The Impact of Egg Quiescence on the Efficacy of Wolbachia-Infected Mosquito Releases for Arbovirus Control
Lu\'is E. S. Lopes, Cl\'audia P. Ferreira

TL;DR
This study uses a differential model to analyze how egg quiescence affects the success of Wolbachia-infected mosquito releases for controlling arboviruses, revealing that high quiescence rates can hinder infection establishment and increase disease risk.
Contribution
It introduces a mathematical model incorporating egg quiescence effects, highlighting its impact on Wolbachia-based control strategies and identifying conditions for success or failure.
Findings
Egg quiescence reduces Wolbachia infection prevalence in mosquitoes.
High quiescence rates can hinder infection establishment during releases.
Quiescence may increase dengue transmission risk post-release.
Abstract
An ordinary differential model is proposed to understand the role of egg quiescence on the efficacy of releasing Wolbachia-infected mosquitoes to control arbovirus transmission. The model admits up to five equilibrium points and four biologically meaningful scenarios: extinction of both populations; persistence of the uninfected population with extinction of the infected one; persistence of the infected population with extinction of the uninfected one; and coexistence of both populations. This occurs because the coexistence scenario allows for bistability in the system. A sensitivity analysis shows that mosquitoes optimize their fitness by adjusting the quiescence rate. Because Wolbachia-infected eggs do not survive quiescence, or the adults that emerge are infertile, quiescence negatively impacts the fitness of infected mosquitoes, thereby reducing the prevalence of infection in the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInsect symbiosis and bacterial influences
