PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

When it comes to mating, female mosquitoes call the shots

Scientists discovered that a subtle behavior by the female mosquito dictates whether mating is successful.

2025-10-28
(Press-News.org) A female mosquito only gets one shot to get reproduction right: She mates just a single time in her entire life. With the stakes so high, it would make sense for these insects to be quite choosey when it comes to selecting a mate. And yet a long-standing assumption in the field was that males controlled the process, and females were simply passive recipients of sperm.

“There’s an inherent contradiction in this assumption,” says Rockefeller University and Howard Hughes Medical Institute mosquito expert Leslie Vosshall. “If females have no say, then multiple males should be able to mate with them all the time. So how can a female mosquito both be a helpless creature but also the decision maker?”

Puzzled by the paradox, Vosshall and her team in the Laboratory of Neurogenetics and Behavior dove into the moment-by-moment, nuts-and-bolts of mosquito mating. The resulting study, recently published in Current Biology, uncovered the first evidence that scientists had it backwards: What makes mating possible is a subtle behavior of the female—a physical movement of her genitalia. Moreover, no subsequent physical pairings trigger this behavior again, regardless of how many males try, or how often they try—and they try a lot.

“It’s a very fast, very subtle change, but it entirely dictates whether mating occurs,” says lead author Leah Houri-Zeevi, a postdoctoral scientist in the lab. “If she makes this movement, it happens. If she doesn’t, it doesn’t matter what the male does—no successful mating will occur.”

Obscure mechanics

Depending on whether she’s living a short and dangerous life in the wild or a long and cushy one in the lab, a single female mosquito can produce up to 1,000 eggs in a single lifetime.

Following her lone mating, she stores the male’s sperm in internal reservoirs. Every 3–4 days, she feeds on the blood of a host, and once sated, draws from these sperm reservoirs to inseminate and lay her eggs in fresh water.

Despite studies on mosquito mating going back to the 1950s, the role of the female in the process remained obscure. The speed of the process—the interactions that lead to mating take 1–2 seconds—makes it challenging to capture, and might have been combined with hidden biases for what the female role in mating could be.

“There’s a long history in biology of assuming male agency and female passivity,” says Vosshall. “This study is a reminder that those assumptions can get in the way of seeing what’s actually happening, even in something as well-studied as mosquito mating.”

For the current study, the researchers investigated the mating practices of two of the most invasive mosquito species in the world: Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus, better known as the yellow fever mosquito and Asian tiger mosquito, respectively. Collectively, they can spread dozens of viruses to humans, including yellow fever, dengue, Zika, and Chikungunya.

They analyzed the step-by-step interactions of different mating pairs both within and between species, including female mosquitoes that had never previously mated and those that had.

A three-step process

Using high-speed, high-resolution cameras, deep learning, and transgenic mosquitoes with fluorescent sperm, Houri-Zeevi and her colleagues discovered that the same three-step process leading to a successful mating between a virgin female and a male occurred in both species. First, the male contacts the female genitalia with his genital tip. In response, the female chooses whether to elongate her tip to about twice its resting length. This behavior is critical for mating. If she doesn’t elongate her tip, mating cannot take place. If she does, the male’s internal genitalia interlocks with the female’s tip, and sperm transfers from one to the other.

The researchers found that the “key” to unlocking the critical female response in Aedes aegypti is rapidly evolving male structures, called gonostyli, that are inserted into the female genital tip and vibrate rapidly when the male attempts copulation.

Houri-Zeevi and the team also observed what occurred when a previously mated female and male attempted to interlock: Step two didn’t occur. That apparently prevents step three—successful insemination.

“After one successful mating, she will never elongate that tip again,” Houri-Zeevi notes.

Interspecies matings

They found this tip elongation mechanism in both species, demonstrating that female control over mating is shared in mosquitoes that diverged about 35 million years ago. However, they also noted differences between the two species, suggesting that within each species, there is a specific female lock and a specific male key.

That idea is bolstered by the fact that Asian tiger mosquitoes and yellow fever mosquitoes diverged from a common ancestor so long ago that they cannot produce viable offspring, so mating between these species is a genetic dead end for the female. However, that doesn’t stop the males from trying to mate with females of the other species. Houri-Zeevi and the team discovered that male Asian tiger mosquitoes—which have far larger gonostyli than their yellow fever mosquito counterparts—used their gonostyli to override the female mating control of yellow fever females, and mate with them without the female genital tip elongation behavior. This “lock picking” could only be done across species, and the Asian tiger mosquitoes could never override the female mating control of their own females.

That finding may help explain a striking pattern that entomologists in southern regions of the U.S. have observed: When Asian tiger mosquitoes move into an area, the population of yellow fever mosquitoes drops or vanishes.

It may also help improve methods of mosquito population control, some of which rely on ill-fated pairings between intentionally sterilized males and wild females. “It’s really important for people who work in an area to understand how the biology of females of a local wild population is going to interact with males from a genetically modified population,” notes Vosshall.

Going forward, the researchers will explore the finer details of the lock-and-key mating mechanism for each species. “We want to understand the neuronal code the female is using to sense male stimulation and then make her decision,” Vosshall says. “The question it comes down to is, how does she choose between different suitors given that it’s a once-in-a-lifetime choice?”

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

CZI and NVIDIA accelerate virtual cell model development for scientific discovery

2025-10-28
REDWOOD CITY, Calif. — October 28, 2025 — Today, the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative (CZI) and NVIDIA announced an expanded collaboration to accelerate life science research by driving development and adoption of virtual cell models through tools, data, models, and benchmarks delivered through CZI’s virtual cells platform (VCP). Core to this collaboration is an effort to scale biological data processing to petabytes of data spanning billions of cellular observations, enabling next-generation model development that will unlock new ...

JMIR Publications and MCBIOS partner to boost open access bioinformatics research

2025-10-28
(Toronto and Little Rock, October 16, 2025)  JMIR Publications, a premier open access publisher of digital health research, and The MidSouth Computational Biology and Bioinformatics Society (MCBIOS), a leading professional organization for computational biology and bioinformatics, today announced a strategic, long-term partnership. This agreement formally designates JMIR Bioinformatics and Biotechnology as the official journal of MCBIOS. This landmark Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) creates a stable, high-impact venue for MCBIOS members to publish their research, particularly the output from the Society's annual conference. Both organizations are ...

Canadian scientists describe an extinct rhino species from Canada's High Arctic

2025-10-28
Ottawa, October 28, 2025 – Scientists from the Canadian Museum of Nature have announced the discovery and description of an extinct rhinoceros from the Canadian High Arctic. The nearly complete fossil skeleton of the new species was recovered from the fossil-rich lake deposits in Haughton Crater on Devon Island, Nunavut and is the most northerly rhino species known. Rhinoceroses have an evolutionary history that spanned over 40 million years, encompassing all continents except South America and Antarctica. The “Arctic rhino” lived about 23 million years ago, during the Early Miocene and is most ...

Houseplant inspires textured surfaces to mitigate copper IUD corrosion

2025-10-28
WASHINGTON, Oct. 28, 2025 – Copper intrauterine devices are a common contraceptive due to their long-acting effects and affordability. However, the first few months of use are associated with several side effects. When a copper IUD is first implanted in the uterus, it undergoes a chemical reaction with uterine fluid. This reaction corrodes its surface, causing a burst of copper ions, which can lead to symptoms such as menstrual irregularity, increased menstrual cramps, and pelvic inflammatory disease. In Biointerphases, an AVS journal published ...

LIGO, Virgo and KAGRA observed “second generation” black holes

2025-10-28
In a new paper published today in The Astrophysical Journal Letters, the international LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA Collaboration reports on the detection of two gravitational wave events in October and November of last year with unusual black hole spins. An observation that adds an important new piece to our understanding of the most elusive phenomena in the universe. Gravitational waves are “ripples” in space-time that result from cataclysmic events in deep space, with the strongest waves produced by the collision of black holes.  Using sophisticated algorithmic techniques and mathematical models, researchers are able to reconstruct ...

Dicer: Life's ancient repair tool

2025-10-28
Could yeast and humans be any more different? Going by looks alone, probably not. But peering into our genomes reveals surprising similarities. That’s because we share a common ancestor called LECA (last eukaryotic common ancestor). Before this single-celled organism died off around 2 billion years ago, it passed down Dicer, a key protein humans and certain yeasts still rely on today.  “Dicer is ancient,” explains Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Professor Rob Martienssen. “The mechanisms behind how it directly interacts with RNA are well understood. How it does this in the context of the whole genome, and how that affects genome stability, is still ...

Environmental shifts are pushing endangered reptiles to the brink of extinction

2025-10-28
Climate change is driving many of Australia’s native reptiles toward extinction, and the answers to their future survival may lie in the fossil record. New research published today in Current Biology originates from an international collaboration with Museums Victoria Research Institute and the Museum für Naturkunde Berlin. The study reveals that the endangered Australian Mountain Dragon (Rankinia diemensis) has been driven into increasingly smaller and more isolated populations over thousands of years as a result of changing climate conditions. The study combines fossil evidence from natural history museums with genetic data ...

New open-source American College of Lifestyle Medicine program brings culinary skills and nutrition education into medicine

2025-10-28
New open-source American College of Lifestyle Medicine program brings culinary skills and nutrition education into medicine Dr. Michelle Hauser of Stanford University School of Medicine created a program that features almost 15 hours of video instruction on cooking skills, kitchen knowledge and healthy, delicious recipes. The resources are accompanied by a curriculum for clinicians or can be used independently by individuals who want to improve their nutrition.  The American College of Lifestyle Medicine (ACLM) has launched a complimentary Culinary Medicine Program (CMP) ...

AI tool identifies women at high risk of interval breast cancer

2025-10-28
OAK BROOK, Ill. – In a study of more than 100,000 screening mammograms, researchers demonstrated the potential of an AI tool to help identify women at higher risk of developing interval breast cancers, breast cancer that is diagnosed between regular screening mammograms. Results of the new study were published today in Radiology, a journal of the Radiological Society of North America (RSNA). “Interval cancers generally have a worse prognosis compared with screen-detected cancers, because they tend to be ...

USF study: AI and citizen science reveal potential first detection of invasive malaria mosquito in Madagascar

2025-10-28
Media Contact: John Dudley (814) 490-3290 (cell) jjdudley@usf.edu Click here for images and a PDF of the journal article EMBARGOED UNTIL TUESDAY, OCT. 28, 2025, AT 9 A.M. ET Key takeaways: USF researchers used AI and citizen science to identify what may be the first Anopheles stephensi mosquito ever detected in Madagascar — a species capable of spreading deadly malaria across urban Africa. A single smartphone photo submitted through NASA’s GLOBE Observer app led to the discovery, showing how artificial intelligence and public participation ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

When it comes to mating, female mosquitoes call the shots

CZI and NVIDIA accelerate virtual cell model development for scientific discovery

JMIR Publications and MCBIOS partner to boost open access bioinformatics research

Canadian scientists describe an extinct rhino species from Canada's High Arctic

Houseplant inspires textured surfaces to mitigate copper IUD corrosion

LIGO, Virgo and KAGRA observed “second generation” black holes

Dicer: Life's ancient repair tool

Environmental shifts are pushing endangered reptiles to the brink of extinction

New open-source American College of Lifestyle Medicine program brings culinary skills and nutrition education into medicine

AI tool identifies women at high risk of interval breast cancer

USF study: AI and citizen science reveal potential first detection of invasive malaria mosquito in Madagascar

American Pediatric Society honors Dr. Bruce D. Gelb with 2026 APS John Howland Award

Leveraging COVID-19 lessons to prepare for the next pandemic

Mount Sinai awarded $4.5M BD2 grant to advance research on the biology of bipolar disorder

Global initiative to demonstrate operational excellence in Nigeria for metastatic colorectal cancer patients

AI produces shallower knowledge than web search

New study shows global decline in parental trust in childhood vaccines after COVID-19, contributing to increased measles outbreaks

BD² awards $18 million in grants to advance research on the biology of bipolar disorder

Opt-out organ donation policies might reduce organ supply

Message from the oldest-living dogs to dogs and men: Gonad function fights frailty

Distinct brain features in football players may tell who is at risk of long-term traumatic disease

Identifying safer implant designs for total hip replacement

Study reveals clinical frailty scale as a quick predictor of patient risk after heart failure administration

Game-changing heat shield to revolutionize aerospace manufacturing with long-life engines

Pusan National University researchers show how AI can help in fashion trend prediction

Sinking Indian megacities pose 'alarming' building damage risks

Cul-de-sac effect: Why Mediterranean regions are becoming more prone to extreme floods in a changing climate

Now in 3D, maps begin to bring exoplanets into focus

Researchers develop an ultrasound probe capable of imaging an entire organ in 4D

Oxygen deprivation heightens risk of illness by changing genes

[Press-News.org] When it comes to mating, female mosquitoes call the shots
Scientists discovered that a subtle behavior by the female mosquito dictates whether mating is successful.