Aedes albopictus (Skuse) males in laboratory and semi-field cages: Release ratios and mating competitiveness
Radiation-sterilized male Aedes albopictus were equally competitive with fertile males in laboratory and semi-field cages, inducing sterility in the female population proportional to the release ratio. •Competitiveness of irradiated males is essential for the sterile insect technique.•Irradiated Ae....
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Veröffentlicht in: | Acta tropica 2014-04, Vol.132, p.S124-S129 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Radiation-sterilized male Aedes albopictus were equally competitive with fertile males in laboratory and semi-field cages, inducing sterility in the female population proportional to the release ratio.
•Competitiveness of irradiated males is essential for the sterile insect technique.•Irradiated Ae. albopictus males reduced egg hatch rates in lab and semi-field cages.•Induced sterility increased with proportion of sterile males in all cage sizes.•Investigation into female remating rate and field trials of the SIT are recommended.
To control the container-breeding mosquito and major vector of dengue and chikungunya Aedes albopictus, the sterile insect technique (SIT) is proposed as a component of integrated vector management programs in endemic areas. For the technique to be successful, released males, sterilized with 35Gy of ionizing radiation during the pupal stage, must be able to compete for mating opportunities with wild counterparts and successfully copulate with wild females to induce sterility in the population. Any reduction in competitiveness can be compensated for by increasing the ratio of released sterile to wild males, a ratio which must be optimized for effectiveness and efficiency. Fruit fly SIT programs use field enclosures to test the competitiveness of sterile males to monitor the quality of the colony and adjust release ratios. This is laborious and time consuming, and for mosquito programs it would be advantageous if similarly useful results could be obtained by smaller scale laboratory tests, conducted on a more regular basis. In the present study we compared the competitiveness, as measured by hatching rate of resulting egg batches, of irradiated males measured in small and large laboratory cages and semi-field enclosures in a greenhouse setting, when competing in a 1:1, 3:1, and 5:1 ratio with fertile males. The sterile males were found to be equally competitive when compared to unirradiated counterparts, and a 5:1 ratio was sufficient to reduce, but not eliminate, the fertility of the female populations, irrespective of cage size. Variability in hatch rate in eggs laid by individual females and so-called indeterminate matings, when we could not be certain whether a female had mated a fertile or a sterile male, could be investigated by closer investigation of mating status and the frequency of multiple matings in Ae. albopictus. The laboratory results are encouraging for the effectiveness of the SIT using irradiated males of this spe |
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ISSN: | 0001-706X 1873-6254 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.actatropica.2013.11.020 |