Authors
Carlos F Marina, Jorge E Ibarra, Juan I Arredondo‐Jiménez, Ildefonso Fernández‐Salas, Pablo Liedo, Trevor Williams
Publication date
2003/1
Journal
Entomologia Experimentalis et applicata
Volume
106
Issue
1
Pages
53-61
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing, Ltd
Description
Sublethal viral infections can cause changes in the body size and demography of insect vectors, with important consequences for population dynamics and the probability that individual mosquitoes will transmit disease. This study examined the effects of covert (sublethal) infection by Invertebrate iridescent virus 6 (IIV‐6) on the demography of female Aedes aegypti and the relationship between key life history parameters in covertly infected female insects compared with healthy (control) insects or non‐infected mosquitoes that had survived exposure to virus inoculum without becoming infected. Of the female mosquitoes that emerged following exposure to virus inoculum and were offered blood meals, 29% (43/150) proved positive for covert IIV‐6 infection. The net reproductive rate (R0) of covertly infected females was 50% lower for infected females compared to control mosquitoes, whereas non‐infected exposed …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
CF Marina, JE Ibarra, JI Arredondo‐Jiménez… - Entomologia Experimentalis et applicata, 2003