Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/5585
Title: Review: Improving our knowledge of male mosquito biology in relation to genetic control programs
Authors: Lees, Rosemary Susan
Knols, Bart
Bellini, Romeo
Benedict, Mark Q.
Bheecarry, Ambicadutt
Bossin, Hervé Christophe
Chadee, Dave D.
Charlwood, Jacques
Dabiréi, Roch K.
Djogbenou, Luc
Egyir-Yawson, Alexander
Gato, René
Gouagna, Louis Clément
Hassann, Mo’awia Mukhtar
Khano, Shakil Ahmed
Koekemoer, Lizette L.
Lemperiere, Guy
Manoukis, Nicholas C.
Mozuraitiss, Raimondas
Pitts, R. Jason
Simard, Frederic
Gilles, Jeremie R.L.
Keywords: Mosquito
Sterile insect technique (SIT)
Mating biology
Courtship behaviour
Artificial rearing
Olfactory responses
Issue Date: 2013
Publisher: University of Cape Coast
Abstract: The enormous burden placed on populations worldwide by mosquito-borne diseases, most notably malaria and dengue, is currently being tackled by the use of insecticides sprayed in residences or applied to bed nets, and in the case of dengue vectors through reduction of larval breeding sites or larviciding with insecticides thereof. However, these methods are under threat from, amongst other issues, the development of insecticide resistance and the practical difficulty of maintaining long-term community-wide efforts. The sterile insect technique (SIT), whose success hinges on having a good understanding of the biology and behavior of the male mosquito, is an additional weapon in the limited arsenal against mosquito vectors. The successful production and release of sterile males, which is the mechanism of population suppression by SIT, relies on the release of mass-reared sterile males able to confer sterility in the target population by mating with wild females. A five year Joint FAO/IAEA Coordinated Research Project brought together researchers from around the world to investigate the pre-mating conditions of male mosquitoes (physiology and behavior, resource acquisition and allocation, and dispersal),the mosquito mating systems and the contribution of molecular or chemical approaches to the understanding of male mosquito mating behavioral summary of the existing knowledge and the main novel findings of this group is reviewed here, and further presented in the reviews and research articles that form this Acta Tropica specialissue
Description: 10p:, ill.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/5585
ISSN: 23105496
Appears in Collections:Department of Biomedical & Forensic Sciences

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