NewsWorld
PredictionsDigestsScorecardTimelinesArticles
NewsWorld
HomePredictionsDigestsScorecardTimelinesArticlesWorldTechnologyPoliticsBusiness
AI-powered predictive news aggregation© 2026 NewsWorld. All rights reserved.
Trending
MilitaryIranNuclearTalksTimelineIranianFebruarySignificantCompanyPolicyDigestCaliforniaSecurityFridayFacesHumanDiscoveryStrikesMarketWarnerPricesChinaLegalCongressional
MilitaryIranNuclearTalksTimelineIranianFebruarySignificantCompanyPolicyDigestCaliforniaSecurityFridayFacesHumanDiscoveryStrikesMarketWarnerPricesChinaLegalCongressional
All Articles
Mosquitoes began biting humans more than a million years ago
Science News
Published about 18 hours ago

Mosquitoes began biting humans more than a million years ago

Science News · Feb 26, 2026 · Collected from RSS

Summary

A DNA analysis suggests mosquitoes shifted from nonhuman primates to early humans nearly 2 million years ago.

Full Article

A DNA analysis traced the history of mosquitoes’ initial human bites A close look at mosquito DNA reveals when the insects switched from biting nonhuman primates to our early human ancestors. Peter Finch/Stone/Getty Images Mosquitoes have been biting people for more than a million years and probably much longer. An analysis of 38 modern mosquitoes’ DNA suggests an ancestral mosquito species developed a preference for feeding on early humans between 2.9 and 1.6 million years ago, researchers write February 26 in Scientific Reports. The team studied 11 mosquito species from the Anopheles leucosphyrus group, chosen because they gave a good overview of the entire group’s genetics. Some species were “anthropophilic” mosquitoes — human feeders — including Anopheles dirus and Anopheles baimaii, both of which spread malaria, while others fed only on nonhuman primates (mostly monkeys) or on both. The team used the genetic data to reconstruct the insects’ evolutionary history from the mutation rates in their genes. That let the researchers estimate when mosquitoes first bit humans and where — a submerged landmass called Sundaland, the remnants of which are now the Malay Peninsula, Borneo, Sumatra and Java. The leucosphyrus group was the first to adapt to bite humans, while other types of mosquitoes acquired this preference only in the last 10,000 years. “We were not expecting this group to have originated so long ago,” says evolutionary biologist Catherine Walton of the University of Manchester in England. “The most parsimonious explanation is that it was in response to these early hominins arriving.” Before humans arrived, the mosquitoes had fed exclusively on the blood of nonhuman primates in the rainforest canopy. This was the insects’ “ancestral behavior,” and previous studies indicate biting nonhuman primates began more than 3.6 million years ago. Archaeologists still debate when the first human ancestors from Africa spread into Asia. But the new study of mosquito genetics independently suggests that the movement happened around 1.8 million years ago, and it matches a recent study that dates the oldest Homo erectus skulls in China to about the same time. H. erectus must have lived in Southeast Asia in large numbers to drive the mosquitoes’ biting adaptation, which seems to have been based on the early human’s unique odor. “You need an abundance of Homo erectus to really get an evolutionary change taking place,” Walton says. And while only about 100 of the estimated 3,600 modern mosquito species have evolved to bite humans, the insects have been ruining quiet evenings ever since. More Stories from Science News on Anthropology


Share this story

Read Original at Science News

Related Articles

Science Newsabout 15 hours ago
Here’s how honeyeaters and other birds thrive on sugary diets

Birds that feed on nectar or fruit evolved better mechanisms for managing metabolism, blood pressure and high glucose.

Science Newsabout 18 hours ago
Can you trust the results from gut microbiome tests? Maybe not

Seven firms reported inconsistent results on the same sample, some over multiple tests. These gut microbe discrepancies could have health consequences.

Science News1 day ago
Climate change could threaten monarch mass migration

Suitable milkweed habitat in Mexico may shift south, fracturing existing migration routes and possibly pushing some butterflies to stay put.

Science News1 day ago
Metal pollution from a rocket reentry detected for the first time

Direct detection of lithium from a SpaceX rocket reentry offers new evidence that metal pollution from space debris could threaten the ozone layer.

Science News1 day ago
Here’s why sneakers squeak on the basketball court

Tiny, repeating detachments between sole and floor — thousands of times a second — create the distinctive squeak heard on the court, data show.

Science News2 days ago
Keeping a beat wins caterpillars friends in low places

Finding a caterpillar with rhythm was “mind-blowing,” suggesting it might be a more widespread part of animal communication than thought.