Protocol for Mosquito Rearing (A. gambiae)
Suchismita Das, Lindsey Garver, George Dimopoulos Malaria Research Institute, Bloomberg School of Public Health, John Hopkins University
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0:01 Introduction1 0:21 Subscription Lock21 1:08 Day 1 - Blood-Feeding Mosquitoes68 3:43 Day 3 - Mosquitoes Lay Eggs223 5:10 Day 4 - Eggs are Collected310 6:22 Day 5-8 - Feed Larvae Every Day382 7:36 Day 9-10 - Late Stage Larvae456 8:02 Day 13 - From Larvae to Pupae482 8:20 Day 14-16 - Adult Mosquitoes Emerge500 8:39 Day 16 - Collection of Adult Mosquitoes519 11:44 Day 17-21 - The Cycle Repeats704 12:07 Conclusion727
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This protocol describes mosquito rearing in the insectary. The insectary rooms are maintained at 28°C and ~80% humidity, with a 12 hr. day/night cycle. For this procedure, you'll need mosquito cages, 10% sterile sucrose solution, paper towels, beaker, whatman filter paper, glass feeders, human blood and serum, water bath, parafilm, distilled water, clean plastic trays, mosquito food (described below), mosquito net to cover the trays, vacuum, and a collection chamber to collect adults.
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Mosquito food:
- Food A: grounded fish food (Aquaricare). A small pinch needs to be added.
- Food B: grounded CAT food (Purina). A small pinch needs to be added.
- Food C: cat food (Purina). Two tablets needs to be added.
Blood:
Animal or human blood can be used to rear mosquitoes. Fresh blood is collected with a syringe and put in a sterile 15 ml Falcon tube containing 1ml of CPD (anticoagulant) for each 10 ml of blood, then mixed gently and centrifuged at room temperature at 2000 rpm for 5 min. The supernatant is discarded, taking care to remove the buffy coat which comprises other blood cells (e.g. WBC). The RBC pellet is then suspended in an equal volume of RPMI medium by pipetting, and further washed in this medium three times. After the final wash, the pelleted RBCs are resuspended in an equal volume of RPMI medium and stored at 4°C (can be kept for 8-10 days). Just before feeding, the RBC (in RPMI) is centrifuged (2000 rpm for 5 min) to pellet down the cells, and the packed RBC is resuspended in serum (O+ human serum) to obtain a 40% haematocrit. The blood must be kept at 37°C always for the feeding.
DAY 1:
- The 3-5 day old adult female mosquitoes are fed on blood to lay eggs.
- For blood feeding, an artificial membrane (parafilm) feeding method is used as follows:
- Red blood cells (see above for blood preparation) are mixed with heat inactivated serum to obtain a ~40% haematocrit (packed RBC 40% and serum 60%). This is added to the glass feeder.
- The feeder is connected to a warm water-jacket (37°C), and placed on the cage to allow the mosquitoes access to the membrane surface.
- The mosquitoes are allowed to feed for ~30 minutes.
DAY 3:
- The females will lay eggs two days after they feed on blood. A small filter paper wrapped in a conical shape is put in a small beaker containing distilled water, making sure that filter paper gets moist. The beaker is kept inside the cage overnight for the mosquitoes to lay eggs.
DAY 4:
- The filter paper containing the mosquito eggs is placed in a plastic tray with ~300 ml distilled water. A pinch of food A is added to the tray and eggs are allowed to hatch to larvae during the next days.
DAYS 5 - 8:
- Growing larvae are fed every day with two tablets of food C, and monitored for density and population. On the eighth day (5 day old larvae), the larvae population is diluted from 1 tray to ~10 trays, with a pinch of food A and two tablets of food C in each tray. (~30 mins)
DAYS 9 - 12:
- The larvae are fed every day with food C. On the 12th day (9 day old larvae), the water is changed with fresh water, and food is added (a pinch of food B and two tablets of food C). The pupae starts developing at this stage. The trays are covered with nets to avoid escape of adults. (~ 8-10 mins)
DAY 13 - 15:
The pupae are allowed to emerge to adults for the next 2 - 3 days. Food is given every day to the larvae/pupae by carefully removing the net to avoid escaping of adults.
DAY 16:
- The adults are collected into a cage through an aspirator connected to vacuum. The cage consists of a small 100 ml bottle with a cotton wick that is soaked with 10% sucrose (autoclaved) and a paper towel lining on the bottom to soak any potential sugar spills which may occur during cage handling. (~ 30-40 mins)
DAY 17 - 21:
- The adults (both males and females) are then kept in the insectary room for 4-5 days, fed on 10% sucrose before they are again blood-fed to begin the next cycle. The same mosquitoes can be used to lay eggs more than once.
- The mosquitoes that are not needed for experiments or rearing can be killed by placing the cage in a freezer. The used trays and cages need to be cleaned and dried before they can be used again.
NOTE: There can be some variations in the mosquito rearing method and different labs may have different techniques.
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| Food A |
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Aquaricare |
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Grounded fish food. A small pinch needs to be added. |
| Food B |
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Purina |
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Grounded cat food. A small pinch needs to be added. |
| Food C |
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Purina |
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Cat food. Two tablets needs to be added |
| RBC |
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prepared red blood cells: 40% hematocrit in human serum |
| RPMI |
Medium |
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| CPD |
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anticoagulant |
| serum |
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O+ human serum |
| Mosquito feeder |
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| parafilm |
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| Anopheles gambiae |
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mosquitos |
| 10% sucrose |
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mosquito food |
| insectary |
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1. Bangs, M. J., Soelarto, T., Barodji., Wicaksana, B. P. and Boewono, D. T.. 2002. Colonization of Anopheles maculatus from Central Java, Indonesia. J Am Mosq Control Assoc. 18(4):359-63.
2. Beier, M. S., Beier, J.C., Merdan. A.A., el Sawaf, B.M. and Kadder, M.A. 1987. Laboratory rearing techniques and adult life table parameters for Anopheles sergentii from Egypt. J Am Mosq Control Assoc. 3:266-70.
3. Benedict, M. Q. 1997. Care and maintenance of anopheline mosquitoes, The molecular biology of disease vectors: A methods manual ed. Crampton, J.M., Beard, C.B., Louis, C. Champman and Hall, London pp. 3-12.
4. Casanges, A. H., Mcgovran, E. R. and Chiles, J. V. 1949. Rearing of Anopheles quadrimaculatus Say and Aedes aegypti (L.) in the laboratory. Mosq News. 9:112-7.
5. Merritt, R. W.,Dadd, R. H. and Walker, E. D. 1992. Feeding behavior, natural food and nutritional relation ships of larval mosquitoes. Annual Rev. Entomol. 37: 349-76.
6. Nasirian, H. and Ladonni, H. 2006. Artificial bloodfeeding of Anopheles stephensi on a membrane apparatus with human whole blood. J Am Mosq Control Assoc. 22:54-6.
7. Ng'habi, K. R., John, B., Nkwengulila, G., Knols, B.G., Killeen, G.F. and Ferguson, H.M. 2005. Effect of larval crowding on mating competitiveness of Anopheles gambiae mosquitoes. Malar J. 30: 4:49.
8. Stobart, R. H. 1971. Factors affecting the control of body volume in the larvae of the mosquitoes Aedes aegypti and Aedes detritus. Edw. J. Exp. Boil. 54: 67-82.
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Das S, Garver L, Dimopoulos G (2007). Protocol for Mosquito Rearing (A. gambiae). JoVE. 5. http://www.jove.com/index/details.stp?id=221, doi: 10.3791/221
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Allowed tags: i, b, u, sup, sub 
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| | 03/13/2008 3:46:18 PM
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Anonymous responded with a statement of type: Neutral
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For your information, there are four larval instars/stages not three as mentioned in the section Late Stage Larvae.
An alternative to collecting adult mosquitoes by sucking is to pick the pupae into a cup with water and place the cup in the adult cage. This does not require an advanced apparatus or the work of mouth aspirating. Also, there is no risk of the pupae escaping as with adults. The disadvantage of picking pupae is that it has to be done on a daily basis, but with good planning of the feeding it is possible to avoid picking the main bulk of the pupae on weekends. Olle Terenius, University of California, Irvine, USA
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| | 04/29/2009 7:22:31 PM
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Le thi Dui responded with a statement of type: Question
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My name' Dui, I work in Institude of Malariology. Parasitology and Entomology in Ho Chi Minh city. I'm responsible for insectary. I feed mosquitoes by alive mouse. Now I want to feed mosquitoes by membrane feeder. I follow your instruction in video clips but the mosquitoes couldn't suck blood through the membrane. I don't know The reason why The mosquitoes didn't have blood inside their body. Can you help me ?
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| | 04/30/2009 12:30:22 PM
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Suchismita Das responded with a statement of type: Neutral
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Hi,
This is Suchismita from Johns Hopkins University. Membrane feeding usually works for many mosquito species, but there are several that somehow do not take blood by membrane-feeding-for example, several arabiensis species and many others.
What is your mosquito species? Also, are you using fresh blood. We have noticed that sometimes blood older than 1 week are no good. Then which serum are you using, as all these citical steps help.
I would also recommend that you starve your mosquitoes for few hours (6-7) before you provide blood by membrane-feeding assays. These makes them really hungry and they go for blood. Also try to swithch off the light of that room, dark somehow initiates their feeding.
I hope these tips help you. In case you have more questions, please send me an email at sudas@jhsph.edu, I will be happy to answer.
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| | 07/08/2009 12:14:27 AM
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Farzeli, Arik responded with a statement of type: Question
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Dear Das:
Greetings. I am an entomology researcher based in Jakarta, Indonesia. Could you please provide information on where I could obtain apparatus glass membran feeding for mosquito?
Thank you.
Arik Farzeli, DVM Medical Entomology Department Naval Medical Research Unit 2 Jakarta, Indonesia
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| | 07/09/2009 1:29:11 PM
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Siisi responded with a statement of type: Agree
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Hi, thanks for your video guide it has been very useful but I would like to know are there anyways by which i can download or buy., since the link in my area is very very bad. It took me 4 hours to watch 10:23 minutes of this clip. can you help?
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| | 07/24/2009 2:55:47 PM
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rrao responded with a statement of type: Neutral
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FYI: Our lab uses mosquitoes to maintain the life cycle of filarial nematode Brugia malayi and to generate larval stages of these parasites for other research activities. For membrane feeding, we routinely use "casing" (used in sausage making) or skin from chicken legs as membranes. "Casings" cost only few dimes and can be bought at any major grocery store. Casing is easy to attach to the glass feeders. Aedes mosquitoes feed well on blood through casings than parafilm and should be good for other blood sucking critters.
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