Identification, Images, & Information
For Insects, Spiders & Their Kin
For the United States & Canada

Family Culicidae - Mosquitoes


An Updated Checklist of the Mosquitoes of Oklahoma Including New State Records and West Nile Virus Vectors, 2003–06.
By Noden, B.H., L. Coburn, R. Wright and K. Bradley.
Journal of the American Mosquito Control Association 31(4): 336-345., 2015
BioOne

Noden, B.H., L. Coburn, R. Wright and K. Bradley. (2015) An Updated Checklist of the Mosquitoes of Oklahoma Including New State Records and West Nile Virus Vectors, 2003–06. Journal of the American Mosquito Control Association 31(4): 336-345.

Abstract
A series of statewide surveys were conducted in Oklahoma in the summers between 1991 and 2004 to identify the distribution of Aedes albopictus. Adult mosquitoes were identified in 63 counties, bringing the currently known distribution of Ae. albopictus in the state to 69 of 77 counties.

The discovery and distribution of Aedes albopictus in Harris County, Texas.
By Sprenger D, Wuithiranyagool T.
Journal of the American Mosquito Control Association 2: 217-219., 1986
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Sprenger D, Wuithiranyagool T. 1986. The discovery and distribution of Aedes albopictus in Harris County, Texas. Journal of the American Mosquito Control Association 2: 217-219.

On August 2, 1985, numerous adults and larvae of an unknown species of Aedes were collected from several widely separated tire dumps, in and around the city of Houston, Texas.

A survey of Harris County was begun on August 22 to determine the frequency, abundance and distribution of Ae. albopictus in water-filled containers, especially tires.

New classification for the composite genus Aedes (Culicidae: Aedini), elevation of subgenus Ochlerotatus to generic rank...
By Reinert, J.F.
Journal of the American Mosquito Control Association, 16(3): 175-188., 2000
Full PDF (fixed)

Reinert, J.F. 2000. New classification for the composite genus Aedes (Diptera: Culicidae: Aedini), elevation of subgenus Ochlerotatus to generic rank, reclassification of the other subgenera, and notes on certain subgenera and species. Journal of the American Mosquito Control Association, 16(3): 175-188.

ABSTRACT (part)
The composite genus Aedes is divided into 2 genera, Aedes and Ochlerotatus, on the basis of consistent primary characters of the female and male genitalia.

Conservation of the names Culex stigmatosoma and Culex thriambus
By B.F. Eldridge & R.E. Harbach
Journal of the American Mosquito Control Association 8(1):104-5., 1992

Keys to the larvae of Texas mosquitoes with notes on recent synonymy. II. Key to general and to the species of the genus Culex L
By Breland, O.P.
The Texas journal of science 5(1): 114-119., 1953
Breland, O.P. 1953. Keys to the larvae of Texas mosquitoes with notes on recent synonymy. II. Key to general and to the species of the genus Culex Linnaeus. The Texas journal of science 5(1): 114-119.

Hidden in plain sight: Cryptic and endemic malaria parasites in North American white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus).
By Martinsen et al.
Science Advances, 2(2): e1501486., 2016
Full Text

Martinsen et al. 2016. Hidden in plain sight: Cryptic and endemic malaria parasites in North American white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus). Science Advances, 2(2): e1501486.

Abstract:
Malaria parasites of the genus Plasmodium are diverse in mammal hosts, infecting five mammalian orders in the Old World, but were long considered absent from the diverse deer family (Cervidae) and from New World mammals. There was a description of a Plasmodium parasite infecting a single splenectomized white-tailed deer (WTD; Odocoileus virginianus) in 1967 but none have been reported since, which has proven a challenge to our understanding of malaria parasite biogeography. Using both microscopy and polymerase chain reaction, we screened a large sample of native and captive ungulate species from across the United States for malaria parasites. We found a surprisingly high prevalence (up to 25%) and extremely low parasitemia of Plasmodium parasites in WTD throughout the eastern United States. We did not detect infections in the other ungulate species nor in western WTD. We also isolated the parasites from the mosquito Anopheles punctipennis. Morphologically, the parasites resemble the parasite described in 1967, Plasmodium odocoilei. Our analysis of the cytochrome b gene revealed two divergent Plasmodium clades in WTD representative of species that likely diverged 2.3 to 6 million years ago, concurrent with the arrival of the WTD ancestor into North America across Beringia. Multigene phylogenetic analysis placed these clades within the larger malaria parasite clade. We document Plasmodium parasites to be common in WTD, endemic to the New World, and as the only known malaria parasites from deer (Cervidae). These findings reshape our knowledge of the phylogeography of the malaria parasites and suggest that other mammal taxa may harbor infection by endemic and occult malaria parasites.

Identification of Uranotaenia sapphirina as a specialist of annelids broadens known mosquito host use patterns
By L.E.Reeves, C.J.Holderman, E.M. Blosser, J.L.Gillett-Kaufman, A.Y.Kawahara, P.E.Kaufman, N.D. Burkett-Cadena
Comunications Biology, 2018

Identification of Uranotaenia sapphirina as a specialist of annelids broadens known mosquito host use patterns
By L.E. Reeves, C.J. Holderman, E.M. Blosser, J.L. Gillett-Kaufman, A.Y. Kawahara, P.E. Kaufman & N.D. Burkett-Cadena
Communications Biology, 2018
Publication showing that Uranotaenia sapphirina is an annelid specialist, feeding on worms and freshwater leeches.