Villarreal C, Fuentes-Maldonado G, Rodriguez M H, Yuval B
Centro de Investigacion de Paludismo, SSA, Tapachula, Chiapas, Mexico.
J Am Mosq Control Assoc. 1994 Mar;10(1):67-9.
We determined how frequently parous female Anopheles albimanus fertilize their eggs with sperm from more than one male. To establish paternity we relied on 2 phenotypically distinct laboratory strains. Nulliparous females were allowed to mate freely with males from one strain, and after oviposition they were offered a 2nd mating with males of the other strain. Fertilization patterns were determined by the phenotypes of offspring. Only 0.6% of females ovipositing for a 2nd time (n = 312) used sperm from the 2nd male, as did 4% of females completing a 3rd gonotrophic cycle (n = 25). In this species receptivity is not routinely renewed following oviposition.