Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 July 2009
The varieties of the banana plant (Musa) on the Kenya coast, with particular reference to Aëdes simpsoni (Theo.), a species concerned with the transmission of yellow fever in East Africa, are described, and the species of mosquito larvae found in their leaf axils are recorded. A. simpsoni was virtually the only species present.
Details are given of the proportion of leaf axils that contain water and the percentage of these that produce larvae. Breeding was found to take place in all varieties, but to a much lesser extent in that known as Kibungala than in the others. Although there was often more water in the lower and upper axils than in the middle ones they produced less larvae individually than did the latter. Larvae were also found in old axils at the base of the stems in spite of the fact that these sites seldom appear to provide direct access for an ovipositing mosquito. Water was present throughout the year in the upper axils only.
It was found that the water content of axils varied from day to day and from morning to evening during dry periods and that the axils were often apparently dry for days at a time although the larvae were able to survive. It is suggested that the larvae are able to survive in the water film at the base of the axils, but that such unfavourable conditions may account for the retarded growth that has been observed.
The relationship between water content and number of larvae per axil is discussed, and the conclusion is reached that unless all measurements of water content for all varieties are made simultaneously each day, a comparison of average water content becomes impossible, and therefore no connection can be established from the data so far available.