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Field Experiments on the Control of Aedes Aegypti and Culex Quinquefasciatus by Toxorhynchites Rutilus Rutilus (Diptera: Culicidae)
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1982
Year
BiologyTerrestrial ArthropodCulex QuinquefasciatusVector ManagementPredator LarvaeNatural SciencesAedes AegyptiEntomologyEvolutionary BiologyNew OrleansPredator-prey InteractionVector-parasite RelationshipIntraguild PredationPest ManagementToxorhynchites Rutilus RutilusAdult Aedes AegyptiVector ControlParasitology
Production of adult Aedes aegypti and Culex quinquefasciatus mosquitoes was monitored for 76 days in automobile tires, plastic buckets, and paint cans, to which 1 or 2 first-instar larvae of Toxorhynchites rutilus rutilus were added ca. every 10 days. The containers were located on residential blocks within a substandard urban area of New Orleans, Louisiana, USA. The regular addition to the containers of 1 or 2 predator larvae resulted in an average control of prey emergence of 65 and 82%, respectively. The data indicated that while substantial mortality among the predators occurred, due to cannibalism or other natural factors, the overall control obtained for both treatment levels was 74%. Cannibalism among predators appeared to play a minor role in determining the degree of control obtained.