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Dive into the research topics where Alon Silberbush is active.

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Featured researches published by Alon Silberbush.


Ecology Letters | 2010

Predator‐released hydrocarbons repel oviposition by a mosquito

Alon Silberbush; Shai Markman; Efraim Lewinsohn; Einat Bar; Joel E. Cohen; Leon Blaustein

Prey species commonly use predator-released kairomones (PRKs) to detect risk of predation, yet the chemical identity of PRKs remains elusive. Chemical identification of PRKs will facilitate the study of predator-prey interactions and the risk of predation, and when the prey are pests, will potentially provide environmentally friendly means of pest control. In temporary pools of the Mediterranean and Middle East, larvae of the mosquito Culiseta longiareolata Macquart are highly vulnerable to the common predatory backswimmer, Notonecta maculata Fabricius. We demonstrate that N. maculata releases two hydrocarbons, n-heneicosane and n-tricosane, which repel ovipositing females of C. longiareolata. In behavioural tests with environmentally relevant chemical concentrations in outdoor mesocosm experiments, the repellent effects of the two compounds were additive at the tested concentrations.


Journal of Vector Ecology | 2011

Oviposition habitat selection by Anopheles gambiae in response to chemical cues by Notonecta maculata

Alon Warburg; Roy Faiman; Alex Shtern; Alon Silberbush; Shai Markman; Joel E. Cohen; Leon Blaustein

ABSTRACT: A number of mosquito species avoid predator-inhabited oviposition sites by detecting predator-released kairomones. In the laboratory, we found that when offered de-ionized water and de-ionized water conditioned with Notonecta maculata, gravid Anopheles gambiae females preferentially oviposited into the former. We then conducted further experiments using two chemical components found in Notonecta-conditioned water, chemically pure n-tricosane and/or n-heneicosane, that was previously shown to repel oviposition by Culiseta longiareolata. These hydrocarbons failed to deter oviposition by An. gambiae females. Thus, different mosquito species may rely on distinct chemical cues to avoid predators. Identification and chemical characterization of such kairomones could facilitate innovative, environmentally sound mosquito control.


Hydrobiologia | 2005

Influence of salinity concentration on aquatic insect community structure : a mesocosm experiment in the Dead Sea Basin Region

Alon Silberbush; Leon Blaustein; Yoel Margalith

Salinity varies considerably among temporary pools in the Dead Sea Basin, Israel. We experimentally assessed the effects of four salinity levels (0, 10, 20 and 30 g NaCl per liter) on the aquatic insect community in this basin in an artificial pool experiment. Each salinity level was randomly assigned to six pools (total=24 pools). Salinity did not affect total insect abundance but strongly affected abundance and distributions of different species, and consequently, community structure. Of 13 taxa colonizing the pools, 12 were Diptera including 10 mosquito species. Five taxa were sufficiently common to assess abundance in relation to salinity. Polypedilum nubiferum Skuse (Diptera: Chironomidae) was largely salinity intolerant being abundant only in the freshwater. Ephydra flavipes Macquart (Diptera: Ephydridae) was most abundant at the highest salinity level and was rare in freshwater. Ochlerotatus caspius Pallas (Diptera: Culicidae) abundance tended to be highest at 10 g/l and lowest at 30 g/l although the differences were not statistically significant. Anopheles multicolor Cambouliu (Diptera: Culicidae) was relatively euryhaline although numbers dropped significantly at the highest salinity. Cleon dipterum Linnaeus (Baetidae: Ephemeroptera) was also euryhaline and showed no significant differences in abundance across salinities. For the mosquito species, we also estimated survival to pupation. Survival to pupation was significantly lower for O. caspius in freshwater, but was not statistically significantly different across salinities for A.␣multicolor. Species diversity was highest at the two lowest salinities tested and then dropped with increasing salinity. Evenness was not significantly different across salinities. Community similarity generally decreased with increasing salinity differences though dissimilarity was greatest when comparing freshwater to other salinities. Thus, regional diversity is likely increased when there is a range of salinities among pools.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Inter- and intra-specific density-dependent effects on life history and development strategies of larval mosquitoes.

Ido Tsurim; Alon Silberbush; Ofer Ovadia; Leon Blaustein; Yoel Margalith

We explored how inter- and intra-specific competition among larvae of two temporary-pool mosquito species, Culiseta longiareolata and Ochlerotatus caspius, affect larval developmental strategy and life history traits. Given that their larvae have similar feeding habits, we expected negative reciprocal inter-specific interactions. In a microcosm experiment, we found sex-specific responses of larval survival and development to both intra- and inter-specific larval competition. C. longiareolata was the superior competitor, reducing adult size and modifying larval developmental time of O. caspius. We observed two distinct waves of adult emergence in O. caspius, with clear sex-specific responses to its inter-specific competitor. In males, this pattern was not affected by C. longiareolata, but in females, the timing and average body size of the second wave strongly varied with C. longiareolata density. Specifically, in the absence of C. longiareolata, the second wave immediately followed the first wave. However, as C. longiareolata abundance increased, the second wave was progressively delayed and the resulting females tended to be larger. This study improves our understanding of the way intra- and inter-specific competition combine to influence the life histories of species making up temporary pond communities. It also provides strong evidence that not all individuals of a cohort employ the same strategies in response to competition.


Archive | 2016

Detection of Fish and Newt Kairomones by Ovipositing Mosquitoes

Lauren L. Eveland; Jason R. Bohenek; Alon Silberbush; William J. Resetarits

For many organisms with complex, multi-stage life cycles, parental care is often limited to oviposition site choice, making site selection critical for offspring fitness. Determining the mechanisms used to avoid predators when selecting an appropriate site is paramount for understanding the dynamics of habitat selection and its effects on species distributions. In aquatic systems, where habitat selection by colonizing species involves choosing among specific bodies of water (patches), the mechanism is thought to involve chemical cues (i.e., semiochemicals). Ovipositing mosquitoes have shown the ability to detect a specific larval predator via predator-released kairomones. Fish and aquatic salamanders are important predators of mosquito larvae. The extent that they that can deter mosquitoes from ovipositing, and the mechanism involved remains uncertain. In this context, we conducted three experiments to investigate whether ovipositing Culex mosquitoes detect and subsequently avoid fish and newts using chemicals cues. We present evidence that Western mosquitofish (Gambusia affinis) and Central newts (Notophthalmus viridescens louisianensis) release kairomones that deter certain species of Culex mosquitoes. Green sunfish (Lepomis cyanellus) are not avoided by any Culex mosquito. Identifying the mechanism and, more importantly, the predator-released kairomone used by mosquitoes can possibly aid in the control of mosquito populations in addition to providing important information about the ecological aspects of oviposition site selection.


Oecologia | 2014

Interactive effects of salinity and a predator on mosquito oviposition and larval performance

Alon Silberbush; Ido Tsurim; Yoel Margalith; Leon Blaustein

Oviposition habitat selection (OHS) is increasingly being recognized as playing a large role in explaining mosquito distributions and community assemblages. Most studies have assessed the role of single factors affecting OHS, while in nature, oviposition patterns are most likely explained by multiple, interacting biotic and abiotic factors. Determining how various factors interact to affect OHS is important for understanding metapopulation and metacommunity dynamics. We investigated the individual and interactive effects of three water salinities (0, 15 and 30 p.p.t. NaCl added) and the aquatic predator Anisops debilis Perplexa (Hemiptera: Notonectidae) on OHS and larval performance of the mosquitoes Ochlerotatus caspius Pallas and Culiseta longiareolata Macquart (Diptera: Culicidae) in outdoor-artificial-pool and laboratory experiments. C. longiareolata inhabited only freshwater pools, strongly avoided pools containing A. debilis, and larvae experienced lower survival in the presence of A. debilis. Salinity concentration interacted strongly with the predator in affecting OHS and larval survival of O. caspius; oviposition increased with increasing salinity in the absence of the predator and decreased with increasing salinity in the presence of the predator. O. caspius larval survival in predator-free pools was lowest in freshwater and highest at intermediate salinity. In predator pools, survival was highest at high salinity, where predation rate was shown to be lowest in the laboratory. Our results highlight that assessing the role of single factors in affecting mosquito distributions can be misleading. Instead, multiple factors may interact to affect oviposition patterns and larval performance.


Acta Tropica | 2015

Effects of fish cues on mosquito larvae development

Alon Silberbush; Zvika Abramsky; Ido Tsurim

We investigated the effects of predator-released kairomones on life history traits of larval Culex pipiens (Linnaeus). We compared the development time and survival of sibling larvae, reared in either water conditioned by the presence of Gambusia affinis (Baird and Girard) or fishless control-water. Our results indicate that larvae developing in fish-conditioned water (FCW) pupated faster than larvae in fishless-control water. The effect of FCW on larval survival was evident only in females. Surprisingly, FCW increased female survival. In both development-time and survival, boiling the water eliminated the FCW effect, supporting our hypothesis that fish conditioning is based on kairomones. Accelerated metamorphosis in response to predator released kairomones, evident in our results, is a rarely described phenomenon. Intuitively, when exposed to predator associated signals, aquatic larvae should metamorphose earlier to escape the higher risk of predation. However, theoretical models predict this outcome only under specific conditions. Indeed, longer - rather than shorter - time to metamorphosis is usually observed in response to predation risk. We argue that the response of larval mosquitoes to predation risk is context-dependent. Shortening larval development time may not be an exceptional response, but rather represents a part of a response spectrum that depends on the level of predation risk and resource abundance.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Species-Specific Non-Physical Interference Competition among Mosquito Larvae

Alon Silberbush; Ido Tsurim; Ran Rosen; Yoel Margalith; Ofer Ovadia

Individuals of different sex, size or developmental stage can compete differently and hence contribute distinctively to population dynamics. In species with complex life cycles such as insects, competitive ability is often positively correlated with larval developmental stage. Yet, little is known on how the development and survival of early-instars is influenced by interference from late-instar larvae, especially at low densities when exploitative competition is expected to be negligible. Furthermore, the specificity and mechanisms by which interference competition operates are largely unknown. We performed two complementary experiments aiming to quantify the competitive effects of late instar Ochlerotatus caspius on early instar larvae at low densities and under high resource supply rate. The first experiment examined the net effect of interference by 4th on 1st instar O. caspius larvae, relative to the effect of 1st instars on themselves. The second experiment examined the effect of species-specific, non-physical interference competition (i.e., cage larvae) by 4th on 1st instar O. caspius larvae at low or high densities. Specifically, we compared the responses of O. caspius larvae raised in the presence of caged con- or hetero-specific, Culiseta longiareolata, with that of larvae in the empty-cage control group. As expected, interference from late instar larvae had a net negative effect on the development rate of first instars. In contrast, the presence of caged con-specifics (non-physical interference) accelerated the development rate of O. caspius, however, this pattern was only evident at the low density. Notably, no such pattern was detected in the presence of caged hetero-specifics. These results strongly suggest the existence of species-specific growth regulating semiochemicals.


Israel Journal of Ecology & Evolution | 2016

Detrivory, competition, and apparent predation by Culiseta longiareolata in a temporary pool ecosystem

Ido Tsurim; Alon Silberbush

Larvae of the mosquito Culiseta longiareolata Macquart have been suggested as important species in desert and Mediterranean temporary pond ecosystems through their strong competitive abilities and as intra-guild predators. We examined their potential predatory effect on larvae of the abundant saltmarsh mosquito Ochlerotatus caspius. We did not find evidence for predatory effects of C. longiareolata on O. caspius larvae. We suggest that, at least in our system, C. longiareolata is an apparent predator. Namely, it does not actively prey on mobile victims, but rather feeds on the carcasses of its fallen competitors additional to its generally immobile food. Hence, we do not expect the occurrence of anti-predator behaviors in response to C. longiareolata presence, including larval development characteristics and oviposition habitat selection.


Functional Ecology | 2011

Mosquito females quantify risk of predation to their progeny when selecting an oviposition site

Alon Silberbush; Leon Blaustein

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Ido Tsurim

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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Yoel Margalith

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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Ofer Ovadia

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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Zvika Abramsky

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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Alex Shtern

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Alon Warburg

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Roy Faiman

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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