Abstract

BackgroundAnopheles gambiae, the principal vector of malignant malaria in Africa, occupies a wide range of habitats. Environmental flexibility may be conferred by a number of chromosomal inversions non-randomly associated with aridity, including 2La. The purpose of this study was to determine the physiological mechanisms associated with the 2La inversion that may result in the preferential survival of its carriers in hygrically-stressful environments.MethodsTwo homokaryotypic populations of A. gambiae (inverted 2La and standard 2L+a) were created from a parental laboratory colony polymorphic for 2La and standard for all other known inversions. Desiccation resistance, water, energy and dry mass of adult females of both populations were compared at several ages and following acclimation to a more arid environment.ResultsFemales carrying 2La were significantly more resistant to desiccation than 2L+a females at emergence and four days post-emergence, for different reasons. Teneral 2La females had lower rates of water loss than their 2L+a counterparts, while at four days, 2La females had higher initial water content. No differences in desiccation resistance were found at eight days, with or without acclimation. However, acclimation resulted in both populations significantly reducing their rates of water loss and increasing their desiccation resistance. Acclimation had contrasting effects on the body characteristics of the two populations: 2La females boosted their glycogen stores and decreased lipids, whereas 2La females did the contrary.ConclusionVariation in rates of water loss and response to acclimation are associated with alternative arrangements of the 2La inversion. Understanding the mechanisms underlying these traits will help explain how inversion polymorphisms permit exploitation of a heterogeneous environment by this disease vector.

Highlights

  • Anopheles gambiae, the principal vector of malignant malaria in Africa, occupies a wide range of habitats

  • The current study explores variation in Desiccation resistance (DR) that is associated with the 2La inversion of A. gambiae s.s. and may explain its differential distribution in the field

  • Overall there was no difference between populations in dry mass (P = 0.396), water content (P = 0.219), lipid (P = 0.641), or glycogen (P = 0.205)

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Summary

Introduction

The principal vector of malignant malaria in Africa, occupies a wide range of habitats. Environmental flexibility may be conferred by a number of chromosomal inversions non-randomly associated with aridity, including 2La. The purpose of this study was to determine the physiological mechanisms associated with the 2La inversion that may result in the preferential survival of its carriers in hygrically-stressful environments. The geographic and seasonal range of the mosquito Anopheles gambiae, the principal African vector of malaria, depends on its ability to survive in arid environments [2]. It is thought that A. gambiae owes its broad distribution to a number of polymorphic chromosomal inversions within its genome, which are proposed to confer a diverse array of adaptations to the species as a whole. The physiological mechanisms by which these inversions confer an adaptive advantage in a given environment remain unknown

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