Departamento de Ingeniería Electrónica, SISTEMIC, Universidad de Antioquia, Medellín, Antioquia, 050010, Colombia.
Programa de Estudio y Control de Enfermedades Tropicales, PECET, Universidad de Antioquia, Medellín, Antioquia, 050010, Colombia.
Parasit Vectors. 2019 Aug 1;12(1):386. doi: 10.1186/s13071-019-3648-8.
Anopheles albimanus is a malaria vector in Central America, northern South America and the Caribbean. Although a public health threat, An. albimanus precopulatory mating behaviors are unknown. Acoustics play important roles in mosquito communication, where flight tones allow males to detect and attract potential mates. The importance of sound in precopulatory interactions has been demonstrated in Toxorhynchites brevipalpis, Aedes aegypti, Culex quinquefasciatus and Anopheles gambiae; convergence in a shared harmonic of the wing beat frequency (WBF) during courtship is thought to increase the chance of copulation. To our knowledge, An. albimanus precopulatory acoustic behaviors have not been described to date. Here, we characterized An. albimanus (i) male and female flight tones; (ii) male-female precopulatory acoustic interactions under tethered and free flight conditions; and (iii) male-male acoustic interactions during free flight.
We found significant increases in the WBFs of both sexes in free flight compared to when tethered. We observed harmonic convergence between 79% of tethered couples. In free flight, we identified a female-specific behavior that predicts mate rejection during male mating attempts: females increase their WBFs significantly faster during mate rejection compared to a successful copulation. This behavior consistently occurred during mate rejection regardless of prior mating attempts (from the same or differing male). During group flight, males of An. albimanus displayed two distinct flying behaviors: random flight and a swarm-like, patterned flight, each associated with distinct acoustic characteristics. In the transition from random to patterned flight, males converged their WBFs and significantly decreased flight area, male-male proximity and the periodicity of their trajectories.
We show that tethering of An. albimanus results in major acoustic differences compared to free flight. We identify a female-specific behavior that predicts mate rejection during male mating attempts in this species and show that male groups in free flight display distinct flying patterns with unique audio and visual characteristics. This study shows that An. albimanus display acoustic features identified in other mosquito species, further suggesting that acoustic interactions provide worthwhile targets for mosquito intervention strategies. Our results provide compelling evidence for swarming in this species and suggests that acoustic signaling is important for this behavior.
按蚊属白纹伊蚊是中美洲、南美洲北部和加勒比地区的疟疾传播媒介。尽管它是一种公共卫生威胁,但按蚊属白纹伊蚊的交配前交配行为尚不清楚。声学在蚊子通讯中起着重要作用,其中飞行音允许雄性检测和吸引潜在的配偶。在 Toxorhynchites brevipalpis、Aedes aegypti、Culex quinquefasciatus 和 Anopheles gambiae 中,已证明声音在交配前相互作用中的重要性;在求爱过程中,翅膀拍打频率 (WBF) 的共享谐音的趋同被认为增加了交配的机会。据我们所知,迄今为止,尚未描述过按蚊属白纹伊蚊的交配前声学行为。在这里,我们描述了按蚊属白纹伊蚊的(i)雄性和雌性飞行音;(ii)系绳和自由飞行条件下雌雄交配前的声学相互作用;和(iii)自由飞行中的雄性-雄性声学相互作用。
我们发现,与系绳时相比,雌雄两性在自由飞行时的 WBF 都显著增加。我们观察到 79%的系绳对之间存在谐音趋同。在自由飞行中,我们发现了一种雌性特有的行为,可以预测雌性在雄性求爱时拒绝交配:与成功交配相比,雌性在拒绝交配时显著更快地增加 WBF。这种行为在拒绝交配时始终发生,无论先前的交配尝试(来自同一或不同的雄性)如何。在群体飞行中,按蚊属白纹伊蚊的雄性表现出两种截然不同的飞行行为:随机飞行和类似蜂群的模式化飞行,每种行为都与独特的声学特征相关联。在从随机到模式化飞行的过渡中,雄性会收敛它们的 WBF,并显著减小飞行区域、雄性之间的接近度以及它们轨迹的周期性。
我们表明,与自由飞行相比,按蚊属白纹伊蚊的系绳会导致主要的声学差异。我们确定了一种雌性特有的行为,可以预测该物种雄性交配时的交配拒绝,并表明自由飞行中的雄性群体表现出具有独特音频和视觉特征的独特飞行模式。这项研究表明,按蚊属白纹伊蚊表现出其他蚊子物种中发现的声学特征,进一步表明声学相互作用是蚊子干预策略的有价值目标。我们的结果为该物种的群集提供了令人信服的证据,并表明声学信号对这种行为很重要。