Olfaction, experience and neural mechanisms underlying mosquito host preference

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Abstract

Mosquitoes are best known for their proclivity towards biting humans and transmitting bloodborne pathogens, but there are over 3500 species, including both blood-feeding and non-blood-feeding taxa. The diversity of host preference in mosquitoes is exemplified by the feeding habits of mosquitoes in the genus Malaya that feed on ant regurgitation or those from the genus Uranotaenia that favor amphibian hosts. Host preference is also by no means static, but is characterized by behavioral plasticity that allows mosquitoes to switch hosts when their preferred host is unavailable and by learning host cues associated with positive or negative experiences. Here we review the diverse range of host-preference behaviors across the family Culicidae, which includes all mosquitoes, and how adaptations in neural circuitry might affect changes in preference both within the life history of a mosquito and across evolutionary time-scales.

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Wolff, G. H., & Riffell, J. A. (2018, February 1). Olfaction, experience and neural mechanisms underlying mosquito host preference. Journal of Experimental Biology. Company of Biologists Ltd. https://doi.org/10.1242/JEB.157131

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