Distention and sugar feeding induce autogenous egg development by the Asian tiger mosquito (Diptera: Culicidae)
1996
Chambers, G.M. | Klowden, M.J.
Mechanisms initiating autogenous egg development were studied using a selected strain of Asian tiger mosquito, Aedes albopictus (Skuse), that required a sugar meal to develop eggs autogenously. Caloric intake and the abdominal distention produced by ingesting sucrose solutions were interrelated in their effects on autogeny. Distention of the abdomen with 2 microliter of saline, with no caloric intake, induced autogenous egg maturation in 66% of the females. Abdominal distention produced by 2 microliter of saline did not induce egg development if the ventral nerve cord was transected. However, eggs were produced when females ingested 200 microgram of sucrose in 2 microliter of water following ventral nerve cord transection. A meal containing at least 100 microgram of sucrose was required for egg development if abdominal distention was <1 microliter. Mating influenced autogeny in only 10% of the population. Neither distention, caloric intake nor mating affected the number of eggs that matured.
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