Ecological dimensions of mosquito-borne disease are on the minds of ecologists 
as they head to southern Florida for the 101st Annual Meeting of the Ecological 
Society of America
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Friday, 8 July 2016
Contact: Liza Lester, 202-833-8773 ext. 211, lles...@esa.org

For photos and links, read online: 
http://www.esa.org/esa/mosquito-ecology-and-disease-at-esa2016/ 
 
The resurgence of Zika virus has raised anxieties about the spread of 
infectious disease by mosquitoes as theEcological Society of America heads to 
southern Florida for its 101st Annual Meeting. Research on mosquito biology and 
disease transmission will have a strong showing at the meeting Fort Lauderdale, 
this 7-12 August 2016. Climate change and species invasions are strong themes 
among this year's research presentations on infectious disease.

Geologists have proposed a new epoch, the Anthropocene, to describe our present 
time, in which the pervasive presence of humans and the products of human 
invention are shaping the atmosphere, oceans, and ecosystems of the world. The 
meeting theme "Novel Ecosystems in the Anthropocene" invites a focus on the new 
relationships between species arising under the influence of global change.
ESA invites press and institutional public information officers to attend for 
free. To apply, please contact ESA Communications Officer Liza Lester directly 
at lles...@esa.org. Walk-in registration will be available during the meeting.

Research presentations: 
. Is mosquito-borne disease risk heating up with a warming climate?
. Organizing defense forces to hit mosquitoes where they breed
. Luring mosquitoes into honeysuckle traps
. Stressed birds get more mosquito bites-and transmit disease
. An invasive mosquito helps break the spread of a parasite
. The Asian tiger mosquito thrives in New York
. Side effects of mosquito defense: broad spectrum insecticides kill the 
pollinators of rare native flowers
. Mosquitoes change their temperature preferences when in competition with 
other mosquito species
. Life cycles, competition, and management
. Battle at the bloodmeal lek
 
Is mosquito-borne disease risk heating up with a warming climate?
. COS 6-3 -Intermediate optimal temperature for dengue, chikungunya, and Zika 
transmission by Aedes spp. mosquitoes
. Monday, August 8, 2016: 2:10 PM, room 124/125, Ft Lauderdale Convention Center
. Erin Mordecai, Stanford University
Mosquito life cycles, and those of the pathogens they host, are intimately 
connected to the temperature and humidity of the cities and landscapes they 
inhabit. Epidemiologists worry that climate change is fostering emergence and 
resurgence of vector-borne and zoonotic diseases such as dengue, chikungunya, 
Zika, and malaria. But warmer is not necessarily always better for the 
pathogen. Modeling transmission of viruses with attention to the physiological 
responses to mosquitoes to temperature, Erin Mordecai of Stanford University 
and colleagues in Florida concluded that warming temperatures may accelerate 
transmission in North America's cooler states, but are not likely to intensify 
the problem in tropical and subtropical regions that already bear the heaviest 
burden from mosquito-borne illnesses. Her talk is part of a session on Disease 
Ecology (I), which will also feature hantavirus, snails, and vampire bats.
 
Organizing defense forces to hit mosquitoes where they breed
. COS 41-7 -Control of emerging infectious diseases: How synchronicity of 
vector reduction efforts affect the size of Zika virus outbreaks
. Wednesday, August 10, 2016: 10:10 AM, Floridian Blrm BC, Ft Lauderdale 
Convention Center
. Samantha R. Schwab, Rutgers University
Are efforts to control mosquito breeding sites more effective when synchronized 
across urban areas or staggered? A mathematical model has suggestions for 
municipalities. Schwab will present in the Disease Ecology (III) session, 
featuring talks on transmission of infection, from polio to the catastrophic 
epidemic of the cryptid fungus Bd in amphibians.
 

Graduate student Noor Malik sets up a leaf detritus experiment, designed to 
explore mosquito egg laying behavoir and larval survival, in a storm drain in 
Paxton, Illinois. Malik graduated from the University of Illinois in 2015. 
Credit, Allison Gardner.
Luring mosquitoes into honeysuckle traps
. COS 17-1 -Direct and indirect effects of native and invasive plants on 
mosquito ecology
. Tuesday, August 9, 2016: 8:00 AM, room Palm B, Ft Lauderdale Convention Center
. Allison M. Gardner, School of Biology and Ecology, University of Maine, 
Orono, ME
Beyond the blood meal, mosquitoes need sugar and safe and nurturing pools to 
cradle their eggs and emerging larva. Fallen leaves floating in still water 
(like residential stormwater drainage ditches) make appealing hatcheries for 
the common house mosquito (Culex pipiens), a carrier of West Nile virus. 
Gardner and colleagues found that the leaves of native common blackberry (Rubus 
allegheniensis) are attractive to gravid female mosquitoes, but inimical to 
their larvae. Invasive Amur honeysuckle (Lonicera maackii) both attracts 
females to lay eggs and favors survival to adulthood. The different communities 
of bacteria that live on the plants appear to play a role in the survival of 
mosquito larvae. The researchers experimented with honeysuckle leaf "traps" 
coated in unfriendly bacteria. Disease Ecology (II).
 
Stressed birds get more mosquito bites-and transmit disease
. SYMP 8-2 -The role of stress hormones on avian host competence for West Nile 
virus
. Tuesday, August 9, 2016: 2:00 PM, Grand Floridian Blrm C, Ft Lauderdale 
Convention Center
. Stephanie S. Gervasi, Monell Chemical Senses Center, Philadelphia, PA
In a triple whammy for disease transmission, zebra finches with high stress 
hormones (corticosterone) suffered from double the number of mosquito 
"foragers." The stressed birds, but not controls, had high enough loads of West 
Nile Virus circulating in their blood to transmit the virus to mosquitoes. 
Mosquito females feeding on the stressed finches laid their egg clutches more 
quickly. Gervasi's presentation is part of a symposium on "Resource 
provisioning and wildlife-pathogen interactions in human-altered landscapes."
 

Two adult Asian tiger mosquitoes (Aedes albopictus) emerge from a tree-hole in 
Bronx, NY.Credit, Marly Katz.
The Asian tiger mosquito thrives in New York
. PS 2-24 -The community assemblage of tree-hole mosquitoes in southern New 
York State
. Monday, August 8, 2016, ESA Exhibit Hall, Ft Lauderdale Convention Center
. Marly B. Katz, Fordham University, New York City, NY
The aggressive day-biting Asian tiger mosquito, Aedes albopictus, has spread 
with global trade from its native home in the tropics and subtropics of 
Southeast Asia. First observed in Houston, Texas, in 1987, it rapidly spread 
through the interstate system in the the United States. Its range is pushing 
northward into New York and Pennsylvania. Does Ae. albopictus crowd out other 
mosquito species? Katz surveyed the mosquito species present at sites in 
southern New York State.
 
Side effects of mosquito defense: broad spectrum insecticides kill the 
pollinators of rare native flowers
. PS 11-27 -Pesticides and pollination of imperiled plants in the Lower Florida 
Keys
. Tuesday, August 9, 2016, ESA Exhibit Hall, Ft Lauderdale Convention Center
. Brittany Harris, Earth and Environment, Florida International University, 
Miami, FL
As an example of the costs of mosquito suppression, three imperiled native 
plants in the Lower Florida Keys suffer indirectly from the spraying of 
insecticides in housing developments flanking National Key Deer Refuge. Harris 
will present her work in a poster session on Conservation.


Mosquitoes change their temperature preferences when in competition with other 
mosquito species
. COS 6-8 -Larval competition modifies the thermal niche of vector mosquitoes
. Monday, August 8, 2016: 4:00 PM, room 124/125, Ft Lauderdale Convention Center
. Sarah E. Bowden, Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies, Millbrook, NY
Temperature is an important factor in the success of both mosquitoes and the 
pathogens they harbor. Competition with other mosquito species complicates this 
relationship. To better model how climate change may affect mosquitoes and the 
transmission of disease, Bowden and John Drake of the University of Georgia 
investigated how competition affected optimal temperatures for larval growth.
 
An invasive mosquito helps break the spread of a parasite
. COS 6-6 -Interactive effects of species invasion and habitat quality on 
parasite prevalence: Evidence of a dilution effect
. Monday, August 8, 2016: 3:20 PM, room 124/125, Ft Lauderdale Convention Center
. Katie M. Westby, Tyson Research Center, Washington University in St. Louis, 
Eureka, MO
Some species of mosquitoes spread dangerous human diseases. But mosquitoes have 
their own parasites, like the protozoan Ascogregarina barretti, which is 
related to the organisms that cause malaria and toxoplasmosis, and infects the 
native North American mosquito Aedes triseriatus. The invasive mosquito, Aedes 
japonicus, a recent arrival in North America, does not contract As. barretti. 
Will the presence of Ae. japonicus dilute the prevalence of the parasite in the 
native mosquito?
 
Life cycles, competition, and management
. COS 100-5 -Spatial and stage-structured model testing for the effects of 
spatial synchrony in larval development and adult emergence on the persistence 
of mosquito populations
. Friday, August 12, 2016: 9:20 AM, room 222/223, Ft Lauderdale Convention 
Center
. Yehonatan Alcalay, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Beer-Sheva, Israel
Mosquitoes have complex life cycles and live in very different environments as 
immature larvae than as the flying biting pests people know and love. Models 
that seek to optimize mosquito management must take this variable life history 
into account. Alcalay will present in a session on Population Dynamics and 
Regulation, which will also feature talks on human encounters with black bears 
and cycles of moth pests in Northeastern fruit orchards.
 
Battle at the bloodmeal lek
. COS 84-1 -Where vectors collide: Effects of interspecific competition on 
worldwide niches of invasive Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus
. Thursday, August 11, 2016: 1:30 PM, room 209/210, Ft Lauderdale Convention 
Center
. L. Philip Lounibos, Florida Medical Entomology Laboratory, University of 
Florida, Vero Beach, FL
Invasive Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus are the principal vectors of 
dengue, chikungunya, and Zika viruses in the Americas. These species often find 
themselves in competition for mates and resources for their young. Cross-mating 
between the species creates infertile eggs and permanent sterilization of A. 
aegypti females. Lounibos and colleague Steven Juliano of Illinois State 
University described the causes and consequences of coexistence in south 
Florida. Lounibos will speak in a session on Invasion: Species Interactions.

###
The Ecological Society of America, founded in 1915, is the world's largest 
community of professional ecologists and a trusted source of ecological 
knowledge, committed to advancing the understanding of life on Earth. The 
10,000 member Society publishes six journals and a membership bulletin and 
broadly shares ecological information through policy, media outreach, and 
education initiatives. The Society's Annual Meeting attracts 4,000 attendees 
and features the most recent advances in ecological science. Visit the ESA 
website at http://www.esa.org.

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