Abstract
Annual Review of Entomology
Vol. 50:
53-70
(Volume publication date January 2005)
(doi:10.1146/annurev.ento.50.071803.130439)
First published online as a Review in Advance on July 13, 2004MOSQUITO BEHAVIOR AND VECTOR CONTROL ▪ Abstract Effective indoor residual spraying against malaria vectors depends on whether mosquitoes rest indoors (i.e., endophilic behavior). This varies among species and is affected by insecticidal irritancy. Exophilic behavior has evolved in certain populations exposed to prolonged spraying programs. Optimum effectiveness of insecticide-treated nets presumably depends on vectors biting at hours when most people are in bed. Time of biting varies among different malaria vector species, but so far there is inconclusive evidence for these evolving so as to avoid bednets. Use of an untreated net diverts extra biting to someone in the same room who is without a net. Understanding choice of oviposition sites and dispersal behavior is important for the design of successful larval control programs including those using predatory mosquito larvae. Prospects for genetic control by sterile males or genes rendering mosquitoes harmless to humans will depend on competitive mating behavior. These methods are hampered by the immigration of monogamous, already-mated females. Conspecific Sharing of Breeding Sites by Anopheline Female Mosquitoes (Diptera: Culicidae) Inferred from Microsatellite Markers Journal of Insect Behavior 21(1):24-33 (2008) Biting patterns of Anopheles minimus complex (Diptera: Culicidae) in experimental huts treated with DDT and deltamethrin Journal of Vector Ecology 33(2):285 (2008) A comparative study of voltage-gated sodium channels in the Insecta: implications for pyrethroid resistance in Anopheline and other Neopteran species Insect Molecular Biology 16(3):361-375 (2007) Analyzing the control of mosquito-borne diseases by a dominant lethal genetic system Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 104(22):9540-9545 (2007) Optimal life stage for radiation sterilization of Anopheles males and their fitness for release Medical and Veterinary Entomology 19(3):238-244 (2005)
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