Department of Entomology, Agricultural Science Center North, University of Kentucky, S-225, Lexington, KY 40546-0091, USA.
Malar J. 2012 Jan 4;11:3. doi: 10.1186/1475-2875-11-3.
The purpose of this study was to determine whether the sugar-or-blood meal choice of Anopheles gambiae females one day after emergence is influenced by blood-host presence and accessibility, nectariferous plant abundance, and female size. This tested the hypothesis that the initial meal of female An. gambiae is sugar, even when a blood host is available throughout the night, and, if not, whether the use of a bed net diverts mosquitoes to sugar sources.
Females and males <1-day post-emergence were released in a mesocosm. Overnight they had access to either one or six Senna didymobotrya plants. Simultaneously they had access to a human blood host, either for 8 h or for only 30 min at dusk and dawn (the remainder of the night being excluded by an untreated bed net). In a third situation, the blood host was not present. All mosquitoes were collected in the morning. Their wing lengths, an indicator of pre-meal energetic state, were measured, and their meal choice was determined by the presence of midgut blood and of fructose.
Female sugar feeding after emergence was facultative. When a blood host was accessible for 8 h per night, 92% contained blood, and only 3.7% contained sugar. Even with the use of a bed net, 78% managed to obtain a blood meal during the 30 min of accessibility at dusk or dawn, but 14% of females were now fructose-positive. In the absence of a blood host, and when either one or six plants were available, a total of 21.7% and 23.6% of females and 30.8% and 43.5% of males contained fructose, respectively. Feeding on both sugar and blood was more likely with bed net use and with greater plant abundance. Further, mosquitoes that fed on both resources were more often small and had taken a sugar meal earlier than the blood meal. The abundance of sugar hosts also affected the probability of sugar feeding by males and the amount of fructose obtained by both males and females.
Even in an abundance of potential sugar sources, female An. gambiae appear to prefer a nearby human source of blood. However, the decision to take sugar was more likely if energy reserves were low. Results probably would differ if sugar hosts were more attractive or yielded larger sugar meals. The diversion of energetically deprived mosquitoes to sugar sources suggests a possible synergy between bed nets and sugar-based control methods.
本研究旨在确定在刚羽化一天的雌性疟蚊选择糖或血作为食物时,是否受到血源的存在和可及性、蜜源植物丰度以及雌蚊体型的影响。这验证了一个假设,即即使整晚都有血源,雌蚊的初始食物仍将是糖,否则,使用蚊帐是否会将蚊子引向糖源。
将羽化后 1 天以内的雌蚊和雄蚊放入一个中尺度生态系统中释放。它们在夜间可以接触到 1 株或 6 株双荚决明。同时,它们可以接触到一个人类血源,要么接触 8 小时,要么在黄昏和黎明时仅接触 30 分钟(通过未处理的蚊帐将其余时间排除在外)。在第三种情况下,没有血源。所有蚊子在早上收集。测量它们的翅长,这是餐前能量状态的指标,并通过中肠血和果糖的存在来确定它们的食物选择。
雌性蚊子在刚羽化后选择吃糖是有条件的。当血源每晚可接触 8 小时时,92%的蚊子含有血液,只有 3.7%的蚊子含有糖。即使使用蚊帐,在黄昏或黎明时的 30 分钟可接触时间内,仍有 78%的蚊子设法获得了血餐,但现在有 14%的雌蚊含有果糖。在没有血源的情况下,当只有 1 株或 6 株植物时,分别有 21.7%和 23.6%的雌性蚊子和 30.8%和 43.5%的雄性蚊子含有果糖。使用蚊帐和植物丰度增加,蚊子同时吃糖和血的可能性更大。此外,同时吃两种资源的蚊子往往体型较小,并且比吃血餐更早地吃了糖餐。糖源的丰富度也影响雄性蚊子吃糖的概率以及雌雄蚊子获得的果糖量。
即使在大量潜在的糖源中,雌性疟蚊似乎也更喜欢附近的人类血源。然而,如果能量储备较低,它们更有可能选择吃糖。如果糖源更具吸引力或产生更大的糖餐,结果可能会有所不同。将能量不足的蚊子吸引到糖源上,这表明蚊帐和基于糖的控制方法之间可能存在协同作用。