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You are here: Home / Malaria Q&A / Characteristics of Adult Mosquitoes

Characteristics of Adult Mosquitoes

September 10, 2011 by Malaria Q&A

QUESTION:

What are the characteristics of adult anophelines and culicines?

ANSWER:

I am assuming your question relates to how adult anopheline and culicine mosquitoes can be differentiated from each other. There are a number of main characters that can be used for identification to genus level, namely in the resting position of the body (and the resultant angle of the proboscis to the ground), the pattern and colour of the wing veins and the relative length of the palps (these are sensory organs located on either side of the proboscis).

Specifically, adult anophelines tend to rest with their bodies at an angle to the ground (head down, body up), whereas culicines tend to rest roughly parallel to the ground. The colouration of the wing veins of anophelines is usually arranged in “blocks” of pale and dark scales, whereas culicines tend to have all-dark scales, or a scattered mixture of pale and dark scales. Finally, if you compare the adult females (all female mosquitoes have non-plumed antennae which contrast very obviously with the males’ plumed antennae, allowing the sexes to be easily differentiated), the palps of the female anophelines are almost as long as the proboscis, whereas they are relatively much shorter in culicines. Both sets of males have palps almost as long as the proboscis, but the tips are swollen in male anophelines whereas male culicines are not, but may have some distal hairs.

Filed Under: Malaria Q&A Tagged With: Anopheline mosquitoes, culicine mosquitoes, palps, proboscis, scales, sex identification in mosquitoes

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