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Oviposition site selection by Mansonia mosquitoes on water lettuce
Author(s) -
LOUNIBOS L. P.,
DEWALD L. B.
Publication year - 1989
Publication title -
ecological entomology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.865
H-Index - 81
eISSN - 1365-2311
pISSN - 0307-6946
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-2311.1989.tb00943.x
Subject(s) - biology , mansonia , pistia , stratiotes , botany , horticulture , larva , aquatic plant , ecology , aedes , macrophyte
. 1. Viable Mansonia egg masses occur in nature on both the upper and under surfaces of Pistia stratiotes (L.) leaves. Upper‐surface masses were from Mansonia dyari Belkin, Heinemann & Page, but lower‐surface oviposition was attributable to both M. dyari and M. titillans Walker. 2. Upper‐surface egg masses were often out of water but were concentrated near a wet‐dry stain line on the leaf. Lower‐surface masses were laid underwater within 3 mm of the leaf edge, except for those oviposited through fenestrations caused by insect damage. 3. Oviposition varied seasonally and masses were most numerous between August and December when water lettuce plants were large and crowded. Egg masses were clumped on plants and leaves and concentrated on mature or mature‐old leaves that subtended mean angles of 28–34° from the horizontal. 4. On intact plants in cages, M. dyari laid egg masses on both leaf surfaces in approximately the same proportions as observed in nature. On detached leaves floating flat on the water, M. dyari laid all masses on under surfaces. 5. At 20 and 25°C, egg development of M. dyari required 17.4 and 8.8 days (means), these being significantly longer than the mean times for M. titillans. Some larvae from eggs that hatched in the absence of water survived 72 h in the eggshell. 6. Upper‐surface oviposition by M. dyari may be an adaptation to the crowded growth of water lettuce, the mosquito's favoured host plant, whose leaves are largely out of water. Leaf ageing and subsidence cause submergence of most upper‐surface eggs by the time of hatching.

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