Abstract

One of the strategies of integrated vector management is to lure gravid mosquitoes for surveillance purposes or to entice them to lay eggs in water containing toxins that kill the offspring (attract-and-kill or trap-and-kill). Typically, the major challenge of this approach is the development of a lure that stimulates oviposition plus a toxin with no deterrent effect. Bacillus thuringiensis var. israelensis (Bti) satisfies the latter criterion, but lures for these autocidal gravid traps are sorely needed. We observed that gravid Aedes aegypti, Ae. albopictus, and Culex quinquefasciatus laid significantly more eggs in cups with extracts from 4th-stage larvae (4 L) of the same or different species. No activity was found when 4 L were extracted with hexane, diethyl ether, methanol, or butanol, but activity was observed with dimethyl sulfoxide extracts. Larval extracts contained both oviposition stimulant(s)/attractant(s) and deterrent(s), which partitioned in the water and hexane phases, respectively. Lyophilized larval extracts were active after a month, but activity was reduced by keeping the sample at 4 °C. In the tested range of 0.1 to 1 larvae-equivalent per milliliter, oviposition activity increased in a dose-dependent manner. In field experiments, Ae. aegpti laid significantly more eggs in traps loaded with larval extracts plus Bti than in control traps with water plus Bti.

Highlights

  • Integrated vector management is a combination of environmentally friendly strategies that can be used to prevent transmission of vector-borne diseases[1]

  • We show that gravid females Ae. aegypti, Ae. albopictus, or Culex quinquefasciatus mosquitoes lay significantly more eggs in oviposition cups loaded with aqueous extracts from conspecific or allospecific

  • Field studies in Recife, Brazil showed that Ae. aegypti laid significantly more eggs in traps baited with larval extract plus Bacillus thuringiensis var. israelensis (Bti) than in traps baited with Bti-containing water, demonstrating that the larval extracts have potential application in integrated vector management

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Summary

Introduction

Integrated vector management is a combination of environmentally friendly strategies that can be used to prevent transmission of vector-borne diseases[1]. We show that gravid females Ae. aegypti, Ae. albopictus, or Culex quinquefasciatus mosquitoes lay significantly more eggs in oviposition cups loaded with aqueous extracts from conspecific or allospecific Liquid-liquid extraction of the active larval extracts showed that they contain both oviposition stimulant(s) and deterrent(s) in the aqueous and organic phases, respectively.

Results
Conclusion

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