Evolutionary and Behavioural Ecology Research Group, Department of Biological Sciences, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, BC, Canada.
Natural Resources Canada, Canadian Forest Service, Victoria, BC, Canada.
Malar J. 2018 Jan 12;17(1):25. doi: 10.1186/s12936-017-2166-4.
Transmission of Plasmodium greatly depends on the foraging behaviour of its mosquito vector (Anopheles spp.). The accessibility of blood hosts and availability of plant sugar (i.e., nectar) sources, together with mosquito energy state, have been shown to modulate blood feeding (and thus biting rates) of anopheline mosquitoes. In this study, the influence of mosquito starvation status and availability of nectar on the decision of female Anopheles gambiae mosquitoes to leave a bed net-protected blood host was examined.
Two small-scale mesocosm experiments were conducted using female mosquitoes starved for 0, 24 or 48 h, that were released inside a specially constructed hut with mesh-sealed exits and containing a bed net-protected human volunteer. Floral cues were positioned on one side of the hut or the other. Several biologically plausible exponential decay models were developed that characterized the emigration rates of mosquitoes from the huts. These varied from simple random loss to leaving rates dependent upon energy state and time. These model fits were evaluated by examining their fitted parameter estimates and comparing Akaike information criterion.
Starved mosquitoes left domiciles at a higher rate than recently fed individuals however, there was no difference between 1- and 2-day-starved mosquitoes. There was also no effect of floral cue placement. The best fitting emigration model was one based on both mosquito energy state and time whereas the worst fitting model was one based on the assumption of constant leaving rates, independent of time and energy state.
The results confirm that mosquito-leaving behaviour is energy-state dependent, and provide some of the first evidence of state-dependent domicile emigration in An. gambiae, which may play a role in malarial transmission dynamics. Employment of simple, first-principle, mechanistic models can be very useful to our understanding of why and how mosquitoes leave domiciles.
疟原虫的传播很大程度上取决于其蚊子媒介(按蚊属)的觅食行为。宿主血液的可及性和植物糖(即花蜜)的可利用性,以及蚊子的能量状态,已被证明可以调节按蚊的吸血行为(从而影响叮咬率)。在这项研究中,研究了蚊子饥饿状态和花蜜可用性对雌性冈比亚按蚊离开蚊帐保护的血宿主的决策的影响。
使用饥饿 0、24 或 48 小时的雌性蚊子进行了两项小规模中尺度实验,将饥饿的雌性蚊子释放到一个特殊建造的带有网密封出口的小屋里,小屋里有一个蚊帐保护的人类志愿者。在小屋的一侧或另一侧放置了花香线索。开发了几种合理的指数衰减模型来描述蚊子从小屋中迁出的迁出率。这些模型从简单的随机损失到依赖能量状态和时间的离开率不等。通过检查拟合参数估计值并比较 Akaike 信息准则来评估这些模型拟合度。
饥饿的蚊子离开住所的速度比最近进食的个体快,但 1 天和 2 天饥饿的蚊子之间没有差异。花香线索的放置位置也没有影响。拟合度最好的迁出模型是基于蚊子能量状态和时间的模型,而拟合度最差的模型是基于假设离开率不变,与时间和能量状态无关的模型。
结果证实,蚊子离开行为依赖于能量状态,并为冈比亚按蚊的栖息地迁出与状态有关提供了一些初步证据,这可能在疟疾传播动态中发挥作用。采用简单的、基于第一原理的机制模型可以非常有助于我们理解蚊子为什么以及如何离开住所。