Studies of the Responses of the femaleAëdesmosquito. Part V. The Role of Visual Factors
- 1 March 1952
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Bulletin of Entomological Research
- Vol. 43 (4) , 567-574
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0007485300026651
Abstract
The role of visual factors in the attractiveness of bodies to adult A. aegypti was investigated by exposing deer-mice in transparent or opaque, airtight or perforated, plastic containers. The visual factors proved to be roughly equivalent to the airborne emanations in attractiveness, being slightly the more attractive when the mice were normally moving, and the less attractive of the two when the mice were motionless.The attractiveness of a moving black object was found to be nearly twice that of a stationary one. A deer-mouse immobilised by anaesthesia was roughly one-half as attractive as a normally moving one.Mirroring surfaces are significantly more attractive than dull ones; a black enamel surface was more attractive than a flat black surface, and a silvered mirror more attractive than a polished metal surface. It was found that enhancement of the attractiveness of a black surface could be obtained by the movement of lines of shadow, not of points of light, across it.This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- Studies of the Responses of the Female Aëdes Mosquito. Part IV. Field Experiments on Canadian SpeciesBulletin of Entomological Research, 1951
- Studies of the Responses of the FemaleAëdesMosquito. Part III. The Response ofAëdes aegypti(L.) to a Warm Body and its RadiationBulletin of Entomological Research, 1951
- Studies on the Responses of the FemaleAëdesMosquito. Part I.—The Search for Attractant VapoursBulletin of Entomological Research, 1951
- Factors in the Attractiveness of Bodies for MosquitoesNature, 1951
- The Visual Responses of Flying Mosquitoes.Journal of Zoology, 1940
- Der Einfluß von intermittierender Reizung auf die optischen Reaktionen von InsektenThe Science of Nature, 1935
- Formdressur und Formunterscheidung bei der HonigbieneJournal of Comparative Physiology A, 1933