(Press-News.org) A new genetic study overturns the myth of the “London Underground Mosquito,” revealing that this common urban insect originated not below the cities of modern Europe, but in ancient Mediterranean civilizations more than a thousand years ago, according to a new study. Modern cities are reshaping ecosystems, driving rapid adaptation in many species. A striking example is the northern house mosquito, Culex pipiens, which exists in two forms: the bird-biting C. pipiens f. pipiens (pipiens), adapted to open-air, seasonal environments, and the human-biting C. pipiens f. molestus (molestus), which thrives in urban belowground spaces. Molestus mates in confined areas, remains active in winter, bites humans, and can lay eggs without a blood meal, yet is morphologically indistinguishable to pipiens. This species is also known to be a potent vector for several mosquito-borne diseases, including West Nile virus. The origin of molestus is debated, however. One hypothesis suggests that it evolved rapidly in the London Underground during World War II. However, historical records describe molestus-like mosquitoes in European cellars and Mediterranean aboveground habitats far earlier and perhaps centuries before the rise of modern cities. Too better understand the origin of molestus, Yuki Haba and colleagues sequenced the whole genomes of 357 C. pipiens mosquitos (both contemporary and historical samples) from across Europe and North Africa. Their findings reveal that molestus did not evolve rapidly in northern European subways or within the last few centuries. Instead, genomic evidence shows that molestus adapted to human habitats aboveground environments in the Mediterranean or Near East over a period of a thousand or more years, possibly in association with the rise of early dense agricultural settlements along the banks of the Nile in Egypt. Key traits enabling urban belowground success, such as biting mammals, mating in confined spaces, and laying eggs without a blood meal, were present in these ancient aboveground populations, arguing for the importance of preexisting traits in urban adaptation. While ancient origins primed molestus for urban environments, additional modern evolution likely occurred after colonizing subterranean urban habitats, Haba et al. note. These findings underscore that adaptation to human-altered environments can build on traits evolved long before modern cities and may involve multiple, independent colonization events globally. In a related Perspective, Jason Munshi-South and Ann Evankow discuss the study in greater detail.
END
Ancient Mediterranean origin of the “London Underground Mosquito”
Summary author: Walter Beckwith
2025-10-23
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Functional extinction of Florida’s reef-building corals following the 2023 marine heatwave
2025-10-23
The record-breaking 2023 marine heatwave has killed nearly all of Florida’s critically endangered Acropora coral colonies, marking the species’ functional extinction in Florida’s Coral Reef (FCR), researchers report. The findings sound a dire warning for the future of coral ecosystems in our rapidly warming oceans. The increasing frequency and intensity of extreme climate events, such as marine heat waves, are severely undermining the health, structure, and resilience of ecosystems worldwide. Coral reefs, among the most heat-sensitive marine environments, ...
Duck-billed dinosaur “mummies” preserve fleshy hide and hooves in thin layers of clay
2025-10-23
New paleontological findings offer insights into Wyoming’s “dinosaur mummies,” revealing that the stunningly preserved skin, spikes, and hooves of duck-billed dinosaurs are not fossilized flesh at all, but delicate clay molds formed by microbes as the creatures decayed, researchers report. Soft-tissue preservation in fossils usually occurs in fine-grained, oxygen-poor environments such as lagoons or seabeds, which enable the fossilization of delicate structures like feathers and skin. However, the so-called “dinosaur ...
Fatty winter snacks may trick the body into packing on the pounds
2025-10-23
Fatty Winter Snacks May Trick the Body into Packing on the Pounds
A new study from UC San Francisco shows that our natural eating patterns are more closely tied to seasonal rhythms than previously thought.
Next time you’re tempted to raid the pantry for snacks loaded with saturated fat — especially in winter — you might want to consider that the result could be a mounting urge for high-calorie nibbles.
That’s because, from our body’s perspective, saturated fat — which ...
Hitchhiking DNA picked up by gene, saves a species from extinction
2025-10-23
An international research team led by Hiroki Shibuya at RIKEN Center for Biosystems Dynamics Research (BDR) in Japan has solved a genetic mystery and revealed a previously unknown way that DNA can control what cells do. Published in Science on Oct 23, the study reveals that in the roundworm C. elegans, vital RNA needed to keep the ends of chromosomes intact does not have its own gene. Instead, it hitchhikes inside another one. DNA hitchhiking could be a common strategy in the animal kingdom, and has implications for anti-aging therapies and regenerative medicine in humans.
Telomeres are DNA ...
Cellarity publishes framework for discovery of cell state-correcting medicines in Science
2025-10-23
SOMERVILLE, Mass., October 23, 2025 – Cellarity, a biotechnology company developing Cell State-Correcting therapies through integrated multi-omics and AI modeling, today announced the publication of a seminal manuscript in the journal Science, which articulates a framework for the integration of advanced transcriptomic datasets and AI models to improve drug discovery.
Cellarity designs novel therapeutics for complex diseases by focusing on the interplay of pathway connections and interactions that define and modulate cellular states. The company has built ...
Peatlands’ ‘huge reservoir’ of carbon at risk of release
2025-10-23
ITHACA, N.Y. - Peatlands make up just 3% of the earth’s land surface but store more than 30% of the world’s soil carbon, preserving organic matter and sequestering its carbon for tens of thousands of years. A new study sounds the alarm that an extreme drought event could quadruple peatland carbon loss in a warming climate.
In the study, published Oct. 23 in Science, researchers find that, under conditions that mimic a future climate (with warmer temperatures and elevated carbon dioxide), extreme drought dramatically increases the release of carbon in peatlands by nearly three ...
Dinosaurs in New Mexico thrived until the very end, study shows
2025-10-23
For decades, many scientists believed dinosaurs were already dwindling in number and variety long before an asteroid strike sealed their fate 66 million years ago. But new research in the journal Science from Baylor University, New Mexico State University, The Smithsonian Institution and an international team is rewriting that story.
The dinosaurs, it turns out, were not fading away. They were flourishing.
A final flourish in the San Juan Basin
In northwestern New Mexico, layers of rock preserve a hidden chapter of Earth’s history. In the Naashoibito Member of the Kirtland ...
Miniscule wave machine opens big scientific doors
2025-10-23
University of Queensland researchers have made a microscopic ‘ocean’ on a silicon chip to miniaturise the study of wave dynamics.
The device, made at UQ’s School of Mathematics and Physics, uses a layer of superfluid helium only a few millionths of a millimetre thick on a chip smaller than a grain of rice.
Dr Christopher Baker said it was the world’s smallest wave tank, with the quantum properties of superfluid helium allowing it to flow without resistance, unlike classical fluids such as water, which become immobilised by viscosity at such small scales.
“The study of how fluids move has ...
Sanger Institute: Origins of the ‘London Underground mosquito’ uncovered, shedding light on West Nile virus transmission
2025-10-23
Embargoed: 23 October 19:00 UK / 14:00 US Eastern Times
Peer-reviewed / Experimental / Mosquito genomics
ORIGINS OF THE ‘LONDON UNDERGROUND MOSQUITO’ UNCOVERED, SHEDDING LIGHT ON WEST NILE VIRUS TRANSMISSION
Subtitle for website: International researchers disprove theory about the evolution of urban mosquito species.
New research has uncovered the ancient origins of an urban mosquito species, Culex pipiens form molestus, also known as the ‘London Underground mosquito’ – disproving a long-held theory of when it first evolved.
Published today (23 October) in Science, ...
Global study reveals tempo of invasive species‘ impacts
2025-10-23
Biological invasions occur when non-native or exotic species colonize new geographic regions, often to the detriment of local plants and animals. Today, human action contributes significantly to invasion processes, allowing species to bridge vast distances and enter new habitats at a highly accelerated rate. This makes it increasingly important to better understand the impact of invasions on ecosystems.
Researchers from the University of Bern, the University of Konstanz (Germany) and the Northeast Forestry University (China), have now shown how the ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
New center aims to make the future of trauma survivors brighter
Research-backed defense of DEI programs published today
From sewage to super soil: Dual breakthrough in phosphorus recycling unveiled by Chinese research teams
Sustainable use of woody biochar boosts soil carbon and crop yields in pepper fields
Smart hormone technologies could help sugarcane survive droughts and floods
Updated CPR guidelines released for pediatric and neonatal emergency care and resuscitation
Psilocybin plus mindfulness shows promise for healthcare worker depression
New study documents functional extinction of two critically endangered coral species following record heatwave in Florida
UC Irvine researchers find new Alzheimer’s mechanism linked to brain inflammation
Ancient stone tools trace Paleolithic Pacific migration
New ‘molecular dam’ stops energy leaks in nanocrystals
Hidden toxins in e-cigarette fluids may harm lung cells
Ancient Mediterranean origin of the “London Underground Mosquito”
Functional extinction of Florida’s reef-building corals following the 2023 marine heatwave
Duck-billed dinosaur “mummies” preserve fleshy hide and hooves in thin layers of clay
Fatty winter snacks may trick the body into packing on the pounds
Hitchhiking DNA picked up by gene, saves a species from extinction
Cellarity publishes framework for discovery of cell state-correcting medicines in Science
Peatlands’ ‘huge reservoir’ of carbon at risk of release
Dinosaurs in New Mexico thrived until the very end, study shows
Miniscule wave machine opens big scientific doors
Sanger Institute: Origins of the ‘London Underground mosquito’ uncovered, shedding light on West Nile virus transmission
Global study reveals tempo of invasive species‘ impacts
Study uncovers origins of urban human-biting mosquito, sheds light on uptick in West Nile virus spillover from birds to humans
It’s not the pain, it’s the mindset: How attitude outweighs pain
Researchers find certain ecological experiments may be too human-centric
Gender equality universally linked to physical capacity
UC Irvine astronomers discover nearby exoplanet in habitable zone
New way to destroy a cancer-linked molecule revealed
Highly manipulated heterostructure via additive manufacturing
[Press-News.org] Ancient Mediterranean origin of the “London Underground Mosquito”Summary author: Walter Beckwith