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

Species Culiseta incidens

Representative Images

Male Mosquito? - Culiseta incidens - male Ow! - Culiseta incidens - female Large female mosquito - Culiseta incidens - female Mosquito - Culiseta incidens - male A Mosquito?  Culiseta particeps? - Culiseta incidens - male Culiseta incidens?  - Culiseta incidens - female what am I? - Culiseta incidens - female Mosquito - Culiseta incidens - female

Classification

Kingdom Animalia (Animals)
Phylum Arthropoda (Arthropods)
Subphylum Hexapoda (Hexapods)
Class Insecta (Insects)
Order Diptera (Flies)
No Taxon ("Nematocera" (Non-Brachycera))
Infraorder Culicomorpha (Mosquitoes and Midges)
Family Culicidae (Mosquitoes)
Genus Culiseta
Species incidens (Culiseta incidens)

Other Common Names

Cool Weather Mosquito

Synonyms and other taxonomic changes

Culex incidens Thompson 1869

Identification

Adult female: Large mosquito, proboscis usually with slight downward curve, proboscis and palps mostly dark-scaled, bare hypostigmal area, tarsomeres 2+3 with indistinct narrow rings of pale scales apically and basally, extensive wing spotting from aggregations of dark scales, pale scales only on distal portion of costa.

4th Instar Larva: Antenna mostly smooth, with some small spicules, Seta 5-C with 5 or more branches, shorter than 6-C which is 2-4 branched, seta 1-P multiple, 3-P 4-branched, saddle pierced by 2 or more precratal setae, seta 1-X fine and shorter than saddle.

Range

Western Canada and US from Pacific Coast (Mexican border to Alaskan Panhandle) east to Saskatchewan south to northwestern Texas.

Habitat

Shaded pools, slow streams, ditches, containers, polluted waters, coastal rock pools.

Season

On coast from April-November, overwinters as adult

Life Cycle

Multivoltine, several generations per year on coast. Females lay egg rafts on surface of water, late season larvae develop into diapausing adults that mate and overwinter in sheltered locations such as rock slides, caves, mines and burrows.

Remarks

The most common peridomestic mosquito on the West Coast, especially in urban areas, favoring container habitats. Large and easy to identify due to spotting on wings. Sometimes diapausing females enter homes to overwinter.

Print References

The Mosquitoes of Canada(1), pg 297.

Indentification and Geographic Distribution of the Mosquitoes of North America (North of Mexico)(2)

Works Cited

1.The Mosquitoes of Canada
D.M. Wood, P.T. Dang, and R.A. Ellis. 1979. Canadian Government Publishing Services.
2.Identification And Geographical Distribution Of The Mosquitoes: Of North America, North Of Mexico
Richard F., Jr. Darsie, RONALD A. WARD, Chien C. Chang, Taina Litwak. 2004. University Press of Florida.