• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content

Texas A&M Entomology Research Network

  • Show Search
Hide Search

News

New discovery may improve future mosquito control

June 13, 2016 by Rob Williams

AgriLife Research scientist’s paper outlines a new mechanism of sugar feeding aversion

By: Steve Byrns, Texas A&M AgriLife Communications

Aedes aegypti females reject the sucrose solution containing the synthetic peptide. The sugary solution contained a blue dye to trace the meal in their gut. (Photo courtesy Dr. Patricia Pietrantonio, Texas A&M AgriLife Research Fellow)
Aedes aegypti females reject the sucrose solution containing the synthetic peptide. The sugary solution contained a blue dye to trace the meal in their gut. (Photo courtesy Dr. Patricia Pietrantonio, Texas A&M AgriLife Research Fellow)

COLLEGE STATION – Major rainfall across most of Texas triggering hordes of mosquitoes coupled with seemingly constant mosquito-related Zika virus media reports from around the globe may have set the stage perfectly for what one researcher deems as a very significant discovery in man’s war against earth’s leading human disease carrier.

Dr. David Ragsdale, head of the entomology department at Texas A&M University, College Station, credits Dr. Patricia Pietrantonio, a Texas A&M AgriLife Research Fellow in the entomology department at College Station, along with her students and colleagues from other institutions, with discovering a receptor on the legs of mosquitoes that when activated, keeps female mosquitoes from taking a sugar meal and makes them fly away.

“This finding could lead to novel mosquito repellents,” Ragsdale said. “This is really a big deal, a major achievement.”

Ragsdale said Pietrantonio has just had the article, “Leucokinin mimetic elicits aversive behavior in mosquito Aedes aegypti (L.) and inhibits the sugar taste neuron,” on the work published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. To view the work and its authors go to http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2016/06/01/1520404113.abstract.

“What makes this even more compelling is the work was with Aedes aegypti, the mosquito species responsible for spreading Zika, dengue, yellow fever and Chikungunya viruses,” Ragsdale said. “This work is the culmination of over five years of study by Dr. Pietrantonio, her students and collaborators. With Zika a looming threat, this is a timely discovery.”

Pietrantonio said after mating, Aedes aegypti females immediately search for a blood meal from a human host.

“They are highly anthropophilic, meaning they are attracted to humans,” Pietrantonio said. “They may even follow people indoors. If female mosquitoes are infected with viruses they may transmit them to humans when they acquire a blood meal.”

The blood meal supplies the protein source female mosquitoes require to produce eggs, she said.

“However, in the field, if human hosts are not present, females will feed on sucrose solutions such as nectar from flowers, though they prefer a blood meal to a sugar meal but male mosquitoes feed only on nectar. Certainly sugar feeding is one of the two feeding modalities for adults of this species.”

“We found that a synthetic peptide that was designed to mimic a peptide naturally present in mosquitoes triggers an aversive fly away, walk away or jump away behavior in female mosquitoes.”

If the same aversion could be tied to a blood meal, she said a totally new and effective mosquito feeding deterrent may be in the offing, one that perhaps would cause the mosquito to pass up the required blood meal needed to lay eggs. Doing so would either disrupt the life cycle and/or reduce disease transmission.

However, this is far from being accomplished, she said.

“One of our team designed a peptide mimetic of the kinin peptides, which are diuretic hormones in mosquitoes, to be resistant to enzymatic degradation,” Pietrantonio said. “These mimetics are more potent than those found naturally, because they take longer to be degraded by the insect. These diuretic hormones make mosquitoes lose water after a blood meal, but we also found the peptidomimetic blocked sugar perception. This is a completely new and unexpected discovery.”

The research team localized these receptors in the feet and mouthparts of mosquitoes. What is really new, they said, is that this type of receptor proteins known as GPCRs, were not previously considered to be important for “taste” in insects and further, contact with the peptidomimetic made the mosquitoes fly away.

“In sum, we unequivocally verified this kinin receptor is present in the taste organs of the legs and labella, the pair of lobes at the tip of the proboscis.”

Pietrantonio said their observation that the peptide blocks sugar perception is interesting because the peptide is insect-specific, therefore, the receptor represents a target for further applied research to find ways to diminish the ability of female mosquitoes to feed. Doing so would likely reduce their lifespan or reproductive capacity.

“We had a lot of fun doing this research within the frame of an international, multi-institutional and multidisciplinary collaboration,” she said.

Institutions involved along with Texas A&M were the U.S. Department of Agriculture-Agriculture Research Service, Iowa State University and Université Paris-Saclay, France.

Pietrantonio said the team will continue to study the system in the hope of developing an effective mosquito feeding deterrent in order to stop what is arguably the greatest foe to mankind on earth.

 

Retired Researcher’s Decades of Work on Texas Spiders Published

May 23, 2016 by Rob Williams

 Allen Dean standing with a specimen from his collection. Photo by Rob Williams.
Allen Dean standing with a specimen from his collection. Photo by Rob Williams.

Former research assistant Allen Dean has turned an interest in learning about spiders into a decades-long effort to catalog all spider species of Texas. Recently, these records were turned into a 700-page catalogue of Texas spiders that was recently published online.

This paper, titled “Catalogue of Texas Spiders,” is the end result of the work of several decades of collecting and researching on various spider species statewide, as well as literature reviews from other publications that were published decades ago.

The catalog contains a list of 1,072 species in 53 families and includes the species, its distribution and locality, habitat, collecting method and notes about each species with an extensive reference section.

Some of the more notable numbers of species collected and recorded include340 species recorded in Hidalgo County, 323 in Brazos County, and 314 in Travis County. In addition, several endangered species from two families, Dictynidae and Leptonetidae, are listed.

Dean first started working with spiders in 1977 when Dr. Winfield Sterling wanted to study the role of spiders as predators in cotton agroecosystems even though he knew little about spiders. He started collaborating with Dr. Norman Horner at Midwestern State University to help with identifications.

Although only very limited lists of spider species were available when he began the project, Dean wanted to expand on previous works published by Bea Vogel and B.J. Kaston, as well as other authors that have recorded species from Texas.

He then started keeping track of Texas spiders for the publication beginning around 1980. He added information from various sources of information, including previously published papers, the spider collections at Texas A&M University and other institutions, and his own collection.

Dean also had help from the Texas A&M Insect Collection curator Dr. John Oswald, former Associate Curator Ed Riley and Curator Emeritus Horace Burke as they allowed him access to and support for expanding the collection. “Ed traveled extensively collecting insects and spiders that added many additional records,” Dean said. “The insect and spider collection at TAMU continues to grow. We currently have about 20,000 vials of spiders from Texas, United States, Mexico, and other countries.”

Dean was, additionally, a resource for students needing to identify spiders for their research projects and also cooperated with several scientists statewide. He said that these collections done by graduate students, staff and faculty have helped immensely with expanding the collection at TAMU.

Dr. Marvin Harris had worked with Dean for more than 30 years on various projects with his lab and when Sterling was leading the cotton entomology program. Harris said that spiders do play a very important role in several agroecosystems in the state, including pecans.

“His work in the Pecan Insect Lab at Texas A&M University involved numerous students over 30+ years and also caused me to rethink the role spiders play in the pecan agroecosystem,” Harris said. “My current view is that they constitute a very robust first line of biocontrol and are largely responsible for the maintenance of endemicity of insectan herbivores in most places most of the time.”

Harris added that the publication will help expand knowledge of spiders’ roles in other agroecosystems.

“This publication will allow such ideas, as well as many others, to be tested in ecosystems and agroecosystems throughout the state. Allen Dean’s decades-long effort documents an increase in 50% of the genera and 100% of the species of spiders that are now known to occur in Texas,” Harris said. “The publication is chock full of information in addition to species identifications. This is now the most important reference on spiders of Texas and will be useful to experts world-wide that study spiders and to non-specialists that study arthropod complexes that wish to include studies of spiders.”

 

Students Join Record Number of Aggies Graduating in Spring 2016

May 12, 2016 by Rob Williams

Entomology Graduating Class of 2016. Back row: Carlos Deleon, Grayson Tung, Ryan Selking, Andrew Graf, Jonathan Dring, and Van Adams. Front Row: Renee Holmes, Andrew Evans, and Melissa Espinoza. Photo by Rebecca Hapes
Entomology Graduating Class of 2016. Back row: Carlos Deleon, Grayson Tung, Ryan Selking, Andrew Graf, Jonathan Dring, and Van Adams. Front Row: Renee Holmes, Andrew Evans, and Melissa Espinoza. Photo by Rebecca Hapes

COLLEGE STATION, Texas–A large group of students celebrated another milestone in their lives as they joined 9,000 other Aggies during spring commencement on Friday, May 13.

The students joined thousands of others from the College of Agriculture and and the College of Geosciences expected to walk the Reed Arena stage. These included 30 undergraduates, 4 Master of Science candidates, 1 Ph.D. candidate, and 27 Public Health Entomology Certificate recipients.

Undergraduates Emily Crews, Alexandria Payne, Taylor Splawn, Colton Sweetser, and Adrianna Tirloni were also recognized during the LAUNCH recognition ceremony held Thursday morning.

Crews, a double major in Animal Science and Entomology, received honors in Animal Science, Entomology and Honors Fellows. She was honored for completing the Honors Capstone Experience course with Dr. Pete Teel with her project titled Ticks infesting the Texas A&M Polo Team horses.

Payne is an Environmental Sciences major and completed her thesis with Dr. Juliana Rangel titled The effects of honey bee queen insemination volume on colony growth. She will be joining the Department and Rangel’s lab as a graduate student in the fall pursuing her Ph.D. in Entomology and has been awarded the Office of Graduate and Professional Studies’ Diversity Fellowship and an NSF Doctoral Fellowship.

Sweetser and Tirloni are Undergraduate Research Scholars and work in Dr. Jeffery Tomberlin’s lab. Sweetser was recognized for completing his senior thesis titled Priority effects of Chrysomya rufifacies and Hermetia illucens – part I Chrysomya rufificies while Tirloni’s was titled Priority effects of Chrysomya rufifacies and Hermetia illucens – part II Hermetia illucens. Both are Forensic and Investigative Sciences majors.

“We are very proud of this group,” Entomology Department Head Dr. David Ragsdale said.

Students expected to graduate this spring include the following:

Undergraduates

Van Adams Entomology
Andrew Archer Forensic and Investigative Sciences-Law Emphasis
Jared Bailey Forensic and Investigative Sciences-Law Emphasis
Carlos Deleon Entomology
Johnathan Dring Entomology
Melissa Espinoza Entomology
Andrew Evans Entomology
Travis Farris Forensic and Investigative Sciences-Law Emphasis
Alexandra Gordy Forensic and Investigative Sciences-Science Emphasis
Andrew Graf Entomology
Aaron Gurrero Forensic and Investigative Sciences-Science Emphasis
Emily Grimshaw Forensic and Investigative Sciences-Science Emphasis
Jeremy Hewlett Entomology
Valerie Holmes Entomology
Morgan Johnson Forensic and Investigative Sciences – Law Emphasis
Henry Junkert Forensic and Investigative Sciences-Law Emphasis
Cady Mello Forensic and Investigative Sciences-Law Emphasis
Domingo Monjaras Forensic and Investigative Sciences-Law Emphasis
Ryan Selking Entomology
Taylor Splawn Forensic and Investigative Sciences-Science Emphasis
Colton Sweetser Forensic and Investigative Sciences-Science Emphasis
Stephanie Stratta Forensic and Investigative Sciences-Law Emphasis
Adrianna Tirloni Forensic and Investigative Sciences-Science Emphasis
Grayson Tung Entomology
Emily Vincent Forensic and Investigative Sciences-Science Emphasis
Whitney West Forensic and Investigative Sciences-Science Emphasis

Undergraduates – Double Majors

Emily Crews Animal Science and Entomology Double Major
Justin Dunn Biomedical Sciences and Entomology
Sydney Jones Biomedical Sciences and Entomology
Antonia Nickleberry Wildlife and Fisheries Science and Entomology Double Major

 Master of Science – Entomology

Nicole Bisang Entomology
Rande Patterson Entomology
Amanda Tinder Entomology
Devin Tillman Entomology

Ph.D. – Entomology

Tony “Chris” Keefer Entomology

Certificate in Public Health Entomology 

Van Adams Entomology
Emily Elaine Barnett Biomedical Sciences
Kasey Bird Biomedical Sciences
Eva Vanessa Calzada Biomedical Sciences
Corey Covert Biomedical Sciences
Brittany Crawford Biomedical Sciences
Emily Crews Animal Science and Entomology Double major
Megan Davies Biomedical Sciences
Justin Dunn Biomedical Science and Entomology Double Major
Melissa Espinoza Entomology
Lisa Feng Biomedical Sciences
Andrew Graf Entomology
Kimberly Hein Biomedical Sciences
Jessica Herrin Biomedical Sciences
Baylee Hirt Biomedical Sciences
Adriana Ibarra Biomedical Sciences
Sydney Jones Biomedical Sciences and Entomology double major
Han Le-Ngoc Biomedical Sciences
Marc Lainez Biomedical Sciences
Mariam Mansour Biomedical Sciences
Antonia Nickleberry Wildlife and Fisheries Science and Entomology Double Major
Lucy Nguyen Biomedical Sciences
Daniel Pope Biomedical Sciences
Emily Shaw Biomedical Sciences
Kalee Smith Biomedical Sciences
Alessandra Thompson Biomedical Sciences
Katherine Trevarrow Biomedical Sciences
Frances Yu Biomedical Sciences

 

Hewlett Receives COALS Senior Merit Award

April 27, 2016 by Rob Williams

Jeremy Hewlett with Dr. Mark Hussey
Jeremy Hewlett. right, with Dr. Mark A. Hussey – Vice Chancellor and Dean for Agriculture and Life Sciences. Photo by College of Agriculture and Life Sciences.

Congratulations to senior Entomology major Jeremy Hewlett as he received the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences’ Senior Merit Award during the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences Spring Convocation.

Hewlett is a member of the Texas A&M Undergraduate Entomology Student Organization and works in Dr. Micky Eubanks’ lab studying the ant-aphid mutualisms and how to use them in controlling other pests while increasing crop yield.

He also participated in certification classes and group sailing activities in the American Sailing Association and the Kemah Sailing Club in 2011-2012 and was involved with the Aircraft Owner and Pilot Association from 2008-2014. He also was a volunteer software developer from 2012 and was involved in the SANS GIAC Certified Intrusion Analyst Advisory Board from 2001-2005.

Hewlett received three awards during his college career, including the Phi Theta Kappa Honor Society in 2013 and the Phi Kappa Phi Honor Society in 2014, as well as receiving the Houston Community College System’s Chemistry Student of the Year in 2013.

The Senior Merit Award is the highest award that is given to an undergraduate by the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences. To be eligible, students must be projected to graduate during the 2016 calendar year.

Department Names Karen Wright As New Insect Collection Assistant Curator

April 19, 2016 by Rob Williams

Karen Wright
Karen Wright. Submitted photo.

COLLEGE STATION, Texas–The Department of Entomology would like to welcome Ms. Karen Wright as the new Assistant Curator of the Texas A&M Insect Collection starting June 1.

Wright will replace Mr. Ed Riley who retired in August of 2015 after working more than 27 years with the department.

Before joining the Department, Wright worked as a graduate assistant in the Arthropod Division of the University of New Mexico’s Museum of Southwestern Biology in Albuquerque in 2015 and as a graduate assistant in the museum’s herbarium during the spring semesters of 2012-2014.

In 2010-2011, Wright was a research assistant for the United States National Park Service’s Sister Park Program. While with that program she organized and supervised eight collecting expeditions to White Sands National Monument and Cuatro Ciénegas National Protected Area in Coahuila, Mexico, where she and her team conducted arthropod inventories. She also managed the processing of the collected material by undergraduate students and the distribution of specimens to a wide range of experts for research and identification.

Wright has also assisted the collection manager of the dry arthropod collection at the University of New Mexico’s Museum of Southwestern Biology’s Arthropod Division and worked for several years as a field technician supervisor with the Sevilleta Long Term Ecological Research program.

She received the Biology Scholarship Award in Research and Academic Record from the University of New Mexico and the Harry Wayne Springfield Scholarship for Excellence in Research and Academic Record.

Wright is currently pursuing her Ph.D. in Biology at the University of New Mexico and received her Master of Science in Entomology from Oregon State. She also received a Bachelor of Arts in Biology and a Bachelor of Science in Environmental Science at the University of Delaware.

“After a broad national search we are very pleased that Ms. Karen Wright will join our team as the next assistant curator of the Texas A&M University Insect collection in June,” said Dr. John Oswald, Professor and Curator of the Texas A&M University Insect Collection. “Ms. Wright has a strong background in insect systematics (especially bees), a long association with insect collections, and extensive experience in project and team management.  These experiences and skills have equipped her to manage the daily operations of our large collection, and to help advance our mission as a research collection.”

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 17
  • Page 18
  • Page 19
  • Page 20
  • Page 21
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 37
  • Go to Next Page »

A member of
Texas A&M AgriLife

Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service | Texas A&M AgriLife Research | Texas A&M Forest Service | Texas A&M AgriLife Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Lab | College of Agriculture & Life Sciences

Texas A&M Entomology Research Network

Copyright © 2025 · Monochrome Pro Child for AgriLife on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in