4.5 Article

Artificial light at night alters the seasonal responses of biting mosquitoes

Journal

JOURNAL OF INSECT PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 129, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jinsphys.2021.104194

Keywords

Light pollution; Diapause; Northern house mosquito; Culex pipiens; Urbanization

Funding

  1. SEEDS grant

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Urban light pollution from artificial light at night has significant impacts on ecology, behavior, and physiology of plants and animals, potentially affecting human and animal health. Exposure to dim artificial light can disrupt the natural dormancy cycle of mosquitoes, leading to increased reproduction and disease transmission, extending the period of disease risk for urban residents. This highlights the importance of considering artificial light at night in modeling mosquito abundance, disease risk, and surveillance and control strategies in temperate regions.
Urban light pollution caused by artificial light at night (ALAN) profoundly affects the ecology, behavior, and physiology of plants and animals. Further, this widespread environmental pollutant has the potential to negatively impact human and animal health by changing the seasonal dynamics of disease-transmitting insects. In response to short days, females of the Northern house mosquito enter an overwintering dormancy, or diapause. While in diapause, female mosquitoes divert energy away from reproduction, cease blood-feeding, and no longer transmit disease. We demonstrate that exposure to dim ALAN (similar to 4 lx) causes female mosquitoes to avert diapause and become reproductively active, as these females acquired less fat content, developed larger egg follicles, imbibed vertebrate blood, and produced viable eggs and larvae. Our findings suggest that mosquitoes in highly light-polluted areas such as cities may be actively reproducing and biting later in the season, thereby extending the period of disease risk for urban residents. Our results suggest that ALAN should be considered when modeling mosquito abundance, disease risk, and when deciding how long mosquito surveillance and control should persist in temperate regions.

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