Factor from swamp water induces hatching in egg of Anopheles diluvialis (Diptera : Culicidae) mosquitoes

Citation
T. Jensen et al., Factor from swamp water induces hatching in egg of Anopheles diluvialis (Diptera : Culicidae) mosquitoes, ENV ENTOMOL, 28(4), 1999, pp. 545-550
Citations number
22
Categorie Soggetti
Entomology/Pest Control
Journal title
ENVIRONMENTAL ENTOMOLOGY
ISSN journal
0046225X → ACNP
Volume
28
Issue
4
Year of publication
1999
Pages
545 - 550
Database
ISI
SICI code
0046-225X(199908)28:4<545:FFSWIH>2.0.ZU;2-D
Abstract
Anopheles quadrimaculatus Say, An. smaragdinus Reinert, and An. diluvialis Reinert mosquitoes are recently described sibling species that occur in nor thern Florida where the adults are sympatric but larvae develop in differen t aquatic habitats. The hatching dynamics of these species showed that An. diluvialis utilizes a hatching stimulus that occurs in the substrate in int ermittently flooded swamps. Most eggs of An. quadrinaculatus and An. smarag dinus hatch spontaneously in distilled water, but most eggs of An. diluvial is do not. Most An. diluvialis eggs hatch when placed in swamp water or whe n placed in an infusion of distilled water, leaf litter, and detritus from intermittently flooded swamps, suggesting the presence of an exogenous comp ound(s) as a hatching factor for this species. Percentage of egg hatch was largest in infusions made from swamp soil and in hexane extracts of swamp w ater, indicating that the hatching factor is a chemically stable organic su bstance. Because this phenomenon was not observed with water from lakes, po nds, springs, spring outlet streams, and rivers, An. diluvialis appears to require the hatching factor to facilitate egg hatch when intermittently flo oded swamps are inundated. This article reports an exogenous compound being : exploited as a hatching stimulus by an Anopheles mosquito.