| Literature DB >> 27177033 |
Lynda K Eneh1, Michael N Okal2,3, Anna-Karin Borg-Karlson1, Ulrike Fillinger4,5, Jenny M Lindh1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A number of mosquito species in the Culex and Aedes genera prefer to lay eggs in Bermuda grass (Cynodon dactylon) hay infusions compared to water alone. These mosquitoes are attracted to volatile compounds from the hay infusions making the infusions effective baits in gravid traps used for monitoring vectors of arboviral and filarial pathogens. Since Bermuda grass is abundant and widespread, it is plausible to explore infusions made from it as a potential low cost bait for outdoor monitoring of the elusive malaria vector Anopheles gambiae s.s.Entities:
Keywords: Anopheles gambiae; Bermuda grass; Egg-count cage bioassays; GC–MS; Hay infusions; Oviposition behaviour; Volatile detection
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27177033 PMCID: PMC4866018 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-016-1330-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Methodological summary of two-choice egg-count cage bioassays performed and references justifying the selection of test compounds
| Test substrate | Conc of test substrate | No of roundsa | No of mosquitoes responding/laying eggs (total number tested) | Literature references | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| EAD signalb | Oviposition semio-chemical?c | Detected in hay infusions | ||||
| Hay infusion | 0d | 8e | 75 (75) | |||
| 10 % | 3 | 126 (150) | ||||
| 25 % | 3 | 22 (30) | ||||
| 50 % | 3 | 25 (30) | ||||
| 100 % | 3 | 28 (30) | ||||
| 3-methyl-1-butanol | 0 | 5 | 209 (250) | [ | [ | |
| 0.010 ppm | 3 | 133 (151) | ||||
| 0.100 ppm | 5 | 197 (250) | ||||
| 1.000 ppm | 4 | 209 (300) | ||||
| 4-hepten-1-ol | 0 | 9 | 185 (265) | – | – | |
| 0.100 ppm | 6 | 110 (148) | ||||
| 0.500 ppm | 4 | 91 (119) | ||||
| 1.000 ppm | 4 | 88 (116) | ||||
| 5.000 ppm | 5 | 94 (149) | ||||
| Phenol | 0 | 9 | 185 (265) | [ | [ | [ |
| 0.100 ppm | 5 | 107 (146) | ||||
| 0.500 ppm | 3 | 110 (148) | ||||
| 1.000 ppm | 3 | 71 (90) | ||||
| 5.000 ppm | 5 | 102 (147) | ||||
| Phenylmethanol | 0 | 6 | 175 (210) | [ | ||
| 0.500 ppm | 5 | 144 (175) | ||||
| 1.000 ppm | 5 | 138 (175) | ||||
| 2.500 ppm | 5 | 149 (210) | ||||
| 5.000 ppm | 6 | 169 (230) | ||||
| 4-methylphenol | 0 | 11 | 319 (417) | [ | [ | [ |
| 0.100 ppm | 5 | 130 (208) | ||||
| 0.500 ppm | 4 | 87 (119) | ||||
| 1.000 ppm | 5 | 171 (238) | ||||
| 5.000 ppm | 5 | 109 (146) | ||||
| 2-phenylethanol | 0 | 7 | 165 (200) | [ | ||
| 0.100 ppm | 4 | 162 (200) | ||||
| 0.500 ppm | 5 | 125 (155) | ||||
| 1.000 ppm | 5 | 131 (155) | ||||
| 2.500 ppm | 4 | 144 (180) | ||||
| 5.000 ppm | 6 | 168 (195) | ||||
| Nonanal | 0 | 4 | 360 (400) | [ | [ | |
| 0.050 ppm | 4 | 116 (150) | ||||
| 0.100 ppm | 3 | 190 (250) | ||||
| 0.500 ppm | 4 | 32 (60) | ||||
| 1.000 ppm | 4 | 43 (60) | ||||
| 4- ethylphenol | 0 | 6 | 169 (220) | [ | [ | [ |
| 0.100 ppm | 5 | 110 (148) | ||||
| 0.500 ppm | 3 | 60 (80) | ||||
| 1.000 ppm | 3 | 60 (87) | ||||
| 5.000 ppm | 3 | 109 (132) | ||||
| Indole | 0 | 5 | 203 (430) | [ | [ | [ |
| 0.100 ppm | 4 | 37 (60) | ||||
| 0.500 ppm | 4 | 40 (60) | ||||
| 1.000 ppm | 5 | 160 (225) | ||||
| 5.000 ppm | 5 | 158 (205) | ||||
| 3-methylindole | 0 | 8 | 195 (290) | [ | [ | [ |
| 0.010 ppm | 8 | 102 (130) | ||||
| 0.100 ppm | 8 | 98 (130) | ||||
| 0.500 ppm | 8 | 110 (160) | ||||
| 1.000 ppm | 8 | 170 (250) | ||||
aA round equals a set of cages set up during the same experimental night with individual gravid female An. gambiae s.s. from one batch of mosquitoes and one batch of test substrates
bReferences that report electro-antennographic detection (EAD) of An. gambiae s.s. to this specific compound
cReferences that suggest (i.e., no bioassays performed) the specific compound to be an oviposition attractant/stimulant for Anopheles mosquitoes
dZero (0) stands for untreated tap water, i.e., the test cups are filled with tap water (just as the control cups)
eThe two equal-choice experiments used as reference for the hay infusion were not done in parallel to the hay infusion experiments (in contrast to all other experiments). For reference, data from 75 responders in equal-choice bioassays were randomly selected using an Excel add-in random sorter from a total of 375 responders from eight different rounds done prior to the infusion experiments
Fig. 1Egg-laying responses of Anopheles gambiae s.s. tested individually to Bermuda grass hay infusion and key organic volatiles of the infusion and the mean number of eggs laid per individual female tested. The bar chart shows the mean proportion of eggs laid in control and test substrates in choice egg-count bioassays, error bars show the 95 % confidence intervals (95 % CI). The odds ratios, including their 95 % CI and P values present the output of the statistical analysis based on generalized linear models. The experiments with tap water in both the control and test cup serve as reference based on the underlying assumption that gravid females lay an approximately equal proportion of eggs (1:1) in either test or control cup if both contain the same choice. The analysis aims to detect a statistically significant deviation from the reference distribution
Fig. 2Relative amount detected in the headspace of Bermuda grass hay infusions of the volatiles evaluated in cage bioassays. Average relative amount (normalized against standard) and 95 % confidence interval. The compounds are listed in each plot in order of volatility (retention time based on GC analysis on a DB-5 column). a The four compounds detected in highest amount. b The compounds previously suggested to mediate positive oviposition responses