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Effect of marsh design on the abundance of mosquitoes in experimental constructed wetlands in southern california

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TLDR
Differences in mortality rates between marsh types were related to predator abundance during the first 6 wk of the study and thereafter were not strongly associated with predator populations.
Abstract
The species composition and abundance of larval mosquitoes were studied in the vegetated regions of 2 types of experimental constructed wetlands: one-phase marshes, which have continuous vegetation throughout the marsh, and 3-phase marshes, which have 2 vegetated regions separated by a region of comparatively deeper open water. Larvae of Culex spp. were significantly more abundant in one-phase marshes than in 3-phase marshes. Larval populations in one-phase marshes also contained proportionately more older larval instars (stages III and IV) than did populations in 3-phase marshes. Mortality rates of larvae increased during the summer and were higher in 3-phase marshes than in one-phase marshes during the initial 6 wk of the study. Differences in mortality rates between marsh types were related to predator abundance during the first 6 wk of the study and thereafter were not strongly associated with predator populations. An infusion of decaying bulrush (Schoenoplectus californicus) stimulated oviposition by gravid Culex stigmatosoma more than by gravid Culex quinquefasciatus and Culex tarsalis. Culex erythrothorax was the most abundant host-seeking species collected in CO2-baited traps; however, larvae were rarely collected during routine dip sampling and egg rafts were never collected in oviposition studies.

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Tropical treatment wetlands dominated by free-floating macrophytes for water quality improvement in Costa Rica

TL;DR: In this article, five tropical treatment wetlands dominated by floating aquatic plants and constructed to deal with a variety of wastewaters were compared for their effectiveness in treating organic matter and nutrients in the Parismina River Basin.
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Strategies for effective mosquito control in constructed treatment wetlands

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe the tradeoffs between mosquito control and the constructed wetland technology and provide a synthesis of information that can be used to optimize the benefits of these wetland systems.
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Constructed wetlands and mosquitoes: Health hazards and management options—An Australian perspective

TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed that water and vegetation management can reduce mosquitoes: aeration and sprinkler systems, and flooding and drainage regimes, can reduce larval densities; vegetation thinning can assist mosquito predators.
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Effects of vegetation management in constructed wetland treatment cells on water quality and mosquito production

TL;DR: In this paper, the impact of three vegetation management strategies on wetland treatment function and mosquito production was assessed in eight free water surface wetland test cells in southern California during 1998-1999.
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Wetlands and mosquitoes: a review

TL;DR: In this article, a review brings together information on mosquitoes, the diseases they transmit and the wetlands that provide habitats for the immature stages (eggs and larvae) of a mosquito.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Chemical ecology and behavioral aspects of mosquito oviposition

TL;DR: Etude du comportement de ponte dans la nature, de the selection du lieu of ponte, des attractifs and des stimulants de the ponte
Journal Article

Identification of oviposition attractants for Culex quinquefasciatus from fermented Bermuda grass infusions.

TL;DR: Compounds which attract and stimulate oviposition by gravid Culex quinquefasciatus were isolated and identified from a fermented Bermuda grass infusion, and bioassays with individual compounds showed that only 3-methylindole consistently induced Oviposition.
Journal ArticleDOI

A vertical life table approach to zooplankton mortality estimation

TL;DR: The vertical approach may provide mortality estimates under conditions in which horizontal techniques are inappropriate, and results obtained from application of the vertical approach to the copepod Pseudocalanw newmani are comparable to those obtained independently by a horizontal method.
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