Exposure of a diurnal mosquito vector to floral mimics: Foraging responses, feeding patterns, and significance for sugar bait technology

© 2018 Food location by mosquitoes is mediated by resource-derived olfactory and visual signals. Smell sensation is intermittent and dependent on the environment, whereas visual signals are continual and precede olfactory cues. Success of mosquito bait technology, where olfactory cues are used for a...

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Main Authors: Hamady Dieng, Tomomitsu Satho, Nurul Atieqah Binti Arzemi, Nur Ezzati Aliasan, Fatimah Abang, Erida Wydiamala, Fumio Miake, Wan Fatma Zuharah, Nur Faeza Abu Kassim, Ronald E. Morales Vargas, Noppawan P. Morales, Gabriel Tonga Noweg
Other Authors: Lambung Mangkurat University
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Published: 2019
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Online Access:https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/45983
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spelling th-mahidol.459832019-08-23T18:47:53Z Exposure of a diurnal mosquito vector to floral mimics: Foraging responses, feeding patterns, and significance for sugar bait technology Hamady Dieng Tomomitsu Satho Nurul Atieqah Binti Arzemi Nur Ezzati Aliasan Fatimah Abang Erida Wydiamala Fumio Miake Wan Fatma Zuharah Nur Faeza Abu Kassim Ronald E. Morales Vargas Noppawan P. Morales Gabriel Tonga Noweg Lambung Mangkurat University Fukuoka University Universiti Malaysia Sarawak Mahidol University Universiti Sains Malaysia Immunology and Microbiology Medicine © 2018 Food location by mosquitoes is mediated by resource-derived olfactory and visual signals. Smell sensation is intermittent and dependent on the environment, whereas visual signals are continual and precede olfactory cues. Success of mosquito bait technology, where olfactory cues are used for attraction, is being impeded by reduced attractiveness. Despite proof that mosquitoes respond to colored objects, including those mimicking floral shape, and that they can discriminate among flowers, the impacts of artificial flowers on foraging remain unexplored. Using artificial flowers with sugar rewards, we examined the foraging responses of Aedes aegypti to various colors in equal choice bioassays. Starved adults were exposed to single flowers with petals of a given color (Single Blue Flowers [SBFs]; Single Red Flowers [SRFs]; Single Yellow Flowers [SYFs]; Single Pink Flowers [SPIFs]; and Single Purple Flowers [SPFs]) and two others with white petals (SWFs). Discrepancies in response time, visitation, feeding, and resting of both sexes were compared between colored flowers and SWFs. Ae. aegypti exhibited shorter response times to colored flowers compared to SWFs, but this behavior was mostly seen for SBFs or SYFs in females, and SRFs, SYFs, SPIFs, or SPFs in males. When provided an option to land on colored flowers and SWFs, female visitation occurred at high rates on SBFs, SRFs, SYFs, SPIFs, and SPFs; for males, this preference for colored flowers was seen to a lesser degree on SBF and SPIFs. Both sexes exhibited preference for colored flowers as sugar sources, but with different patterns: SPIFs, SRFs, SYFs, and SPFs for females; SYFs, SPFs, SPIFs and SRFs for males. Females preferentially rested on colored flowers when in competition with SWFs, but this preference was more pronounced for SPFs, SRFs, and SBFs. Males exhibited an increased preference for SRFs, SPFs, and SYFs as resting sites. Our results indicated the attraction of Ae. aegypti to rewarding artificial flowers, in some cases in ways similar to live flowering plants. The discovery that both male and female Ae. aegypti can feed on nectar mimics held by artificial flowers opens new avenues for improving sugar bait technology and for developing new attract-and-kill devices. 2019-08-23T11:18:39Z 2019-08-23T11:18:39Z 2018-09-01 Article Acta Tropica. Vol.185, (2018), 230-238 10.1016/j.actatropica.2018.05.019 18736254 0001706X 2-s2.0-85047874142 https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/45983 Mahidol University SCOPUS https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=85047874142&origin=inward
institution Mahidol University
building Mahidol University Library
continent Asia
country Thailand
Thailand
content_provider Mahidol University Library
collection Mahidol University Institutional Repository
topic Immunology and Microbiology
Medicine
spellingShingle Immunology and Microbiology
Medicine
Hamady Dieng
Tomomitsu Satho
Nurul Atieqah Binti Arzemi
Nur Ezzati Aliasan
Fatimah Abang
Erida Wydiamala
Fumio Miake
Wan Fatma Zuharah
Nur Faeza Abu Kassim
Ronald E. Morales Vargas
Noppawan P. Morales
Gabriel Tonga Noweg
Exposure of a diurnal mosquito vector to floral mimics: Foraging responses, feeding patterns, and significance for sugar bait technology
description © 2018 Food location by mosquitoes is mediated by resource-derived olfactory and visual signals. Smell sensation is intermittent and dependent on the environment, whereas visual signals are continual and precede olfactory cues. Success of mosquito bait technology, where olfactory cues are used for attraction, is being impeded by reduced attractiveness. Despite proof that mosquitoes respond to colored objects, including those mimicking floral shape, and that they can discriminate among flowers, the impacts of artificial flowers on foraging remain unexplored. Using artificial flowers with sugar rewards, we examined the foraging responses of Aedes aegypti to various colors in equal choice bioassays. Starved adults were exposed to single flowers with petals of a given color (Single Blue Flowers [SBFs]; Single Red Flowers [SRFs]; Single Yellow Flowers [SYFs]; Single Pink Flowers [SPIFs]; and Single Purple Flowers [SPFs]) and two others with white petals (SWFs). Discrepancies in response time, visitation, feeding, and resting of both sexes were compared between colored flowers and SWFs. Ae. aegypti exhibited shorter response times to colored flowers compared to SWFs, but this behavior was mostly seen for SBFs or SYFs in females, and SRFs, SYFs, SPIFs, or SPFs in males. When provided an option to land on colored flowers and SWFs, female visitation occurred at high rates on SBFs, SRFs, SYFs, SPIFs, and SPFs; for males, this preference for colored flowers was seen to a lesser degree on SBF and SPIFs. Both sexes exhibited preference for colored flowers as sugar sources, but with different patterns: SPIFs, SRFs, SYFs, and SPFs for females; SYFs, SPFs, SPIFs and SRFs for males. Females preferentially rested on colored flowers when in competition with SWFs, but this preference was more pronounced for SPFs, SRFs, and SBFs. Males exhibited an increased preference for SRFs, SPFs, and SYFs as resting sites. Our results indicated the attraction of Ae. aegypti to rewarding artificial flowers, in some cases in ways similar to live flowering plants. The discovery that both male and female Ae. aegypti can feed on nectar mimics held by artificial flowers opens new avenues for improving sugar bait technology and for developing new attract-and-kill devices.
author2 Lambung Mangkurat University
author_facet Lambung Mangkurat University
Hamady Dieng
Tomomitsu Satho
Nurul Atieqah Binti Arzemi
Nur Ezzati Aliasan
Fatimah Abang
Erida Wydiamala
Fumio Miake
Wan Fatma Zuharah
Nur Faeza Abu Kassim
Ronald E. Morales Vargas
Noppawan P. Morales
Gabriel Tonga Noweg
format Article
author Hamady Dieng
Tomomitsu Satho
Nurul Atieqah Binti Arzemi
Nur Ezzati Aliasan
Fatimah Abang
Erida Wydiamala
Fumio Miake
Wan Fatma Zuharah
Nur Faeza Abu Kassim
Ronald E. Morales Vargas
Noppawan P. Morales
Gabriel Tonga Noweg
author_sort Hamady Dieng
title Exposure of a diurnal mosquito vector to floral mimics: Foraging responses, feeding patterns, and significance for sugar bait technology
title_short Exposure of a diurnal mosquito vector to floral mimics: Foraging responses, feeding patterns, and significance for sugar bait technology
title_full Exposure of a diurnal mosquito vector to floral mimics: Foraging responses, feeding patterns, and significance for sugar bait technology
title_fullStr Exposure of a diurnal mosquito vector to floral mimics: Foraging responses, feeding patterns, and significance for sugar bait technology
title_full_unstemmed Exposure of a diurnal mosquito vector to floral mimics: Foraging responses, feeding patterns, and significance for sugar bait technology
title_sort exposure of a diurnal mosquito vector to floral mimics: foraging responses, feeding patterns, and significance for sugar bait technology
publishDate 2019
url https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/45983
_version_ 1763494785473052672