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Featured researches published by John D. Edman.


Journal of Medical Entomology | 2000

Longitudinal studies of Aedes aegypti (Diptera : Culicidae) in Thailand and Puerto Rico : Blood feeding frequency

Thomas W. Scott; Priyanie H. Amerasinghe; Amy C. Morrison; Leslie H. Lorenz; Gary G. Clark; Daniel Strickman; Pattamaporn Kittayapong; John D. Edman

Abstract We used a histologic technique to study multiple blood feeding in a single gonotrophic cycle by engorged Aedes aegypti (L.) that were collected weekly for 2 yr from houses in a rural village in Thailand (n = 1,891) and a residential section of San Juan, Puerto Rico (n = 1,675). Overall, mosquitoes from Thailand contained significantly more multiple meals (n = 1,300, 42% double meals, 5% triple meals) than mosquitoes collected in Puerto Rico (n = 1,156, 32% double meals, 2% triple meals). The portion of specimens for which frequency of feeding could not be determined was 31% at both sites. We estimated that on average Ae. aegypti take 0.76 and 0.63 human blood meals per day in Thailand and Puerto Rico, respectively. However, frequency of multiple feeding varied among houses and, in Puerto Rico, the neighborhoods from which mosquitoes were collected. In Thailand 65% of the mosquitoes fed twice on the same day, whereas in Puerto Rico 57% took multiple meals separated by ≥ 1 d. At both sites, the majority of engorged specimens were collected inside houses (Thailand 86%, Puerto Rico 95%). The number of blood meals detected was independent of where mosquitoes were collected (inside versus outside of the house) at both sites and the time of day collections were made in Puerto Rico. Feeding rates were slightly higher for mosquitoes collected in the afternoon in Thailand. Temperatures were significantly higher and mosquitoes significantly smaller in Thailand than in Puerto Rico. At both sites female size was negatively associated with temperature. Rates of multiple feeding were associated positively with temperature and negatively with mosquito size in Thailand, but not in Puerto Rico. Multiple feeding during a single gonotrophic cycle is a regular part of Ae. aegypti biology, can vary geographically and under different climate conditions, and may be associated with variation in patterns of dengue virus transmission.


Journal of Medical Entomology | 2001

Why Do Female Aedes aegypti (Diptera: Culicidae) Feed Preferentially and Frequently on Human Blood?

Laura C. Harrington; John D. Edman; Thomas W. Scott

Abstract Adult female Aedes aegypti (L.), the vector of dengue and yellow fever viruses, have an affinity for feeding on human blood and a tendency to forego feeding on sugar. This observation challenges two tenets of mosquito biology: (1) mosquitoes imbibe plant carbohydrates for synthesis of energy reserves and blood for reproduction and (2) egg production is reduced when mosquitoes feed on human blood compared with blood from other species. Sub-optimal amounts of the amino acid isoleucine in human blood (particularly free isoleucine in plasma) are thought to be responsible for lowered egg production when human blood is ingested. We tested the hypothesis that feeding on human blood is associated with a selective advantage for Ae. aegypti and is an underlying reason for this mosquito’s intimate and epidemiologically important relationship with human beings. Our five experiments examined the effects of different isoleucine concentrations on accumulated energy reserves, frequency of host contact, survival, and egg production. When mosquitoes imbibed blood meals over a 7- to 10-d period and were not fed sugar, increased isoleucine concentration decreased energy reserves and did not increase egg production. Aedes aegypti took smaller but more frequent blood meals when feeding on a low-isoleucine human host daily compared with a high-isoleucine mouse host. Previous reports that isoleucine enhances egg production were confirmed only when females were fed sugar, an unusual behavior for most domestic Ae. aegypti populations. Females fed human blood and water had greater age-specific survival (lx), reproductive output (mx), and cumulative net replacement (R0) than cohorts fed human blood plus sugar or isoleucine-rich mouse blood with or without access to sugar. The unique isoleucine concentration of human blood is associated with Ae. aegypti’s unusual propensity to feed preferentially and frequently on humans—a behavior that increases this mosquito’s fitness, synthesis of energy reserves, and contact with human hosts, making it an especially effective disseminator of human pathogens.


Journal of Medical Entomology | 2000

Longitudinal Studies of Aedes aegypti (Diptera: Culicidae) in Thailand and Puerto Rico: Population Dynamics

Thomas W. Scott; Amy C. Morrison; Leslie H. Lorenz; Gary G. Clark; Daniel Strickman; Pattamaporn Kittayapong; Hong Zhou; John D. Edman

Abstract Aspiration collections of adult Aedes aegypti (L.) were made weekly from inside and outside of houses for 3 yr in a rural Thai village (n = 9,637 females and n = 11,988 males) and for 2 yr in a residential section of San Juan, Puerto Rico (n = 5,941 females and n = 6,739 males). In Thailand, temperature and rainfall fell into distinct seasonal categories, but only temperature was correlated with fluctuations in female abundance. Average weekly temperature 6 wk before mosquitoes were collected and minimum weekly temperature during the week of collection provided the highest correlations with female abundance. Accounting for annual variation significantly improved Thai models of temperature and mosquito abundance. In Puerto Rico, temperature, but not rainfall, could be categorized into seasonal patterns. Neither was correlated with changes in female abundance. At both sites the vast majority of females were collected inside houses and most contained a blood meal. Most teneral females were collected outside. Wing length—an indicator of female size—and parity, egg development or engorgement status were not correlated, indicating that feeding success and survival were not influenced by female size. At both sites, females fed almost exclusively on human hosts (≥96%), a pattern that did not change seasonally. In Puerto Rico more nonhuman blood meals were detected in mosquitoes collected outside than inside houses; no such difference was detected in Thailand. Gut contents of dissected females indicated that females in the Thai population had a younger age distribution and fed more frequently on blood than did Ae. aegypti in Puerto Rico. Our results indicated that aspects of this species’ biology can vary significantly from one location to another and 1 yr to the next.


Journal of Medical Entomology | 2001

Analysis of Survival of Young and Old Aedes aegypti (Diptera: Culicidae) from Puerto Rico and Thailand

Laura C. Harrington; John P. Buonaccorsi; John D. Edman; Adriana Costero; Pattamaporn Kittayapong; Gary G. Clark; Thomas W. Scott

Abstract It generally is assumed that the daily probability of survival of wild adult mosquitoes is independent of age. To test this assumption we conducted mark-release-recapture studies in Puerto Rico and Thailand to determine if estimated daily survival rates between two different age cohorts of the dengue vector Aedes aegypti (L.) were the same. Survivorship was estimated with nonlinear regression analysis using bootstrapping to obtain estimates of errors. Initial recapture success of the younger cohort was greater than the older cohort at both locations. Our analysis revealed a significantly greater survival rate for the younger cohort of females in Puerto Rico, and no significant differences between age cohorts in Thailand. For comparison, a traditional approach for analyzing these type of data, linear regression of log-transformed captures over time (exponential model), was used to calculate the probability of daily survival based on slopes of linear regression lines for recaptured mosquitoes. With this method, the estimated daily survival rate of older females (13–23 d old) was significantly greater than survival of younger ones (3–13 d old) in Puerto Rico and Thailand. In addition, short-range movement of mosquitoes was observed in Puerto Rico; maximum dispersal distance detected was 79 m. Survival rates of adult Ae. aegypti may be age-dependent and nonlinear regression analysis is a sensitive approach for comparing patterns of mosquito survival based on mark, single release, multiple recapture data.


Journal of Parasitology | 1983

Malaria renders mice susceptible to mosquito feeding when gametocytes are most infective.

Jonathan F. Day; John D. Edman

Mice infected with Plasmodium berghei, P. chabaudi, or P. yoelii became lethargic and ceased to display normal antimosquito behavior. Periods of reduced defensiveness corresponded with maximum mosquito engorgement and with periods of maximum gametocyte infectivity to mosquitoes. Increased feeding success of mosquitoes during periods of peak gametocyte infectivity may be important to the natural maintenance of these malaria parasites.


Vector-borne and Zoonotic Diseases | 2008

Influence of Container Size, Location, and Time of Day on Oviposition Patterns of the Dengue Vector, Aedes aegypti, in Thailand

Laura C. Harrington; A. Ponlawat; John D. Edman; Thomas W. Scott; F. Vermeylen

We conducted a study to determine the effect of container size and location on oviposition site selection by Ae. aegypti in large outdoor field enclosures (10 x 10 x 4 m high). There was a strong positive relationship between increasing container diameter, container volume, and water surface area with egg numbers over both high (rainy, July) and low (cool-dry, January) dengue transmission seasons. Location of containers (indoors versus immediately outdoors and underneath houses) did not influence the number of eggs deposited for containers 5-32 cm in diameter in either season. No trends based on container color (black, brown, or grey) were observed. A slight trend with a greater numbers of eggs laid outdoors in the largest containers (42 cm diameter) during the dry season was observed. Three separate models were run using the mixed model procedure in SAS for each container attribute. Controlling for season, time, and date, the most important container attribute predicting total egg numbers was container volume (total capacity) explaining 88% of the variation, followed by water surface area (85%), and container diameter opening (83%). Oviposition peaked in the afternoon at 1600 hrs and 2000 hrs in the dry and rainy seasons, respectively. Few eggs were laid overnight (2000 hrs-0600 hrs). Our results indicate that physical attributes of oviposition sites, such as size, light-dark contrasts, and specular reflectance from water surfaces, play a significant role in oviposition site selection.


Pesticide Biochemistry and Physiology | 2003

Sodium channel mutations associated with knockdown resistance in the human head louse, Pediculus capitis (De Geer)

Si Hyeock Lee; Jian-Rong Gao; Kyong Sup Yoon; Kosta Y. Mumcuoglu; David Taplin; John D. Edman; Miwa Takano-Lee; J. Marshall Clark

Pyrethroid resistance in human head louse populations is widespread in the United States and worldwide. We previously documented that the knockdown resistance of permethrin-resistant head louse populations is associated with the T929I and L932F (T917I and L920F in the numbering of the louse amino acid sequence) mutations in the voltage-sensitive sodium channel α-subunit gene. In order to identify additional sodium channel mutations potentially associated with knockdown resistance, we cloned and sequenced full-length cDNA fragments from insecticide-susceptible (Ecuador) and permethrin-resistant (Florida) head louse populations and from an insecticide-susceptible body louse population (Israel). Sequence comparisons of the complete open reading frames of the sodium channel genes identified one additional novel mutation (M815I), which was located in the IIS1-2 extracellular loop of the α-subunit, from the permethrin-resistant head louse population. Absolute conservation of the Met815 residue at the corresponding positions within sodium channels from all known susceptible populations of insect species implied that the M815I mutation likely has a functional significance in resistance. Sequence analyses of cloned cDNA fragments and genomic DNA fragments from individual louse samples, both containing the three mutation sites, confirmed that all the mutations exist en bloc as a haplotype. Northern blot analysis identified a single 7.2 kb transcript. The comparison of complete open reading frame sequences (6156 bp) of sodium channel gene between head and body lice revealed 26 polymorphic nucleotides, of which only one resulted in a conservative amino acid substitution (glutamic versus aspartic acid at 11th amino acid position). The virtual identity in nucleotide sequences indicated that both body and head lice are conspecific, and lends justification of the use of the body louse as a surrogate organism for the head louse in biochemical and molecular biology studies. Conserved point mutations resulting in knockdown resistance to the pyrethrins, the pyrethroids, and DDT are suitable for detection by various DNA-diagnostic protocols for monitoring and resistance management.


International Journal of Tropical Insect Science | 1987

Host defensive behaviour and the feeding success of mosquitoes

John D. Edman; Thomas W. Scott

Defensive behaviour is one of the principal ways vertebrate hosts regulate the blood-feeding success of vector insects. Intrinsic variation in the intensity and efficiency of this biting avoidance behaviour depends on host: (1) species, (2) size, (3) age, (4) health and (5) individuality. In this paper we summarize data on the relative importance of each of these host-associated factors in regulating mosquito feeding and transmission of mosquito-borne diseases.RésuméLe procédé défensif est un des moyens principaux que le succès d’alimentation sanguin des vecteurs est contrôlé par les hôtes vertébré. Variation intrinsèque à l’intensité et l’efficacité de ce procédé défensif dépend sur (1) l’espèce (2) la grandeur (3) l’âge (4) la santé et (5) l’individualité de l’hôte. A cette composition, nous résumons les données au sujet de l’importance relatif de chaque facteur associé avec l’hôte sur la contrôle d’alimentation sanguin pars les moustiques et sur la transmission des maladies qui sont portées par les moustiques.


Journal of Medical Entomology | 2008

Age-Dependent Survival of the Dengue Vector Aedes aegypti (Diptera: Culicidae) Demonstrated by Simultaneous Release-Recapture of Different Age Cohorts

Laura C. Harrington; Françoisevermeylen; James J. Jones; Sangvorn Kitthawee; Ratana Sithiprasasna; John D. Edman; Thomas W. Scott

Abstract The assumption that mosquito survival remains constant and that it is independent of age was tested with free-ranging Aedes aegypti (L.) (Diptera: Culicidae) by using a “synthetic cohort” mark–release–recapture method. Mosquito age cohorts (1–2, 3–4, and 19–20 d) were released simultaneously in homes in rural Thai villages during dry and rainy seasons (2002). Significant age-dependent effects were detected during the dry and rainy seasons. More young than older mosquitoes were recaptured (1–4 versus 5–20 d). The best predictive fit for recaptures was obtained using a quadratic function of age. Our results provide the first field-based evidence for age-dependent Ae. aegypti mortality in which the death rate increases with advancing age and highlight the need for research on ecological and epidemiological aspects of this process.


Journal of Medical Entomology | 2003

In Vivo and In Vitro Rearing of Pediculus humanus capitis (Anoplura: Pediculidae)

M. Takano-lee; Kyong Sup Yoon; John D. Edman; Bradley A. Mullens; John M. Clark

Abstract Four geographically distinct colonies of the human head louse, Pediculus humanus capitis De Geer (Anoplura: Pediculidae) were reared on a live host and exhibited significantly different life history patterns. Florida head lice exhibited ≈10% slower development and ≈15% reduced longevity relative to California or Ecuador head lice. Fecundity (4.9 ± 0.2 eggs/female/d) and fertility (76.4 ± 2.9% mean hatching rate) declined over the lifetime of female lice, especially when separated from males (i.e., unmated recently). All four colonies (above plus one from Panama) were similar in their ability to tolerate starvation, although older stages tended to die sooner. An in vitro feeding apparatus was developed to rear head lice. Teneral first instar lice were placed on human hair tufts on the upper side of membrane-covered feeders, which were immersed bottom-side down within a vessel containing warmed human blood. Relative to lice reared on a human host, in vitro-reared lice required a significantly longer time (10–20%) to molt and survived a significantly shorter time as adults (30–50%); the addition of antibiotics did not adversely affect louse development. Teneral first instars were more likely than any other stage to feed through the membrane. Lice spent a significantly greater proportion of time searching in the in vitro apparatus than on a host, but the proportion of time spent feeding did not differ. This research is the first to demonstrate that head lice can be reared successfully in vitro through a complete life cycle.

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John M. Clark

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Gary G. Clark

United States Department of Agriculture

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Russell E. Coleman

Walter Reed Army Institute of Research

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J. Marshall Clark

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Lloyd H. Semprevivo

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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