Antagonistic effects of energy status on meal size and egg-batch size of Aedes aegypti (Diptera: Culicidae). |
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Authors: | Wieslaw M Mostowy Woodbridge A Foster |
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Affiliation: | Department of Entomology, The Ohio State University, 318 W. 12th Avenue, Columbus, OH 43210-1242, USA. |
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Abstract: | The effect of sugar feeding on egg-batch size in Aedes aegypti was examined in a way that would distinguish between the roles of a recent sugar meal (full vs. empty crop) and of repeated sugar feeding and digestion (high vs. low energy reserves). Egg numbers of females representing the four combinations of these characteristics (full crop/high reserves, full crop/low reserves, empty crop/high reserves, empty crop/low reserves) were counted during their first gonotrophic cycle. In addition, the sizes of their replete sugar meals and human blood meals were measured to understand the interactions between them. Results demonstrated that blood-fed mosquitoes with full crops and low energy reserves produced the fewest eggs (mean = 56.2); those with empty crops and high energy reserves produced the most eggs (mean = 84.6); and those with the opposite combinations (full/high and empty/ low) had an intermediate fecundity (mean = 75.2 and 76.9, respectively). This ranking of fecundities did not correspond to blood-meal size ranks, owing to direct and indirect effects of energy reserves on meal sizes and egg number. Full-crop females with low reserves ingested the smallest blood meals (mean = 0.62 mg) and had the lowest fecundities. Full-crop females with high reserves ingested more blood (mean = 0.82 mg) and produced more eggs. But empty-crop females with low reserves ingested the largest blood meals (mean = 1.19 mg), yet produced significantly fewer eggs than their high-reserve counterparts, which took smaller blood meals (mean = 0.99 mg). These results demonstrate extremes in the reproductive penalty of crop sugar and the reproductive reward of digested sugar. Energy reserves and an empty crop are similarly valuable in promoting fecundity at the time blood is taken. |
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