ÐÓ°ÉÔ­´´

Skip to Content

What Are the Risks of Contracting West Nile Virus From a Mosquito in Canada?

Lead image by Unaihuiziphotography / iStock

By Mehra Balsara, Antoinette Ludwig, Catherine Cullingham and Marc Avramov

As a in Ontario this week, Canadians may be wondering: just how prevalent are such mosquito-borne viruses in Canada, and how risky is the summer camping trip?

Mosquitoes are the , carrying . Malaria alone takes . Cases of , and are projected to rise globally due to climate and land-use change.

While Canada’s cold weather currently , local species do transmit lesser-known seasonal viruses like .

As , tropical species such as the are also , along with the deadly viruses they transmit.

Surveillance is our best defence. Our lab group has collaborated with Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada and the Public Health Agency of Canada to . We’ve developed cost-effective strategies to improve the detection of mosquito-borne viruses.

West Nile virus

While West Nile virus is becoming more prevalent in Canada, the good news is that only around result in flu-like symptoms. Less than one per cent of cases like meningitis or encephalitis.

West Nile virus can be deadly for the most vulnerable, however. Research shows organ transplant recipients have up to a of developing neuroinvasive symptoms.

, or those with co-morbidities like heart disease, hypertension and diabetes.

What’s troubling is that West Nile virus and other mosquito-borne illnesses may be under-detected. In 2022, there were , suggesting that milder infections remain undiagnosed.

The head of a black crow against a blurred yellow background
A dead crow found in the City of Guelph tested positive for West Nile virus on June 2, 2026. (Wikimedia Commons/Alexis Lours),

Mosquito surveillance

, but these programs have some limitations.

Current surveillance aims to assess human risk by monitoring areas where humans and mosquitoes overlap. In Ontario, because sites are monitored only after documented cases, , even though West Nile virus is primarily spread in rural areas.

While humans can be infected with West Nile virus, we don’t carry high enough levels of the virus to spread it to an uninfected mosquito that bites us. The virus can only proliferate through an — both present in high numbers in rural and agricultural regions. West Nile virus has been detected in over and is most common for birds in the passerine family, like and the .

How can we confidently predict an outbreak if we aren’t properly monitoring these areas?

Our has been , along with our collaborators. By creating a surveillance program that monitors different habitat types in Ontario, we can get ahead of West Nile virus.

Genomics as a tool

How do we pick the right areas to monitor? In our work, we’re interested in to understand how and where the virus is spreading.

The first possible approach is phylogeography — . Exciting research has used . The researchers even assessed whether birds or mosquitoes were the most likely culprits in spreading the virus.

This information helps pinpoint broad areas at risk of the virus and the possible transmission routes. But what if your area already has West Nile virus?

In that case, you need to look at these patterns at a local level. A landscape genetics approach can help us match patterns in genetic relatedness across space to specific landscape and climate features. This tells us how and where the virus is circulating in your local community, helping inform where we need surveillance most.

While this method has yet to be used in West Nile virus surveillance, it has been successfully applied by some researchers to . Their work can now be used to inform targeted control strategies in the region.

The future of surveillance

Monitoring and prevention are inseparable. Only after we identify what and where a pathogen is can we make informed decisions about what steps to take. We cannot control mosquito-borne diseases without knowing where they are and how they spread.

We need to establish a two-pronged approach: habitat and genomics-informed surveillance. These tools are essential for controlling the mosquito-borne viruses currently here, and those that could threaten us in the future.

But please, keep camping. Just remember your long-sleeved shirt, bug spray and — for the super keen — a net over your cap.

Roqeeb Akinbile, a master’s student in bioinformatics at ÐÓ°ÉÔ­´´ University, co-authored this article.

–
 is a PhD student in biology, Catherine Cullingham is an associate professor in biology, and is a PhD candidate in biology at ÐÓ°ÉÔ­´´ University.

This article is  from The Conversation under a Creative Commons licence. All photos provided by  from various from various sources.

A woman in a hat carries a Canadian flag through a lush green field.

The U.S. Narrowly Upheld Birthright Citizenship. What ÐÓ°ÉÔ­´´ Canada?

The United States Supreme Court recently struck down President Donald Trump’s executive order that sought to limit birthright citizenship for children based on their parents’…

Books on a bookshelf in what appears to be a store or library.

Want To Be a Better Reader? Here’s How To Practise Active Reading

If you’re part of Gen Z, chances are you rely on social media for news and current events. And if you’re under 30, you’re more…

Flags of the World Cup surrounding a soccer ball on a soccer field.

At the 2026 World Cup, There Will Be More Winners Than Just the Champion

Who wouldn’t want to know who the winner of the 2026 FIFA World Cup will be? That’s impossible without a crystal ball. In reality, along…