Abstract

The production of large numbers of males needed for a sustainable sterile insect technique (SIT) control program requires significant developmental and operational costs. This may constitute a significant economic barrier to the installation of large scale rearing facilities in countries that are undergoing a transition from being largely dependent on insecticide use to be in a position to integrate the SIT against Aedes albopictus. Alternative options available for those countries could be to rely on outsourcing of sterile males from a foreign supplier, or for one centralised facility to produce mosquitoes for several countries, thus increasing the efficiency of the mass-rearing effort. However, demonstration of strain compatibility is a prerequisite for the export of mosquitoes for transborder SIT applications. Here, we compared mating compatibility among Ae. albopictus populations originating from three islands of the South Western Indian Ocean, and assessed both insemination rates and egg fertility in all possible cross-mating combinations. Furthermore, competitiveness between irradiated and non-irradiated males from the three studied strains, and the subsequent effect on female fertility were also examined. Although morphometric analysis of wing shapes suggested phenoptypic differences between Ae. albopictus strains, perfect reproductive compatibility between them was observed. Furthermore, irradiated males from the different islands demonstrated similar levels of competitiveness and induced sterility when confronted with fertile males from any of the other island populations tested. In conclusion, despite the evidence of inter-strain differences based on male wing morphology, collectively, our results provide a new set of expectations for the use of a single candidate strain of mass-reared sterile males for area-wide scale application of SIT against Ae. albopictus populations in different islands across the South Western Indian Ocean. Cross-mating competitiveness tests such as those applied here are necessary to assess the quality of mass reared strains for the trans-border application of sterile male release programs.

Highlights

  • Aedes albopictus (Skuse) (Diptera: Culicidae) is the most abundant Aedes species in the islands of the South West Indian Ocean (SWIO)

  • Further analysis indicated that in both directions of the reciprocal crosses the origin of males released in the cage did not significantly affect the insemination rate (Two-way Analysis of variance (ANOVA), F = 0.96, DF = 2, P = 0.40), the number of eggs laid per female (F = 1.98, DF = 2, P = 0.17), or hatching rate (F = 1.28, DF = 2, P = 0.30)

  • There is a compelling commitment to sterile insect technique (SIT) development and its regional implementation against Aedes albopictus, arguably the vector species that poses the greatest threat to human health in the islands of the SWIO

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Summary

Introduction

Aedes albopictus (Skuse) (Diptera: Culicidae) is the most abundant Aedes species in the islands of the South West Indian Ocean (SWIO). Ae. aegypti was the only vector implicated in the Comoros archipelago, while both Aedes species were involved in Madagascar In response to these devastating chikungunya outbreaks and motivated by the need to reduce insecticide use for vector control, both La Réunion and Mauritius Islands have launched research efforts to develop and implement the sterile insect technique (SIT) as a component of control strategies against Ae. albopictus. The SIT is based on the repeated inundation of sterile males to induce sterility in the wild population over a number of generations, and suppress the target pest species [4,5] This technology has been effectively used for decades against numerous species [6,7] including screwworm [8,9,10], tsetse fly [11] and Mediterranean fruit fly [12,13] and its potential for mosquito control was shown in early trials in the 1960s and 1970s [14,15,16,17,18]. Efforts have been made to assess the feasibility of the SIT program for Ae. albopictus control, both in Reunion [23,24,25] and Mauritius Island [26]

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