Mosquitoes
are one of the most common and important bloodsucking insects. The
adult female mosquito feeds on the warm blood of mammals (including
man) and birds and on the cold blood of fish, reptiles and amphibians.
Mosquitoes are one of the most important public health pests due to
vectoring of disease-causing pathogens. These mosquito-borne pathogens
cause diseases like the West Nile virus, malaria, yellow fever, dengue
and encephalitis. Worldwide these diseases afflict tens of millions
people per year and kill millions per year as well. In the US, West
Nile Virus is spreading westward by way of infected birds and
encephalitis outbreaks occur frequently.
Mosquitoes undergo a complete life cycle, which means they go
through four stages: eggs, larvae, pupae, and adults. All mosquitoes
complete their life-cycle in about 10 - 14 days in summer months.
Female adult mosquitoes usually are the only ones that feed on blood.
They have piercing-sucking mouthparts (needle with suction tube) from
which to extract blood from a victim. For normal metabolic function,
plant juices and nectar provide the required nutrients. A blood meal is
required for egg development from which protein is extracted. It is
during this feeding process that pathogens are introduced into victim’s
blood stream. Eggs are laid singularly or in tight clusters called
rafts.
Many species of mosquitoes occur worldwide. Culex, Aedes and Anopheles are general genus groupings.
Common Culex species include C. pipiens (Northern House), C. p. quinquefaciatus and C. tarsalis. Culex pipiens and C. p. quinquefaciatus
are plain brown and lay eggs in rafts in rain barrels, flower pots and
any other waterholding vessel high in organic pollution. C.tarsalis
is dark brown with white bands on legs and on proboscis and may lay
eggs in clear water. Larvae develop into pupae while still in water.
Common Aedes species include salt marsh species like A. taeniorhynchus (Black Salt Marsh), A. sollicitans and A. dorsalis. These species typically breed in salt water marshes along the coast. They lay eggs singularly on water or on mud surfaces. Aedes species also include the floodwater species that breed in riverine flood plains and in water seepage areas. Aedes species such as Ae. sierrensis, Ae. triseriatus and Ae. aegypti most often breed in water-filled tree hole cavities. Common Anopheles species include An. freeborni, An. quadrimaculatus, An. earlei, An. occidentalis and An. aztecus. Eggs are laid in clean still water. Anopheles quadrimaculatus
is common vector for malaria in USA. Life cycle in this species on
average may take about 3 weeks to a month, and the egg stage is very
prone to desiccation.