Abstract
AbstractVariations in density of adults of Anopheles merus Dön. in Jimbo Village on the Kenya Coast were found to be correlated both with rainfall and with salinity at their breeding sites. Densities started to increase at the beginning of the rains when several breeding sites were formed. This was followed by a decline in numbers resulting mainly from the decrease in salinity in the semi-permanent breeding sites. A second rise occurred after the end of the rains, corresponding with an increase in salinity in the semi-permanent breeding sites due to evaporation. Peak density coincided with salinities of 30–50% sea water in the breeding sites. Laboratory breeding experiments showed that the larvae were usually capable of completing development in 0–100% sea water, with optimum development at 0, 40 and 60% sea water. Failure to complete development in 100% sea water at certain periods of the year indicated that there could be some seasonal variation in salt tolerance. The larvae were also found to complete development in alkaline saline water collected from an inland location around Lake Jipe in Kenya. The LC50s of sea water for first and fourth-instar larvae after exposure for 2 h were 135·0 and 930·0%, respectively. First-instar larvae were less to lerant of sodium chloride than of sea water of equivalent strength. The LC50 of sodium chloride for first-instar larvae was only 102·5%, sea water equivalent. In tests against first-instar larvae of other soluble chemical salts normally present in sea water, the highest LC50 (122·0g/litre) was of sodium sulphate and the lowest (10·5g/litre) of potassium carbonate.
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