Abstract

An improved understanding of mosquito population dynamics under natural environmental forcing requires adequate field observations spanning the full range of temporal scales over which mosquito abundance fluctuates in natural conditions. Here we analyze a 9-year daily time series of uninterrupted observations of adult mosquito abundance for multiple mosquito species in North Carolina to identify characteristic scales of temporal variability, the processes generating them, and the representativeness of observations at different sampling resolutions. We focus in particular on Aedes vexans and Culiseta melanura and, using a combination of spectral analysis and modeling, we find significant population fluctuations with characteristic periodicity between 2 days and several years. Population dynamical modelling suggests that the observed fast fluctuations scales (2 days-weeks) are importantly affected by a varying mosquito activity in response to rapid changes in meteorological conditions, a process neglected in most representations of mosquito population dynamics. We further suggest that the range of time scales over which adult mosquito population variability takes place can be divided into three main parts. At small time scales (indicatively 2 days-1 month) observed population fluctuations are mainly driven by behavioral responses to rapid changes in weather conditions. At intermediate scales (1 to several month) environmentally-forced fluctuations in generation times, mortality rates, and density dependence determine the population characteristic response times. At longer scales (annual to multi-annual) mosquito populations follow seasonal and inter-annual environmental changes. We conclude that observations of adult mosquito populations should be based on a sub-weekly sampling frequency and that predictive models of mosquito abundance must include behavioral dynamics to separate the effects of a varying mosquito activity from actual changes in the abundance of the underlying population.

Highlights

  • A detailed understanding of mosquito population dynamics under natural environmental forcing requires the observation and understanding of ecological processes over a wide range of time scales

  • We focus here on the ‘‘Chicken Trap’’ site because of the comparatively large sample size and because expert opinions from the Brunswick County Mosquito Control Department suggest that the population dynamic recorded at the "Chicken trap" sentinel site is well-aligned with changes in mosquito population abundance over large areas of the County

  • A Peak at yearly time scales in the power spectrum is found for Ae.vexans, Cx. salinarius and Ps. columbiae, but it is less obvious for Cs.melanura

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Summary

Introduction

A detailed understanding of mosquito population dynamics under natural environmental forcing requires the observation and understanding of ecological processes over a wide range of time scales. Adult mosquito activity (such as host seeking) can respond quickly to meteorological forcings [2, 3], inducing fast response times of apparent population abundance. Many mosquito species have relatively short generation times. Mosquito oviposition and feeding processes occur at hourly and daily scales [1, 4, 5], and endogenous and exogenous driving factors typically vary on weekly to monthly scales [6,7,8,9,10,11,12]

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