Ancient origin of an urban underground mosquito
Ghallab, Enas;
Abstract
Understanding how life is adapting to urban environments represents an important challenge in evolutionary biology. In this work, we investigate a widely cited example of urban adaptation, Culex pipiens form molestus, also known as the London Underground mosquito. Population genomic analysis of ~350 contemporary and historical samples counters the popular hypothesis that molestus originated belowground in London <200 years ago. Instead, we show that molestus first adapted to human environments aboveground in the Mediterranean or Middle East over the course of more than 1000 years, possibly in association with ancient agricultural civilizations of the Middle East. Our results highlight the role of early human society in priming taxa for contemporary urban evolution. They also provide insight into whether and how molestus contributes to West Nile virus transmission in modern cities.
Other data
| Title | Ancient origin of an urban underground mosquito | Authors | Ghallab, Enas | Keywords | Science 23 Oct 2025 Vol , Issue DOI: | Issue Date | 23-Oct-2025 | Publisher | Science | Journal | Science | Volume | 390 | Issue | 6771 | Start page | eady4515 | DOI | 10.1126/science.ady4515 |
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| science.ady4515.pdf | Full Text | 6.67 MB | Adobe PDF | Request a copy |
| WhatsApp Image 2025-12-22 at 5.23.19 PM.jpeg | PipPop Consortium (authors names in the last page of the paper) | 94.91 kB | JPEG | Request a copy |
| 50.Haba etal., 2025-science.ady4515.pdf | 6.67 MB | Unknown | Request a copy |
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