetlands not influenced by flood events [30]. These acidic hardwood swamps are also suitable habitats not only for plants preferring acidic conditions, but also for Cs. melanura, the primary vector of EEEV.

Fig. 1
figure 1

Data collected in Addison and Rutland Counties, Vermont, June through October, 2012. a Close-up of Addison and Rutland Counties, VT with number of EEEV positive blood-fed Cs. melanura in open circles and number of blood-fed mosquitoes in closed circles. b Close-up of Addison and Rutland Counties, VT with number of positive mosquito pools, and human and equine infections

Mosquito collection

Mosquitoes were collected June 16 through October 22, 2012. CDC light and black plastic Coroplast resting box traps (Mills Industries, Inc. Laconia, NH) were used for collecting mosquitoes. Gravid traps were also placed in the town of Brandon, which has a history of virus activity, where EEEV was isolated from a flock of emus in 2011 [18].

Mosquito specimen processing and morphological identification

Identification of mosquitoes to species was carried out by using a morphological key with the aid of a dissecting microscope on chill tables or dry ice [31]. All mosquitoes with visible sign of blood were placed in 2.0 ml tubes and stored in an ultra-low temperature freezer for subsequent blood meal analysis and virus testing.

DNA isolation and blood meal analyses

Mosquito abdomens were removed for blood meal analysis using disposable razor blades. DNA was extracted from the abdomen of blood-fed mosquitoes using DNAzol BD (Molecular Research Center, Cincinnati, OH) according to the manufacturer’s recommendation with modifications as described elsewhere [21, 32, 33]. Isolated DNA from the mosquito blood meals was used as a DNA template in subsequent polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assays with primers based on mitochondrial cytochrome b sequences of avian and mammalian species. The thermal cycling conditions were as described earlier [21, 32, 33]. The Veriti Dx Thermal Cycler, or GeneAmp PCR System 9700 (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA) were used to perform PCR assays, and PCR products were sequenced directly in cycle sequencing reactions using the sequencer 3730xl DNA Analyzer (Applied Biosystems) at the Keck Sequencing Facility (Yale University, New Haven, CT). Sequence annotation and analyses were conducted using ChromasPro version 1.7.5 (Technelysium Pty Ltd., Tewantin, Australia), and compared to the sequences available at the GenBank DNA sequence database of the National Center for Biotechnology Information using the BLAST search (BLASTN) [34].

Virus testing of mosquitoes

The head and thorax of blood-fed mosquitoes were individually homogenized in 0.5 mL phosphate buffered saline (PBS) containing 30 % heat-inactivated rabbit serum, 0.5 % gelatin, and 1X antibiotic/antimycotic using a copper BB and vibration mill. Mosquito homogenates were centrifuged at 4 °C for 7 min at 7,000 rpm and 100 μL of the supernatant were inoculated onto a monolayer of confluent Vero cells. Cells were maintained at 37 °C in 5 % CO2 and examined daily for cytopathic effect (CPE) from day 3 through day 7 following inoculation. RNA was extracted from CPE-positive cultures using the QIAamp viral RNA kit and tested for EEEV by TaqMan assay as previously described [35].

Non-blooded mosquitoes were grouped into pools of 50 or fewer individuals and tested by real-time RT-PCR and inoculation of Vero cells [36, 37]. Briefly, mosquitoes were homogenized in tissue culture diluent, centrifuged at 4 °C for 3 min at 13,000 rpm. One aliquot was removed for virus isolation on Vero cell culture, and another for storage. Lysis buffer was added to the remainder for RNA extraction, followed by purification from the extract by Tecan EVO Freedom automated system (Tecan Group Ltd., Männedorf, Switzerland), and MagMax 96 Viral Isolation Kit (Applied Biosystems).

Virus sequencing and phylogenetic analysis

EEEV sequence was derived from four overlapping PCR products spanning the entire coding region and flanking portions of the 5′ and 3′ untranslated regions of the virus genome. RT-PCR was performed using the Titan One-Tube RT-PCR System (Roche Diagnostics, Indianapolis, IN) and one of the following primer pairs:

EEE1 FWD 5′-ATA GGG TAC GGT GTA GAG GCA AC-3′ and

EEE3191 REV 5′-AGG CCA TCT CAG GCG AAT AC-3′;

EEE3085 FWD 5′-AGC GCT AGA ACC TGT GTT GG-3′ and

EEE6258 REV 5′-GAT CGT ATC TCA GGC CGC AA-3′;

EEE6162 FWD 5′-ACG GAG CAT CCT GCT GTT TA-3′ and

EEE9119 REV 5′-CCT TGG CAC TGT GGA TGC TA-3′;

EEE8859 FWD 5′-ACA TCT TGG CTC AAT GCC CA-3′ and

EEE11430 REV 5′-ATG CAC CAC CGT CAC CAT AG-3′

PCR products were amplified under the following thermal cycling conditions: one cycle of 48 °C for 30 min and 94 °C for 2 min, 10 cycles of 94 °C for 15 s, 58 °C for 30 s, and 68 °C for 2 min 30 s, followed by 25 cycles of 94 °C for 15 s, 58 °C for 30 s, and 68 °C for 2 min 30 s + 5 s per cycle, and 1 cycle of 68 °C for 7 min. PCR products were purified using the PCR purification kit (Qiagen , Valencia, CA) and sequenced (Yale DNA Analysis Facility, New Haven, CT) using 27 sequencing primers (sequences available upon request).

Overlapping sequence chromatograms were edited using ChromasPro version 1.7.5 (Technelysium Pty Ltd.) and edited sequences were deposited in GenBank (Accession no. KT153580 and KT153581). Multiple sequence alignments were generated using the ClustalW algorithm, and the resulting alignment was comprised of 58 viruses and 11,104 nucleotide sites [38]. Phylogenetic and molecular evolutionary analyses were conducted by maximum-likelihood (ML) analysis using MEGA version 6 [39]. The optimal nucleotide substitution model was selected by performing ML fits of 24 different models in MEGA. Support for individual nodes was evaluated by performing 1000 bootstrap replicates.

Avian population abundance estimates

Observation frequency of local avian species (Fig. 2) were estimated for 5 months from June through October 2012, based on the information available through a project by the Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology and the National Audubon Society to track the bird abundance in North America. “Frequency” represents the percentage of checklists reporting the species within a specified date range and region. Observation frequency of avian populations was expressed in decimal format ranging from 0 to 1, indicating “absent” to “present” for all observations. The frequency data consist of information obtained from historic submissions of bird count lists from birders in and around the wetlands where blood-fed mosquitoes were collected [40].

Fig. 2
figure 2

a and c Percentage of avian-derived blood meals for Cs. melanura compared with average avian frequencies in Addison and Rutland Counties, VT, June through October, 2012. b and d Monthly frequencies of avian species based on point count data in Addison and Rutland Counties, VT, June through October, 2012. Bars above each avian species represent frequencies of these species from June through October, during which blood-fed mosquitoes had also been collected

Results

Mosquito species

Vertebrate hosts of 574 engorged field-collected mosquitoes of seven species, Cs. melanura (n = 331), An. quadrimaculatus Say (n = 164), An. punctipennis (Say) (n = 56), Ae. vexans (n = 9); Cx. pipiens s.l. (n = 6), Coquillettidia perturbans, and Culiseta morsitans (Theobald) (each n = 4) were identified to species.

Vertebrate host choice by mosquitoes

Culiseta melanura

Of the 331 engorged Cs. melanura, 312 (94.3 %) had avian- and 19 (5.7 %) mammalian-derived blood meals (Table 1). Forty-nine avian species representing 18 families and 5 orders were identified (Tables 1 and 2). Passeriformes constituted the most numerous hosts representing 77.6 % of avian-derived blood meals. Ciconiiformes represented the second most frequent source (18.3 %), whereas comparatively few Cuculiformes (1.9 %), Strigiformes (1.6 %), and Columbiformes (0.6 %) were identified (Table 2). Green Heron, Butorides virescens (L.) was the most frequent host (16.9 % of all vertebrate hosts), followed by American Robin, Turdus migratorius L. (11.5 %), Common Yellowthroat, Geothlypis trichas (L.) (9.1 %), Black-capped Chickadee, Poecile atricapillus (L.) (5.1 %), and then 45 other avian species (51 %) (Table 1).

Table 1 Number and percentage of avian- and mammalian-derived blood meals identified from Culiseta melanura in Vermont, June through October, 2012
Table 2 Number and percentage of avian families (n = 18) as host choice for Culiseta melanura in Addison and Rutland Counties, Vermont, June through October, 2012

Of the 49 avian species as hosts for Cs. melanura, Passeriformes comprised 44 species (89.8 %), followed by Ciconiiformes 2 species (4.1 %), Cuculiformes, Columbiformes and Strigiformes, each one species (2.0 %) (Tables 1 and 2). Mammalian hosts included the domestic cow, Bos taurus L. (n = 14, 73.7 % of mammalian hosts), human, Homo sapiens L. (n = 4, 21.1 %), and white-tailed deer (n = 1, 5.3 %) (Table 1).

Anopheles quadrimaculatus

Of the 164 An. quadrimaculatus, 159 (97.0 %) obtained blood meals from mammalian species, and 3 (3.0 %) had avian-derived blood meals. Domestic cows were the most frequent host (72.6 % of all vertebrate-derived blood meals) followed by 7 other mammalian species including horse, Equus caballus L. (2.4 %), and humans (1.2 %). Avian hosts included the American Robin (0.6 %), Common Yellowthroat (0.6 %), and Emu (1.8 %) (Table 3). Anopheles quadrimaculatus mosquitoes that fed on emus were collected from a site in close proximity to an Emu farm.

Table 3 Number and percentage of avian- and mammalian-derived blood meals identified from Ae. vexans, An. punctipennis, An. quadrimaculatus, Cq. perturbans, Cs. morsitans, and Cx. pipiens s.l. in Vermont, June through October, 2012

Anopheles punctipennis

Of the 56 blood-fed An. punctipennis, 52 (92.8 %) obtained blood meals from mammalian hosts, and 4 (7.2 %) had avian-derived blood meals. White-tailed deer was the most frequent source (67.9 %) followed by domestic cows (17.9 %), humans (5.4 %), and horses (1.8 %). Avian hosts included the Green Heron, Common Yellowthroat, Red-eyed Vireo, Vireo olivaceous (L.), and Northern Cardinal, Cardinalis cardinalis (L.) (each 1.8 %) (Table 3).

Aedes vexans

Of the 9 blood-fed Ae. vexans, 7 (77.8 %) obtained blood meals from mammalian hosts, and 2 (22.2 %) had avian-derived blood meals. Mammalian hosts of Ae. vexans included white-tailed deer (n = 4, 44.4 %), and domestic cows (n = 3, 33.4 %). Avian hosts were identified as Green Heron, and Swamp Sparrow, Melospiza georgiana (Latham) (each n = 1, 11.1 %) (Table 3).

Culex pipiens

All specimens had acquired blood meals from avian hosts including the Wood Thrush, Hylocichla mustelina (Gmelin) (n = 3, 50 %)), Green Heron, Cedar Waxwing, Bombycilla cedrorum Vieillot and the Bobolink, Dolichonyx oryzivorus L. (each n = 1, 16.7 %) (Table 3).

Culiseta morsitans

All 4 specimens had obtained blood meals from the avian host, Wood Thrush (Table 3).

Coquillettidia perturbans

Of the 4 Cq. perturbans, 3 (75 %) had mammalian- and 1 (25 %) avian-derived blood meals. All three mammalian blood meals were from white-tailed deer, and the avian host was identified as the Mallard Duck, Anas platyrhynchos L. (Table 3).

Seasonal variation in avian host composition

The monthly prevalence of Cs. melanura blood meals acquired from 49 avian species is shown in Table 1. In June, we identified 45 avian-derived blood meals from 13 species, of which 62.2 % (n = 28) were from Green Heron, followed by American Robin (n = 5, 11.1 %), Black-capped Chickadee (n = 2, 4.4 %), and 10 other bird species (n = 10, 22.3 %). In July, although the number of avian hosts increased to 31 species, Green Heron remained the most frequently identified host (n = 28, 23.5 %), followed by American Robin (n = 8, 6.7 %), and then several other species (each n = 4, 3.4 %). In August however, no Green Heron-derived blood meals were identified and American Robin was the most frequently identified host (n = 19, 22.4 %), followed by Common Yellowthroat (n = 7, 8.2 %), Black-capped Chickadee and Northern Cardinal (each n = 5, 5.9 %). In September, Common Yellowthroat served as the most frequently identified host (n =16, 21.1 %), followed by Rose-breasted Grosbeak, Pheucticus ludovicianus L. (n = 8, 10.5 %), and several other bird species (n = 29, 38.2 %). Only 6 avian-derived blood meals were identified in October representing 5 species (Table 1). Chi-squared test showed significant temporal differences in the monthly proportion of blood meals from Green Heron (p < 0.0001), American Robin (p < 0.0001), and Common Yellowthroat (p < 0.0001) as the most frequent hosts for Cs. melanura.

Frequency estimates of avian species and Cs. melanura blood feeding

Monthly frequencies of regional avian species in the study area are depicted in Fig. 2. Relatively higher frequencies of American Robin, Common Yellowthroat, Black-capped Chickadee, Red-eyed Vireo, Northern Cardinal, American Goldfinch, Spinus tristis L., and several other bird species were noticed throughout the year. The percentage of Cs. melanura that acquired blood meals from some of these bird species were as expected based on their abundance. However, no blood meals were identified from Blue Jay, Cyanocitta cristata L., Song Sparrow, Melospiza melodia Wilson, or Mourning Dove, Zenaida macroura L. despite the comparative abundance of these birds in the region, based on frequency estimates. Notably, Green Heron had a relatively lower frequency in the region, but comprised the most frequent source of blood meals for Cs. melanura in June and July.

Eastern equine encephalitis virus infection in Cs. melanura

Five virus isolates were recovered from head and thorax of individual blood-fed Cs. melanura in Vero cell culture, and all were subsequently identified as EEEV by real-time RT-PCR assays suggesting disseminated infection. These specimens had been collected on August 7, 2012, September 8, 2012 and September 18, 2012 from the towns of Whiting and Cornwall (Addison County), and Brandon (Rutland County). The host species for these mosquitoes were identified as American Robin, Common Yellowthroat, and Savannah Sparrow, Passerculus sandwichensis (Gmelin) (Table 4). EEEV was also detected from ten pools of non-blooded Cs. melanura from late July to early September (Fig. 3). The first EEEV positive pool was detected on July 24, 2012, and the last one on September 8, 2012. Mosquitoes were not collected during the second week of September (CDC week 37) due to an unexpected circumstance and unavailability of human resources. Virus-infected mosquitoes were collected from three trapping locations in close proximity to human and equine cases (Fig. 1).

Table 4 Identity of virus isolates from individual blood-fed Cs. melanura mosquitoes, date of collection, location, trap type, and blood meal sources, in Addison and Rutland Counties, Vermont, 2012
Fig. 3
figure 3

Weekly eastern equine encephalitis virus (EEEV) isolations and Maximum Likelihood Estimations (MLEs) compared to average Cs. melanura collected per trap night, 2012. The line graph represents the weekly average Cs. melanura captured per trap citywide. The bar graph represents the total number of EEEV-positive mosquito pools from each week with a corresponding MLE above the bar (calculated with both Vector Test and PCR positives of Cs. melanura pools)

Phylogenetic analysis

To evaluate the phylogenetic relationships of EEEV isolates from Vermont mosquitoes, we sequenced two virus strains and compared these sequences with those available on GenBank. Maximum likelihood analysis revealed that Vermont strains from 2012 were most similar to each other yet distinct from an earlier isolate of EEEV in this state from 2011 (Fig. 4). The 2012 strains clustered with viruses isolated earlier in Virginia from 2003–2009 whereas the Vermont isolate from 2011 shared sequence identity with a Florida 2001 strain, as previously noted [18]. These findings suggest that EEEV was independently introduced into Vermont on at least two separate occasions.

Fig. 4
figure 4

Maximum-likelihood tree based on EEEV sequences. Taxon names specify the GenBank number and state and year where they were collected. Numbers at nodes indicate bootstrap support >60 %. Branch lengths are proportional to the number of nucleotide subtitutions

Discussion

Our analysis of the host associations of Cs. melanura provides further insight into the role of this species as the principal enzootic vector of EEEV in this northerly region of New England where the virus activity had been largely unrecognized. We found that Cs. melanura predominantly (94.3 %) feeds on passerine birds and focuses its feeding activity on several key species capable of supporting EEEV transmission, in particular, the Green Heron, American Robin, Common Yellowthroat, and Black-capped Chickadee. Our findings are consistent with previous studies from more southern geographic locales that have examined the host feeding patterns of Cs. melanura [10, 17, 21, 22, 41, 42]. However, a small percentage (5.7 %) of Cs. melanura was also identified with mammalian-derived blood meals including humans (1.2 %), suggesting occasional contribution of this species to epidemic transmission of EEEV in this region.

Green Heron is common and widespread from the northwestern U.S. across southeastern Canada and south to the West Indies, Panama, and northern South America, but may not be easily noticed (http://www.vermontbirds.org/vbba/pdf/VBBA1/Green%20Heron.pdf). They breed in coastal and inland wetlands and nest along swamps, marshes, lakes, ponds, impoundments, and other wetland habitats with trees and shrubs. In Vermont, the species is near the northern limit of its range. Therefore, its distribution is somewhat spotty, and it is absent or very irregular at higher elevations and in the northeastern corner of the state (http://www.vermontbirds.org/vbba/pdf/VBBA1/Green%20Heron.pdf). Green Heron arrives in Vermont around the third week in April and departs early in the fall, becoming scarce after early September (http://www.vermontbirds.org/vbba/pdf/VBBA1/Green%20Heron.pdf, http://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Green_Heron/id, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Green_heron).

There is little information available on the competency of Green Heron for EEEV or its exposure status to the virus in the northeastern U.S. However, serological studies on Pelicaniformes and Ciconiiformes particularly Ardeidae family (Bitterns, Herons, and Allies) suggest these birds may be involved in amplification of EEEV in the southern U.S. In field studies conducted in Louisiana, Green Heron, Black-crowned Night Heron, Nycticorax nycticorax L., Yellow-crowned Night Heron, Nyctanassa violacea L., and Great Blue Heron, Ardea Herodias L. were shown to have high prevalence of neutralizing antibody to EEEV, and the virus has been isolated from the blood of a nestling Yellow-crowned Night Heron [4345]. Furthermore, the Snowy Egret, Egretta thula (Molina) has been shown to be highly susceptible to inoculation with EEEV, and neutralizing antibody was detected in this species from Florida [43, 45]. Recent blood meal analysis conducted in Florida has further revealed that these three herons are frequently fed upon by Cs. melanura [46]. Therefore, close association of Ardeidae birds with swamp habitats, where Cs. melanura and some other mosquito species breed, their ability to migrate over long distances and disperse following the breeding season, and high antibody prevalence suggest these birds could be involved in transport of EEEV from more southerly regions to the northeast and from further north to southern regions during fall migration [47].

American Robin served as the second most frequent host for Cs. melanura in the present study. Similarly, American Robin served as the most frequent source of blood meal for Cs. melanura in neighboring Massachusetts and Connecticut (22.9 %), and as the second most frequent host in New York (9.1 %) [10, 17, 21]. Resident and migratory populations of American Robin are common in North America, where they inhabit open and forested habitats in urban/suburban and rural settings, riparian forests, early successional forests, and closed canopy forests and woodlands [48]. Emergence of the first clutch of American Robin in early July in northern areas of the northeast temporally overlaps with the first generation of Cs. melanura [4851] (http://www.epa.gov/housatonic/thesite/restofriver/reports/final_era/B%20-%20Focus%20Species%20Profiles/EcoRiskProfile_american_robin.pdf). American Robin is a moderately competent amplifying host, and EEEV has been isolated from local populations of this species in Massachusetts and New Jersey [2, 52, 53]. Therefore, results of our study in identifying American Robin as the second most frequent host in the present study, its abundance and other lines of evidence further suggest potential contribution of this avian species to maintenance and amplification of EEEV in the region.

As a New World warbler, Common Yellowthroat is active in open areas with thick, low and tangled vegetation, ranging from wetlands to grasslands to open pine forests and prairies. During migration, Common Yellowthroat uses diverse habitats including backyards and forests. The breeding range for Common Yellowthroat stretches across most of the United States, the Canadian provinces, and western Mexico (http://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Common_Yellowthroat/lifehistory). The Common Yellowthroat was identified as one of the most frequently fed upon hosts by Cs. melanura in upstate New York, and as a relatively frequent host in Connecticut and Massachusetts [10, 17, 21]. In serosurvey of wild birds for infection with EEEV, high antibody prevalence has been reported from Common Yellowthroat, or the virus has been isolated from this bird in New Jersey, New York, and Massachusetts [2, 5356]. In a multi-year study of mosquito feeding patterns in a southeastern focus of EEEV in Alabama, Common Yellowthroat had a forage ratio estimate for Cs. melanura that was greater than one, suggesting that this bird species may be a preferred host [42]. In a serological study of wild birds for infection with Alphaviruses in upstate New York, Common Yellowthroat was antibody positive (n = 24, 19.0 %) for EEEV and the virus was isolated from five specimens (4.0 %) of this bird species [56].

As a small non-migratory songbird, Black-capped Chickadee lives in deciduous and mixed deciduous/coniferous woodlands, open woods, swamps, and dense canopies in North American (http://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Black-capped_Chickadee/lifehistory). Black-capped Chickadee is more common near edges of wooded areas, but can be found in the middle of large wooded tracts, and builds nests usually between 1.5 and 7 m high within the reach of questing mosquitoes. We identified Black-capped Chickadee as a frequent host of Cs. melanura in the present study in accordance with the findings of earlier investigations in upstate New York, Massachusetts, and Connecticut [10, 17, 21]. Black-capped Chickadee captured within EEEV foci in Massachusetts and New York have been reported to have very high antibody prevalence for EEEV, and the virus has been isolated from this bird [53, 56].

As a predominantly ornithophagic mosquito, the role of Cs. melanura in enzootic transmission of EEEV is well established. However, the potential contribution of this species to epidemic/epizootic transmission to humans/equines is unclear. Our study indicates that a small percentage of this mosquito species acquire blood meals from mammalian species including humans in support of other recent investigations [10, 17]. These findings in conjunction with its close association in time and space with virus foci, high virus titer in field-collected mosquitoes and physiological competence, local abundance, and frequent infection in nature, suggest that occasional human feeding by Cs. melanura could account for the comparatively few number of human cases that typically ensue periods of intense epizootic activity in this species.

In the present study, very small numbers of engorged Ae. vexans and Cq. perturbans were captured and examined for the source of blood meals, therein precluding any possible assessment of their respective roles in transmission of EEEV in this region. However, EEEV has been repeatedly detected in Cq. perturbans in other regions of the northeast, highlighting its potential contribution to epidemic/epizootic transmission of EEEV where sufficient populations of this virus-competent species overlap temporally and spatially with Cs. melanura [8, 9, 24].

Anopheles quadrimaculatus and An. punctipennis contained mostly mammalian-derived blood meals with little inclination for feeding on birds. Other studies have identified a relatively greater percentage of avian-derived blood meals in these two Anopheline species, suggesting that they may occasionally acquire EEEV infection from viremic birds, and EEEV has been isolated from An. quadrimaculatus and An. punctipennis collected in northeastern U.S. [8, 22, 5759]. Both are moderately competent vectors of EEEV, are abundant in wetland habitats where EEEV occurs, and seek hosts from mid-summer to early fall, when the virus is actively transmitted, thus suggesting that both An. quadrimaculatus and An. punctipennis may occasionally contribute to EEEV transmission in the northeastern U.S. [24].

Seasonal shifts in mosquito blood feeding from avian to mammalian hosts that may purportedly influence the role of various mosquito species in epidemic/epizootic transmission of arboviruses have been reported for other species [6066]. Due to small percentage of Cs. melanura blood feeding from mammalian hosts, we did not observe a shift from avian to mammalian species; however, a late seasonal shift from Green Heron to American Robin, Common Yellowthroat, and Black-capped Chickadee was noted in August and September. The northern population of Green Heron moves to its breeding ranges during March and April, near the northernmost limit of this bird range, and breeding is well underway by the end of May. Migration to the winter quarters starts in September; by late October, these birds are absent from regions where they do not stay all year. Eastern breeders migrate via Florida, the Gulf Coast, and the Caribbean (http://www.vermontbirds.org/vbba/pdf/VBBA1/Green%20Heron.pdf, http://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Green_Heron/id, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Green_heron). Although we have no direct evidence, these observations are consistent with the view that migrating Green Heron may contribute to early season introduction and “seeding” of EEEV into northern virus foci wherein other avian species subsequently serve as maintenance hosts and support viral amplification.

In this study, we recovered EEEV from the head and thorax portion of five Cs. melanura mosquitoes and identified their respective blood meal sources. These virus-infected mosquitoes had fed exclusively on passerine birds, specifically the Common Yellowthroat, American Robin, and Savannah Sparrow. The presence of virus in the head and thorax suggests that these were disseminated infections that were acquired from earlier blood meals than those identified in this study.

Phylogenetic analyses were also conducted to evaluate the geographic origin of EEEV strains from Vermont. Viral strains from 2012 were nearly identical to each other, but genetically distinct from a 2011 strain from Vermont. This suggests that EEEV was independently introduced into this geographic region on at least two separate occasions. The 2012 strain was most similar to EEEV isolated in Virginia from 2003–2009, whereas the 2011 strain grouped with a 2001 Florida strain, suggesting long-distance introduction of EEEV strains from southern source populations as previously discussed [11, 13].

Conclusion

We show that Cs. melanura feeds primarily on passerine birds in Vermont and focuses its feeding activity on several species capable of supporting EEEV transmission, and occasionally acquires blood meals from mammalian hosts including humans. These behavioral characteristics, in conjunction with observations on its vector competence and high EEEV titers and infection rates in field-collected mosquitoes, qualify Cs. melanura not only as the principal vector of EEEV in enzootic cycle among wild bird species, but also enable this species to occasionally contribute to epidemic/epizootic transmission of EEEV in the region.

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Acknowledgments

We are grateful to Michael Misencik and Saryn Kunajukr Center for Vector Biology & Zoonotic Diseases, CAES, and Jarrod Bridge, seasonal research assistant for technical assistance; and Susan Jones and Steven Zink from the Arbovirus Lab of the Wadsworth Center for testing mosquitoes. We also thank Dr. Erica Berl by providing funding from the 2012 CDC ELC grant to the Vermont Department of Health. Funding for this research was provided by the Laboratory Capacity for Infectious Diseases Cooperative Agreement Number U50/CCU6806-01-1 from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued to CAES, and USDA NIFA Multi-state Research Project 1043.

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Conceived and designed the experiments: GM, TA & AG. Performed the experiments: GM, PA, AG & LK. Analyzed the data: GM, PA & AG. Contributed reagents/materials/analysis tools: GM, PA, AG & LK. Wrote the paper: GM, PA, AG, TA & LK. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.

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Molaei, G., Armstrong, P.M., Graham, A.C. et al. Insights into the recent emergence and expansion of eastern equine encephalitis virus in a new focus in the Northern New England USA. Parasites Vectors 8, 516 (2015). https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.1186/s13071-015-1145-2

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