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Tiger mosquito found in Berlin, fear of permanent settlement

/picture alliance, Uwe Anspach

Berlin – Specimens of the Asian tiger mosquito have once again been detected in a Berlin allotment garden. The Senate Department for Health announced today that the hibernation was successful and permanent settlement is to be feared.

The mosquito species drawn in black and white was found last year in the facility in the Treptow-Köpenick district. This makes Berlin the northernmost point in Germany where a proliferation of Asian tiger mosquitoes has been proven.

The Asian tiger mosquito (Aedes albopictus) is originally native to South and Southeast Asia, but is also increasingly found in Central Europe. According to the Senate administration, there are already some populations in southern Germany, and isolated specimens have been found in Berlin since 2017.

The occurrence of the exotic mosquito species is monitored because the animals can transmit pathogens such as dengue or chikungunya viruses.

“The diseases caused by these viruses have not yet spread in Germany, but the corresponding pathogens are repeatedly brought in by people returning from travel,” says the statement from the Senate Department.

The project “mosquito atlas“ investigated. In cooperation with the Health Department Treptow-Köpenick and the State Office for Health and Social Affairs (LAGeSo) in June of this year, eggs, larvae and adult specimens of the mosquito were searched for in 35 plots of the affected allotment garden. The tenants of the facility were informed about preventive and control measures in the spring.

“The new finds of the Asian tiger mosquito in the allotment garden area require a coordinated control strategy to prevent the long-term settlement of this invasive species in Berlin and to effectively push back the first populations,” writes the Senate Department. The LAGeSo also asks the Berlin population to send suspicious mosquito specimens to the German mosquito atlas. © dpa/aerzteblatt.de

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