Mosquito pollination of plants: an overview of their role and an assessment of the possible contribution of disease vectors.

IF 4.6 Q2 MATERIALS SCIENCE, BIOMATERIALS ACS Applied Bio Materials Pub Date : 2024-08-22 DOI:10.1007/s11248-024-00394-w
Woodbridge A Foster
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Abstract

Mosquitoes visit flowers to obtain sugar or other nutrients and therefore possibly serve as major or minor pollinators of some plant species. They also often derive plant nutrients from other sources, such as extrafloral nectaries and honeydew. In a few cases, the plant-mosquito relationship is close, and mosquito pollination has been confirmed. Most plant species visited by mosquitoes, however, appear to depend on multiple means of pollination, particularly other flower-feeding insects. In addition, most mosquito species visit the flowers of many kinds of plants, possibly dispersing pollen in both biologically meaningful and irrelevant ways. This apparent lack of selectivity by both plants and mosquitoes liberates each of them from dependence on an unreliable pollen vehicle or nutrient source. A hypothetical pollinating role for the two top vectors of devastating human-disease pathogens, Anopheles gambiae or Aedes aegypti, relies on indirect evidence. So far, this evidence suggests that their participation in pollen transfer of native, introduced, or beneficial plants is negligible. The few plant species likely to be pollinated by these vectors are mostly invasive, harmful weeds associated with humans. That conclusion draws support from four characteristics of these vectors: (1) the numerous alternative potential pollinators of the flowers they visit; (2) their common use of diverse non-floral sources of nutrients; (3) the females' infrequent sugar feeding and heavy reliance on human blood for energy; and (4) their relatively low population densities. From these traits it follows that focused suppression or elimination of these two vectors, by whatever means, is highly unlikely to have adverse effects on pollination in endemic biotic communities or on ornamental plants or food crops.

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蚊子为植物授粉:概述其作用并评估病媒的可能贡献。
蚊子访花是为了获取糖分或其他营养物质,因此可能是某些植物物种的主要或次要授粉者。它们还经常从其他来源获取植物营养,例如花蜜和蜜露。在少数情况下,植物与蚊子的关系密切,蚊子授粉已被证实。不过,蚊子拜访的大多数植物物种似乎都依赖多种授粉方式,特别是其他食花昆虫。此外,大多数蚊子种类会光顾多种植物的花朵,可能以对生物有意义或无关紧要的方式传播花粉。植物和蚊子显然都没有选择性,这就使它们各自摆脱了对不可靠的花粉媒介或营养源的依赖。冈比亚按蚊和埃及伊蚊这两种破坏性人类疾病病原体的主要传播媒介的授粉作用假设依赖于间接证据。到目前为止,这些证据表明,它们在本地、引进或有益植物的花粉传播中的参与微乎其微。可能由这些媒介授粉的少数植物物种大多是与人类有关的入侵性有害杂草。这一结论可以从这些媒介的四个特点中得到支持:(1)它们所到之处的花朵有许多潜在的授粉者;(2)它们通常使用各种非花卉养分来源;(3)雌虫不经常摄取糖分,严重依赖人体血液获取能量;(4)它们的种群密度相对较低。根据这些特征,无论采用何种手段,集中抑制或消灭这两种媒介都不太可能对地方生物群落或观赏植物或粮食作物的授粉产生不利影响。
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来源期刊
ACS Applied Bio Materials
ACS Applied Bio Materials Chemistry-Chemistry (all)
CiteScore
9.40
自引率
2.10%
发文量
464
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