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Effects of Plasmodium yoelii nigeriensis infection on Anopheles stephensl egg development and resorption
Authors:S. L. CARWARDINE  H. HURD
Affiliation:Centre for Applied Entomology and Parasitology, Department of Biological Sciences, Keele University, Staffordshire, U.K.
Abstract:Abstract It has been shown previously that infection with Plasmodium yoelii nigeriensis reduces the number of eggs produced by female Anopheles stephensi. Here we examine the mechanism underlying fecundity reduction. Ovaries from infected and uninfected (control) female mosquitoes were examined12, 24 or 36 h after blood-feeding during the first gonotrophic cycle (replicated) or the second gonotrophic cycle (unreplicated). Follicular development was assessed according to Christophers' stages and the proportions of developing and resorbing follicles per ovary were determined. Resorption of some follicles commenced within 12h of blood-feeding, affecting significantly more follicles in the infected females: 1.1% v. 3.2%. The difference was greatest 36h after blood-feeding: 25% reduction (10 v. 35%) in the first cycle; 16% reduction (9 v. 25%) in the second gonotrophic cycle. The mean speed of oogenesis was also found to be significantly retarded in infected mosquitoes. During the second gonotrophic cycle, for example, only 92–94% of follicles reached stage III by 24 h and stage IV by 36 h in infected females, whereas all the developing follicles of uninfected females reached these stages more or less synchronously in the time specified.
Keywords:Anopheles stephensi,    Plasmodium yoelii nigeriensis    fecundity    resorption    egg development    malaria    vector.
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