“…To compensate for the lack of a particular nutrient, insects may acquire these through supplementary feeding on e.g., mud, various excrements and secretions of vertebrates, and carrion, in a process referred to as puddling (Molleman, 2010). Although mainly described for various butterfly and moth species, puddling also occurs in other insect orders, where attraction to and feeding on these types of resources has a significant effect on fitness and other life-history traits (Bänziger et al, 2009;Hendrichs et al, 1993;Molleman, 2010;Plotkin and Goddard, 2013;Shen et al, 2009). The malaria mosquito, Anopheles gambiae sensu lato, ecloses as an 'undernourished' adult (Van Handel, 1965), and, as such, puddling may play an important role for its life-history traits, but is a behaviour that so far has been overlooked.…”