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A Culex mosquito entering winter diapause stops seeking blood. What replaces it?

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Answer: Sugary fat storage

Thickened wing armorNo. Wing toughness is a plausible-sounding cold adaptation, but it is not the documented diapause switch in this mosquito. The measured change is metabolic and behavioral: less host seeking, more sugar feeding, and more fat storage. Some insects do change body form seasonally, but Culex diapause is better pictured as switching from a blood-powered reproduction mode to a nectar-powered survival mode. That makes a porch light a calendar problem, not a wing-engineering problem.

Sugary fat storageCorrect. Female Culex pipiens do not just 'sleep' through winter; they rewire what food is useful. Diapause-destined females downshift blood-meal digestion and feed on carbohydrate sources such as nectar and fruit, then store lipids for winter. One study found short-day females accumulated about twice the lipid reserves of non-diapause females within a week. Light pollution is risky because it can blur the timing of that fuel-loading program.

Winter egg strategyNot for Culex pipiens females. Aedes albopictus survives winter largely through diapause eggs, so eggs are a real route in another mosquito. Culex pipiens instead overwinters as adult females in sheltered places such as culverts, caves, and unheated buildings. That difference matters: the same night light can disturb seasonal timing, but the life stage being disturbed is not identical across mosquitoes.

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