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. 2020 Jan 16;10(3):1581–1591. doi: 10.1002/ece3.6012

Table 1.

Detections of Wolbachia in natural populations of Aedes aegypti

Location Collection date(s) Evidence for infection Infection frequency (n tested) Supergroup Reference
Jacksonville, Florida, USA July 2014 Molecular detection (16S rRNA sequencing, MLST) Not specified A and B Coon et al. (2016)
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Not specified Molecular detection (wsp) 25% (16) Unknown Teo, Lim, Voon, and Mak (2017)
Nakhon Nayok, Thailand 2008 Molecular detection (16S and 18S rRNA sequencing) Not specified C, others Thongsripong et al. (2018)
Houston, Texas, USA Not specified Molecular detection (16S rRNA sequencing) Not specified Unknown Hegde et al. (2018)
Tamil Nadu, India August 2015 Molecular detection (16S rRNA, wsp, ftsZ, MLST) Not specified B Balaji, Jayachandran, and Prabagaran (2019)
Electron microscopy
qPCR across developmental stages and tissues
Removal through antibiotic treatment
New Mexico and Florida, USA 2016, 2017 Molecular detection (PCR, LAMP) 44.8% (194) B Kulkarni et al. (2019)
Maternal transmission
Manila, Philippines May 2014–January 2015 Molecular detection (wsp, 16S rDNA) 11.9% (672) A, B, C, D and J Carvajal, Hashimoto, Harnandika, Amalin, and Watanabe (2019)
Panama Not specified Molecular detection (16S rRNA sequencing) 0.2% (490) Unknown Bennett et al. (2019)