Mosquitoes Cool Down during Blood Feeding to Avoid Overheating

Temperature is one of the most important factors affecting the life of insects [1]. For instance, high temperatures can have deleterious effects on insects' physiology. Therefore, many of them have developed various strategies to avoid the risk of thermal stress [2]. They can seek a fresher env...

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Veröffentlicht in:Current biology 2012-01, Vol.22 (1), p.40-45
Hauptverfasser: Lahondère, Chloé, Lazzari, Claudio R.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Temperature is one of the most important factors affecting the life of insects [1]. For instance, high temperatures can have deleterious effects on insects' physiology. Therefore, many of them have developed various strategies to avoid the risk of thermal stress [2]. They can seek a fresher environment or adjust their water loss, but hematophagous insects, such as mosquitoes, must confront the issue of thermal stress at each feeding event on a warm-blooded host [3]. To better understand to what extent mosquitoes are exposed to thermal stress while feeding, we conducted a real-time infrared thermographic analysis of mosquitoes' body temperature during feeding on both warm blood and sugar solution. First, our results highlighted differences in temperature between the body parts of the mosquito (i.e., heterothermy) during blood intake, but not during sugar meals. We also found that anopheline mosquitoes can decrease their body temperature during blood feeding thanks to evaporative cooling of fluid droplets, which are excreted and maintained at the end of the abdomen. This mechanism protects the insect itself, probably as well as the sheltered microorganisms, both symbionts and parasites, from thermal stress. These findings constitute the first evidence of thermoregulation among hematophagous insects and explain the paradox of fresh blood excretion during feeding. ► During blood feeding, mosquitoes face the problem of avoiding overheating ► Neither heterothermy nor evaporative cooling occur in males or sugar-feeding females ► Anophelines perform evaporative cooling during blood feeding ► This constitutes the first report of thermoregulation in hematophagous insects
ISSN:0960-9822
1879-0445
DOI:10.1016/j.cub.2011.11.029