
In experimental entomology, reproducibility and environmental control are critical factors for obtaining reliable results.
Precision climate chambers enable the maintenance of stable temperature, relative humidity, and light intensity, key variables in the study of mosquito developmental biology, behavior, and physiology.
By allowing controlled simulation of photoperiods, microclimates, and thermal gradients, these chambers accurately recreate natural environments, enabling assessment of how environmental factors influence biological parameters such as larval development rate, longevity, fecundity, and vector competence.
This technological infrastructure is a fundamental tool for producing reproducible and comparable data across laboratories, supporting advances in the understanding of the ecology and epidemiology of mosquito-borne diseases such as dengue, Zika, and malaria.

