Author:
Kim Dongmin,Burkett-Cadena Nathan D.,Reeves Lawrence E.
Abstract
AbstractAlthough adulticide application is a pillar in the integrated management of nuisance and vector mosquitoes, non-target effects of adulticide applications within ecosystems are a substantial concern. However, the impacts of adulticide applications on non-target organisms are not necessarily detrimental, and in some cases, may provide benefits to certain organisms or wildlife. Here, we hypothesized that adulticide applications have beneficial non-target impacts on vertebrate wildlife through reduced biting pressure. To test this, we collected mosquitoes from ultra-low volume Permanone-treated (intervention) and untreated (reference) areas and assessed mosquito abundance and diversity, and abundance of blood-engorged female mosquitoes. We performed DNA barcoding analysis on mosquito blood meals to identify host species. Our results demonstrated a significant reduction in mosquito abundance by 58.9% in the intervention areas, taking into account the reduction in reference areas. Consequently, this decline led to a 64.5% reduction in the abundance of blood-engorged females. We also found a temporal dynamic of mosquito composition driven by mosquito control actions in which different mosquito species became dominant at treated sites while composition at reference areas remained similar during the same period. The present study suggests that the beneficial effects of mosquito control treatments for humans extend to other vertebrates, which represents an unstudied and rarely recognized non-target impact.
Funder
Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference67 articles.
1. Gubler, D. J. Human arbovirus infections worldwide. Ann. N. Y. Acad. Sci. 951, 13–24 (2001).
2. Hubálek, Z., Rudolf, I. & Nowotny, N. Arboviruses pathogenic for domestic and wild animals. Adv. Virus Res. 89, 201–275 (2014).
3. Piccolomini, A. M., Flenniken, M. L., O’Neill, K. M. & Peterson, R. K. The effects of an ultra-low-volume application of etofenprox for mosquito management on Megachile rotundata (Hymenoptera: Megachilidae) larvae and adults in an agricultural setting. J. Econ. Entomol. 111, 33–38 (2018).
4. Lloyd, A., Connelly, C. & Carlson, D. Florida Coordinating Council on Mosquito Control. Florida Mosquito Control: the state of the mission as defined by mosquito controllers, regulators, and environmental managers. https://fmel.ifas.ufl.edu/media/fmelifasufledu/7-15-2018-white-paper.pdf. (2018).
5. Kim, D., Burkett-Cadena, N. D. & Reeves, L. E. Pollinator biological traits and ecological interactions mediate the impacts of mosquito-targeting malathion application. Sci. Rep. 12, 17039 (2022).