| Literature DB >> 27869724 |
Abstract
The burden of gene transfer from one mosquito generation to the next falls on the female and her eggs. The selection of an oviposition site that guarantees egg and larval survival is a critical step in the reproductive process. The dangers associated with ephemeral aquatic habitats, lengthy droughts, freezing winters, and the absence of larval nutrition makes careful oviposition site selection by a female mosquito extremely important. Mosquito species exhibit a remarkable diversity of oviposition behaviors that ensure eggs are deposited into microenvironments conducive for successful larval development and the emergence of the next mosquito generation. An understanding of mosquito oviposition behavior is necessary for the development of surveillance and control opportunities directed against specific disease vectors. For example, Aedes aegypti Linnaeus is the vector of viruses causing important human diseases including yellow fever, dengue, chikungunya, and Zika. The preference of this species to oviposit in natural and artificial containers has facilitated the development of Ae. aegypti-specific surveillance and toxic oviposition traps designed to detect and control this important vector species in and around disease foci. A better understanding of the wide diversity of mosquito oviposition behavior will allow the development of new and innovative surveillance and control devices directed against other important mosquito vectors of human and animal disease.Entities:
Keywords: mosquito control; mosquito oviposition; mosquito-borne disease transmission
Year: 2016 PMID: 27869724 PMCID: PMC5198213 DOI: 10.3390/insects7040065
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Insects ISSN: 2075-4450 Impact factor: 2.769
Mosquito oviposition: examples of egg laying behavior [1,8].
| Method of Oviposition | Tribe | Genera | Species |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sabethini | |||
| Sabethini | |||
| Sabethini | |||
| Sabethini | |||
| Toxorhynchitini | |||
| Aedini | |||
| Aedini | |||
| Aedini | |||
| Culicini | |||
| Aedini | |||
| Aedini | |||
| Aedini | |||
| Aedini | |||
| Culicini | |||
| Culisetini | |||
| Mansoniini | |||
| Uranotaeniini | |||
| Culisetini | |||
| Ficalbiini | |||
| Mansoniini | |||
| Aedini | |||
| Sabethini |
Figure 1A partially flooded woodland pool in south Florida. This type of habitat is the preferred oviposition site of Psorophora ferox which is most abundant during the late summer and autumn.
Figure 2High water mark in a black mangrove (Avicennia germinans (Linnaeus) Linnaeus) forest in south Florida where Aedes taeniorhynchus females prefer to oviposit in the leaf litter above the standing water.
Figure 3Entrances to three blue land crab burrows in a south Florida salt marsh. The interior of these burrows serves as the major reproductive habitat for the mosquito Deinocerites cancer.
Figure 4Exotic water-holding bromeliads in south Florida that serve as an oviposition site for Aedes aegypti and Ae. albopictus. These types of plants are responsible for increased populations of both mosquito species around homes, businesses, and recreational areas throughout Florida.