The energetic costs of diving in Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus pupae.

J Am Mosq Control Assoc

Tropical Disease Institute, Department of Biomedical Sciences, College of Osteopathic Medicine, Ohio University, Athens 45701, USA.

Published: March 2001

Undisturbed mosquito pupae rest at the water surface and respond to passing shadows or vibrations by diving. Pupae do not feed and rely solely on energy stored from the larval stage. The ability of a newly emerged adult mosquito to survive, and therefore to transmit disease, depends on these energy reserves. Earlier studies of diving behavior in Aedes aegypti, Ae. albopictus, and Ae. triseriatus pupae provided evidence that pupae sense their state of buoyancy and modify their diving behavior accordingly. With strong stimulation pupae tend to dive to a depth where they become neutrally or negatively buoyant and commonly rest on the bottom. This behavior, as well as the tendency to rest when not disturbed, may logically be viewed as energy-conserving. The results of these studies also generated the hypothesis that the diving behavior displayed by these container-breeding mosquitoes helps them avoid being washed from their container by overflowing water during rainfall. Rainfall stimulates diving and logically, prolonged, heavy rainfall stimulates excessive diving, a likely drain on energy reserves. Our objectives were to determine, in Ae. aegypti and Ae. albopictus, the energetic costs associated with resting behavior, with frequent diving, and with buoyancy reduction. Using survival rate, mean survival after adult emergence, and measurement of total calories, we found a clear energetic cost associated with frequent diving. In contrast, relative to diving, essentially no energy cost was associated with buoyancy reduction, that is, pupae behave in response to variations in buoyancy in a way that does not impact significantly on energy reserves.

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