Coffee and its waste repel gravid Aedes albopictus females and inhibit the development of their embryos

Background: Dengue is a prevalent arboviral disease and the development of insecticide resistance among its vectors impedes endeavors to control it. Coffee is drunk by millions of people daily worldwide, which is associated with the discarding of large amounts of waste. Coffee and its waste contain...

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Main Authors: Tomomitsu, Satho, Hamady, Dieng, Muhammad Hishamuddin, Itam Ahmad, Salbiah, Binti Ellias, Ahmad, Abu Hassan, Fatimah, Abang, Idris, Abd Ghani, Fumio, Miake, Hamdan, Ahmad, Yuki, Fukumitsu, Wan Fatma, Zuharah, Abdul Hafiz, Ab Majid, Nur Faeza, Abu Kassim, Nur, Aida Hashim, Olaide, Olawunmi Ajibola, Fatima, Abdulla Al-Khayyat, Cirilo, Nolasco-Hipolito
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BioMed Central Ltd. 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/14850/
http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/14850/1/Tomomitsu.pdf
_version_ 1848837745686872064
author Tomomitsu, Satho
Hamady, Dieng
Muhammad Hishamuddin, Itam Ahmad
Salbiah, Binti Ellias
Ahmad, Abu Hassan
Fatimah, Abang
Idris, Abd Ghani
Fumio, Miake
Hamdan, Ahmad
Yuki, Fukumitsu
Wan Fatma, Zuharah
Abdul Hafiz, Ab Majid
Nur Faeza, Abu Kassim
Nur, Aida Hashim
Olaide, Olawunmi Ajibola
Fatima, Abdulla Al-Khayyat
Cirilo, Nolasco-Hipolito
author_facet Tomomitsu, Satho
Hamady, Dieng
Muhammad Hishamuddin, Itam Ahmad
Salbiah, Binti Ellias
Ahmad, Abu Hassan
Fatimah, Abang
Idris, Abd Ghani
Fumio, Miake
Hamdan, Ahmad
Yuki, Fukumitsu
Wan Fatma, Zuharah
Abdul Hafiz, Ab Majid
Nur Faeza, Abu Kassim
Nur, Aida Hashim
Olaide, Olawunmi Ajibola
Fatima, Abdulla Al-Khayyat
Cirilo, Nolasco-Hipolito
author_sort Tomomitsu, Satho
building UNIMAS Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Background: Dengue is a prevalent arboviral disease and the development of insecticide resistance among its vectors impedes endeavors to control it. Coffee is drunk by millions of people daily worldwide, which is associated with the discarding of large amounts of waste. Coffee and its waste contain large amounts of chemicals many of which are highly toxic and none of which have a history of resistance in mosquitoes. Once in solution, coffee is brownish in colour, resembling leaf infusion, which is highly attractive to gravid mosquitoes. To anticipate the environmental issues related to the increasing popularity of coffee as a drink, and also to combat insecticide resistance, we explored the deterrence potentials of coffee leachates against the ovipositing and embryonic stages of the dengue vector, Aedes albopictus. Methods: In a series of choice, no-choice, and embryo toxicity bioassays, we examined changes in the ovipositional behaviours and larval eclosion of Ae. albopictus in response to coffee extracts at different concentrations. Results: Oviposition responses were extremely low when ovicups holding highly concentrated extract (HCE) of coffee were the only oviposition sites. Gravid females retained increased numbers of mature eggs until 5 days post-blood feeding. When provided an opportunity to oviposit in cups containing coffee extracts and with water, egg deposition occurred at lower rates in those containing coffee, and HCE cups were far less attractive to females than those containing water only. Females that successfully developed in a coffee environment preferentially oviposited in such cups when in competition with preferred oviposition sites (water cups), but this trait did not continue into the fourth generation. Larval eclosion occurred at lower rates among eggs that matured in a coffee environment, especially among those that were maintained on HCE-moistened substrates. Conclusions: The observations of the present study indicate a pronounced vulnerability of Ae. albopictus to the presence of coffee in its habitats during the early phases of its life cycle. The observations that coffee repels gravid females and inhibits larval eclosion provide novel possibilities in the search for novel oviposition deterrents and anti-larval eclosion agents against dengue vectors. © 2015 Satho et al.; licensee BioMed Central.
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institution Universiti Malaysia Sarawak
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-15T06:44:33Z
publishDate 2015
publisher BioMed Central Ltd.
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling unimas-148502021-06-22T16:22:36Z http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/14850/ Coffee and its waste repel gravid Aedes albopictus females and inhibit the development of their embryos Tomomitsu, Satho Hamady, Dieng Muhammad Hishamuddin, Itam Ahmad Salbiah, Binti Ellias Ahmad, Abu Hassan Fatimah, Abang Idris, Abd Ghani Fumio, Miake Hamdan, Ahmad Yuki, Fukumitsu Wan Fatma, Zuharah Abdul Hafiz, Ab Majid Nur Faeza, Abu Kassim Nur, Aida Hashim Olaide, Olawunmi Ajibola Fatima, Abdulla Al-Khayyat Cirilo, Nolasco-Hipolito RB Pathology Background: Dengue is a prevalent arboviral disease and the development of insecticide resistance among its vectors impedes endeavors to control it. Coffee is drunk by millions of people daily worldwide, which is associated with the discarding of large amounts of waste. Coffee and its waste contain large amounts of chemicals many of which are highly toxic and none of which have a history of resistance in mosquitoes. Once in solution, coffee is brownish in colour, resembling leaf infusion, which is highly attractive to gravid mosquitoes. To anticipate the environmental issues related to the increasing popularity of coffee as a drink, and also to combat insecticide resistance, we explored the deterrence potentials of coffee leachates against the ovipositing and embryonic stages of the dengue vector, Aedes albopictus. Methods: In a series of choice, no-choice, and embryo toxicity bioassays, we examined changes in the ovipositional behaviours and larval eclosion of Ae. albopictus in response to coffee extracts at different concentrations. Results: Oviposition responses were extremely low when ovicups holding highly concentrated extract (HCE) of coffee were the only oviposition sites. Gravid females retained increased numbers of mature eggs until 5 days post-blood feeding. When provided an opportunity to oviposit in cups containing coffee extracts and with water, egg deposition occurred at lower rates in those containing coffee, and HCE cups were far less attractive to females than those containing water only. Females that successfully developed in a coffee environment preferentially oviposited in such cups when in competition with preferred oviposition sites (water cups), but this trait did not continue into the fourth generation. Larval eclosion occurred at lower rates among eggs that matured in a coffee environment, especially among those that were maintained on HCE-moistened substrates. Conclusions: The observations of the present study indicate a pronounced vulnerability of Ae. albopictus to the presence of coffee in its habitats during the early phases of its life cycle. The observations that coffee repels gravid females and inhibits larval eclosion provide novel possibilities in the search for novel oviposition deterrents and anti-larval eclosion agents against dengue vectors. © 2015 Satho et al.; licensee BioMed Central. BioMed Central Ltd. 2015 Article PeerReviewed text en http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/14850/1/Tomomitsu.pdf Tomomitsu, Satho and Hamady, Dieng and Muhammad Hishamuddin, Itam Ahmad and Salbiah, Binti Ellias and Ahmad, Abu Hassan and Fatimah, Abang and Idris, Abd Ghani and Fumio, Miake and Hamdan, Ahmad and Yuki, Fukumitsu and Wan Fatma, Zuharah and Abdul Hafiz, Ab Majid and Nur Faeza, Abu Kassim and Nur, Aida Hashim and Olaide, Olawunmi Ajibola and Fatima, Abdulla Al-Khayyat and Cirilo, Nolasco-Hipolito (2015) Coffee and its waste repel gravid Aedes albopictus females and inhibit the development of their embryos. Parasites and Vectors, 8 (1). pp. 1-15. ISSN 17563305 http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?eid=2-s2.0-84929316236&partnerID=40&md5=c68627d8e0353b31a8a2963e6eae9d02
spellingShingle RB Pathology
Tomomitsu, Satho
Hamady, Dieng
Muhammad Hishamuddin, Itam Ahmad
Salbiah, Binti Ellias
Ahmad, Abu Hassan
Fatimah, Abang
Idris, Abd Ghani
Fumio, Miake
Hamdan, Ahmad
Yuki, Fukumitsu
Wan Fatma, Zuharah
Abdul Hafiz, Ab Majid
Nur Faeza, Abu Kassim
Nur, Aida Hashim
Olaide, Olawunmi Ajibola
Fatima, Abdulla Al-Khayyat
Cirilo, Nolasco-Hipolito
Coffee and its waste repel gravid Aedes albopictus females and inhibit the development of their embryos
title Coffee and its waste repel gravid Aedes albopictus females and inhibit the development of their embryos
title_full Coffee and its waste repel gravid Aedes albopictus females and inhibit the development of their embryos
title_fullStr Coffee and its waste repel gravid Aedes albopictus females and inhibit the development of their embryos
title_full_unstemmed Coffee and its waste repel gravid Aedes albopictus females and inhibit the development of their embryos
title_short Coffee and its waste repel gravid Aedes albopictus females and inhibit the development of their embryos
title_sort coffee and its waste repel gravid aedes albopictus females and inhibit the development of their embryos
topic RB Pathology
url http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/14850/
http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/14850/
http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/14850/1/Tomomitsu.pdf