Deadliest Animals with the Thinnest Wings : Near-Infrared Properties of Tropical Mosquitoes
(2025) In Applied Spectroscopy- Abstract
Tropical mosquitoes transmit diseases like malaria, yellow fever, and Zika. Classifying mosquitoes by species, sex, age, and gravidity offers vital insights for assessing transmission risk and effective mitigations. Photonic monitoring for mosquito classification can be used in distributed sensors or lidars on longer ranges. However, a reflectance model and its parameters are lacking in the current literature. This study investigates mosquitoes of different species, sexes, age groups, and gravidity states, and reports metric pathlengths of wing chitin, body melanin, and water. We use hyperspectral push-broom imaging and laser multiplexing with a rotation stage to measure near-infrared spectra from different angles and develop simple... (More)
Tropical mosquitoes transmit diseases like malaria, yellow fever, and Zika. Classifying mosquitoes by species, sex, age, and gravidity offers vital insights for assessing transmission risk and effective mitigations. Photonic monitoring for mosquito classification can be used in distributed sensors or lidars on longer ranges. However, a reflectance model and its parameters are lacking in the current literature. This study investigates mosquitoes of different species, sexes, age groups, and gravidity states, and reports metric pathlengths of wing chitin, body melanin, and water. We use hyperspectral push-broom imaging and laser multiplexing with a rotation stage to measure near-infrared spectra from different angles and develop simple models for spectral reflectance, including wing thickness and equivalent absorption path lengths for melanin and water. We demonstrate wing thickness of 174 (±1) nm – the thinnest wings reported to our knowledge. Water and melanin pathlengths are determined with ∼10 µm precision, and spectral models achieve adjusted R² values exceeding 95%. While mosquito aspect angle impacts the optical cross-section, it alters shortwave infrared spectra minimally (∼2%). These results demonstrate the potential for remote retrieval of micro- and nanoscopic mosquito features using spectral sensors and lidars irrespective of insect body orientation. Improved specificity of vector monitoring can be foreseen.
(Less)
- author
- Li, Meng
LU
; Månefjord, Hampus LU
; Hernandez, Julio ; Müller, Lauro LU ; Brackmann, Christian LU ; Merdasa, Aboma LU
; Kirkeby, Carsten ; Bulo, Mengistu Dawit ; Ignell, Rickard LU and Brydegaard, Mikkel LU
- organization
-
- LU Profile Area: Light and Materials
- Combustion Physics
- LTH Profile Area: Photon Science and Technology
- LTH Profile Area: The Energy Transition
- Ophthalmology, Lund
- LTH Profile Area: Engineering Health
- Ophthalmology Imaging Research Group (research group)
- Department of Biology
- BECC: Biodiversity and Ecosystem services in a Changing Climate
- LTH Profile Area: Aerosols
- Animal Navigation Lab (research group)
- publishing date
- 2025-06-12
- type
- Contribution to journal
- publication status
- epub
- subject
- keywords
- ballistic light, biophotonics, hyperspectral, lidar, Mosquito, remote microscopy, small animal imaging, thin-film, tissue spectroscopy
- in
- Applied Spectroscopy
- article number
- 00037028251341317
- publisher
- Society for Applied Spectroscopy
- external identifiers
-
- pmid:40501281
- scopus:105008076715
- ISSN
- 1943-3530
- DOI
- 10.1177/00037028251341317
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- 784ae518-caf4-42fa-9628-c5d6387867f7
- date added to LUP
- 2025-06-15 11:42:06
- date last changed
- 2025-08-14 10:43:53
@article{784ae518-caf4-42fa-9628-c5d6387867f7, abstract = {{<p>Tropical mosquitoes transmit diseases like malaria, yellow fever, and Zika. Classifying mosquitoes by species, sex, age, and gravidity offers vital insights for assessing transmission risk and effective mitigations. Photonic monitoring for mosquito classification can be used in distributed sensors or lidars on longer ranges. However, a reflectance model and its parameters are lacking in the current literature. This study investigates mosquitoes of different species, sexes, age groups, and gravidity states, and reports metric pathlengths of wing chitin, body melanin, and water. We use hyperspectral push-broom imaging and laser multiplexing with a rotation stage to measure near-infrared spectra from different angles and develop simple models for spectral reflectance, including wing thickness and equivalent absorption path lengths for melanin and water. We demonstrate wing thickness of 174 (±1) nm – the thinnest wings reported to our knowledge. Water and melanin pathlengths are determined with ∼10 µm precision, and spectral models achieve adjusted R² values exceeding 95%. While mosquito aspect angle impacts the optical cross-section, it alters shortwave infrared spectra minimally (∼2%). These results demonstrate the potential for remote retrieval of micro- and nanoscopic mosquito features using spectral sensors and lidars irrespective of insect body orientation. Improved specificity of vector monitoring can be foreseen.</p>}}, author = {{Li, Meng and Månefjord, Hampus and Hernandez, Julio and Müller, Lauro and Brackmann, Christian and Merdasa, Aboma and Kirkeby, Carsten and Bulo, Mengistu Dawit and Ignell, Rickard and Brydegaard, Mikkel}}, issn = {{1943-3530}}, keywords = {{ballistic light; biophotonics; hyperspectral; lidar; Mosquito; remote microscopy; small animal imaging; thin-film; tissue spectroscopy}}, language = {{eng}}, month = {{06}}, publisher = {{Society for Applied Spectroscopy}}, series = {{Applied Spectroscopy}}, title = {{Deadliest Animals with the Thinnest Wings : Near-Infrared Properties of Tropical Mosquitoes}}, url = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/00037028251341317}}, doi = {{10.1177/00037028251341317}}, year = {{2025}}, }