Premium accounts now available! Sign up and create a premium account. Read more Close

Advertisement

Image

Integrated behavioural, morphological, and reproductive responses reveal a trade-off during diapause in Culex pipiens

Preprint Created on 17 Jun 2026 bioRxiv

Diapause is a critical adaptive strategy that enables temperate mosquito species to survive adverse environmental conditions and maintain population persistence across seasons. In Culex pipiens, diapause plays a key role in overwintering and influences the seasonal dynamics of arbovirus transmission. However, diapause expression is often assessed using single traits, limiting our understanding of its integrated physiological basis and variation among populations. In this study, we investigated the behavioural, morphological, and reproductive signatures of diapause across three laboratory strains of Culex pipiens (Mogden, Pirbright, and Pirbright Hybrid) reared under diapause-inducing (10 {degrees}), cold (14 {degrees}), and control (26 to 27 {degrees}) conditions. We quantified blood-feeding behaviour, wing size as a proxy for somatic growth, and spermatheca size as an indicator of reproductive development. Diapause-inducing conditions resulted in a coordinated phenotype characterised by strong suppression of blood-feeding, increased somatic size, and marked inhibition of reproductive development. Mosquitoes reared at 10{degrees} exhibited near-complete feeding inhibition and significantly reduced spermatheca size, consistent with reproductive arrest, while those reared at 14 {degrees} showed intermediate phenotypes. In contrast, control mosquitoes displayed active feeding and fully developed reproductive structures. Wing size increased progressively with decreasing temperature, with the largest individuals observed under diapause-inducing conditions. When analysed together, wing size and spermatheca development exhibited opposing responses across temperature treatments, revealing a strong negative association and indicating a trade-off between somatic growth and reproductive investment. This integrated response supports the interpretation of diapause as a coordinated life-history strategy involving resource reallocation towards survival. Additionally, diapause expression varied among strains, with the Mogden strain showing reduced sensitivity compared with Pirbright and hybrid populations, highlighting the role of genetic background in diapause plasticity. These findings demonstrate that diapause in Culex pipiens is a multi-trait, plastic phenotype with important implications for overwintering success and the seasonal dynamics of arbovirus transmission in temperate regions.

Mthawanji, R. R., Tanianis-Hughes, J., Binti Rashid, A., Subramaniam, K. S., Blagrove, M. S. C.

Advertisement

Stats

  • Recommendations n/a n/a positive of 0 vote(s)
  • Views 1
  • Comments 0

Recommended by

  • No recommendations yet.

Post a comment

You need to be signed in to post comments. You can sign in here.

Comments

There are no comments yet.

Advertisement