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Nutritional Stress Affects Mosquito Survival and Vector Competence for West Nile Virus

48

Citations

34

References

2008

Year

Abstract

Most anautogenous female mosquitoes ingest plant carbohydrates for flight energy and survival, and they imbibe vertebrate blood for egg development. We evaluated the effect of different sucrose meals following a blood meal containing West Nile virus (WNV) on Culex pipiens pipiens survival, nutritional status, and susceptibility to viral infection and transmission. Ten days after blood feeding, no mosquitoes survived on distilled water, 55% survived on 2% sucrose, 61% on 10 and 20% sucrose meals, and over 70% survived on 40% sucrose. There was a positive correlation between sucrose meal concentration and detectable sugars, glycogen, and lipid in whole-body homogenates. Average sugar values increased from 0 microg per starved mosquito (range 0-1.0 microg) to an average of 392 microg per mosquito fed on 40% sucrose (85-1088 microg). Average glycogen values increased from 0 microg (0-5.7 microg) to an average of 620 microg (118-1421 microg). Average lipid values were identical for mosquitoes in the starved and 2% sucrose series (38 microg) and increased to 172 microg per mosquito fed on 40% sucrose (92-266 microg). Mosquitoes in all sucrose series were equally susceptible to WNV infection (p > 0.5), but mosquitoes with lower nutrient reserves as a result of lower sucrose meals were more likely to orally transmit virus (p < 0.05). We discuss how mosquito nutritional status influences probability of daily survival, susceptibility to infection, and vectorial capacity. We conclude that maintaining C. p. pipiens on standard 10% sucrose is justified in light of these results.

References

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