Extended Data Fig. 1: Effects of ATQ exposure on survival and post-blood-feeding egg production in A. gambiae female mosquitoes. | Nature

Extended Data Fig. 1: Effects of ATQ exposure on survival and post-blood-feeding egg production in A. gambiae female mosquitoes.

From: Exposing Anopheles mosquitoes to antimalarials blocks Plasmodium parasite transmission

Extended Data Fig. 1: Effects of ATQ exposure on survival and post-blood-feeding egg production in A. gambiae female mosquitoes.

a, ATQ exposure has no effect on the acute or long-term survival of A. gambiae female mosquitoes (two-sided log-rank Mantel–Cox, n = 189, df = 1, χ2 = 0.00, P = 0.9951). The sigmoidal fit used for subsequent modelling is shown. b, The production of eggs after an infectious blood meal is unaffected by ATQ exposure (two-sided, unpaired Student’s t-test, n = 75, df = 1, t = 0.826, P = 0.4115). Means and 95% confidence intervals of the mean are indicated. ns, not significant; n indicates the number of biologically independent mosquito samples.

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