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Wind Tunnels and Airflow-Driven Assays: Methods for Establishing the Cues and Orientation Mechanisms That Modulate Female Mosquito Attraction to Human Hosts

  1. Ring T. Cardé1
  1. Department of Entomology, University of California, Riverside, California 92521, USA
  1. 1Correspondence: ring.carde{at}ucr.edu

Abstract

Understanding how female mosquitoes find a prospective host is crucial to developing means that can interfere with this process. Many methods are available to researchers studying cues and orientation mechanisms that modulate female mosquito attraction to hosts. Behaviors that can be monitored with these assays include activation, taking flight, upwind flight along an odor plume (optomotor anemotaxis), close approach to the stimulus (including hovering), and landing. Video recording can three-dimensionally document flight tracks and can correlate overall distribution patterns and moment-to-moment movements with odor contact and the presence of nearby cues such as a visual target. Here, we introduce mosquito host-seeking behaviors and methods to study them: wind tunnels (which allow orientation in free-flight), airflow-driven assays (using either tethered mosquitoes or small assay chambers that permit flight but also often dictate walking orientation), and still-air assays (wherein in odor concentration and spatial distribution are the orientation cues). We also describe factors that affect the assays and provide assay design considerations.

Footnotes

  • From the Mosquitoes collection, edited by Laura B. Duvall and Benjamin J. Matthews.

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