These new findings about their vision could help you hide from these disease vectors
University
of Washington
New research shows that Aedes aegypti mosquitoes are attracted to specific colors, including red.Kiley Riffell |
The mosquitoes ignore other colors, such as green, purple, blue and
white. The researchers believe these findings help explain how mosquitoes find
hosts, since human skin, regardless of overall pigmentation, emits a strong
red-orange "signal" to their eyes.
"Mosquitoes
appear to use odors to help them distinguish what is nearby, like a host to
bite," said senior author Jeffrey Riffell, a UW professor of biology.
"When they smell specific compounds, like CO2 from our
breath, that scent stimulates the eyes to scan for specific colors and other
visual patterns, which are associated with a potential host, and head to
them."
The
results, published Feb. 4 in Nature Communications, reveal how the
mosquito sense of smell -- known as olfaction -- influences how the mosquito
responds to visual cues. Knowing which colors attract hungry mosquitoes, and
which ones do not, can help design better repellants, traps and other methods
to keep mosquitoes at bay.
"One of the most common questions I'm asked is 'What can I do to stop mosquitoes from biting me?'" said Riffell. "I used to say there are three major cues that attract mosquitoes: your breath, your sweat and the temperature of your skin. In this study, we found a fourth cue: the color red, which can not only be found on your clothes, but is also found in everyone's skin. The shade of your skin doesn't matter, we are all giving off a strong red signature. Filtering out those attractive colors in our skin, or wearing clothes that avoid those colors, could be another way to prevent a mosquito biting."
In
their experiments, the team tracked behavior of female yellow fever
mosquitoes, Aedes aegypti, when presented with different types
of visual and scent cues. Like all mosquito species, only females drink blood,
and bites from A. aegypti can transmit dengue, yellow fever,
chikungunya and Zika. The researchers tracked individual mosquitoes in
miniature test chambers, into which they sprayed specific odors and presented
different types of visual patterns -- such as a colored dot or a tasty human
hand.
Without
any odor stimulus, mosquitoes largely ignored a dot at the bottom of the
chamber, regardless of color. After a spritz of CO2 into the
chamber, mosquitos continued to ignore the dot if it was green, blue or purple
in color. But if the dot was red, orange, black or cyan, mosquitoes would fly
toward it.
Humans
can't smell CO2, which is the gas we and other animals exhale with
each breath. Mosquitoes can. Past research by Riffell's team and other groups
showed that smelling CO2 boosts female mosquitoes' activity
level -- searching the space around them, presumably for a host. The
colored-dot experiments revealed that after smelling CO2, these
mosquitoes' eyes prefer certain wavelengths in the visual spectrum.
It's
similar to what might happen when humans smell something good.
"Imagine
you're on a sidewalk and you smell pie crust and cinnamon," said Riffell.
"That's probably a sign that there's a bakery nearby, and you might start
looking around for it. Here, we started to learn what visual elements that
mosquitoes are looking for after smelling their own version of a bakery."
Most
humans have "true color" vision: We see different wavelengths of
light as distinct colors: 650 nanometers shows up as red, while 450 nanometer
wavelengths look blue, for example. The researchers do not know whether
mosquitoes perceive colors the same way that our eyes do. But most of the
colors the mosquitoes prefer after smelling CO2 -- orange, red
and black -- correspond to longer wavelengths of light. Human skin, regardless
of pigmentation, also gives off a long-wavelength signal in the red-orange
range.
When
Riffell's team repeated the chamber experiments with human skintone
pigmentation cards -- or a researcher's bare hand -- mosquitoes again flew
toward the visual stimulus only after CO2 was sprayed into the
chamber. If the researchers used filters to remove long-wavelength signals, or
had the researcher wear a green-colored glove, then CO2-primed
mosquitoes no longer flew toward the stimulus.
Genes
determine the preference of these females for red-orange colors. Mosquitoes
with a mutant copy of a gene needed to smell CO2 no longer
showed a color preference in the test chamber. Another strain of mutant
mosquitoes, with a change related to vision so they could no longer
"see" long wavelengths of light, were more color-blind in the
presence of CO2.
"These
experiments lay out the first steps mosquitoes use to find hosts," said
Riffell.
More
research is needed to determine how other visual and odor cues -- such as skin
secretions -- help mosquitoes target potential hosts at close range. Other
mosquito species may also have different color preferences, based on their
preferred host species. But these new findings add a new layer to mosquito
control: color.
Co-lead
authors on the paper are Diego Alonso San Alberto, a researcher and lecturer in
the UW Department of Biology, and Claire Rusch, a UW doctoral alum in biology.
Co-authors are Yinpeng Zhan and Craig Montell at the University of California,
Santa Barbara, and Andrew Straw at the University of Freiburg in Germany. The
research was funded by the National Institutes of Health, the Air Force Office
of Scientific Research, the UW and the U.S. Army Research Office.
Grant
numbers: FA9550-20-1-0422, R01-AI148300, R21-AI137947, EY008117, AI165575,
DC016278, W911NF-19-2-0026.