Interspecific mating between Louisiana strains of Aedes albopictus and Aedes aegypti in the field and laboratory |
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Authors: | R S Nasci S G Hare F S Willis |
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Affiliation: | Department of Biological and Environmental Sciences, McNeese State University, Lake Charles, LA 70609. |
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Abstract: | Interspecific mating between Aedes albopictus males and Ae. aegypti females was detected in the field using mark-release-recapture techniques. By 3 days after the release of virgin Ae. aegypti females into a field site containing only Ae. albopictus, 100% of the captured females were inseminated. Laboratory investigations indicated that male Ae. albopictus were very proficient at inseminating Ae. aegypti females and that Ae. aegypti males rarely inseminated Ae. albopictus females, especially if Ae. aegypti females were available. Most of the Ae. aegypti females inseminated by Ae. albopictus males contained only small amounts of dead sperm in their spermathecae, while inseminated females from the converse interspecific mating and from intraspecific matings contained only large amounts of live sperm. The results are discussed in relation to the decline in Ae. aegypti densities observed since the introduction of Ae. albopictus into the southern USA. |
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