Anopheles Mosquito

QUESTION

What does Anopheles looks like?

ANSWER

Mosquitoes of the genus Anopheles are responsible for all transmission of malaria in mammals, including to humans. They are night-feeding mosquitoes, usually biting between dusk and dawn, though they may also be active during the day in heavily shaded environments.

Like all mosquitoes, Anopheles are usually found either as freshwater larvae, which prefer stagnant, still water, or flying adults, of which only the females feed on blood (the males exclusively feed on nectar).  Anopheles larvae lie parallel to the surface of the water where they live (in contrast to Aedes and Culex larvae which hang at an angle), whereas the adults rest with their bodies at a 45 degree angle upwards (again in contrast to Aedes and Culex adults, which rest parallel to their resting surface).

What are mosquito larvae?

QUESTION

What are mosquito larvae?

ANSWER

Larvae are one of the life stages of mosquitoes; they are baby mosquitoes, if you will. Adult mosquitoes lay eggs as a “raft” on the surface of a body of fresh water—they prefer still and stagnant pools. These eggs then hatch into the mosquito larvae, which live in the freshwater pool until they form a pupa, just under the surface. These pupae then hatch into adults again, completing the life cycle.

Mosquito larvae are omnivorous, eating algae and small organisms also living in the water. Despite living immersed in water, they require oxygen to breathe, which they inhale using two different methods: Aedes and Culex mosquitoes (the vectors of a number of diseases, including West Nile disease, dengue fever, yellow fever, encephalitis and filarisasis) have a specialised breathing organ, a bit like a snorkel, called a siphon, which they use to suck in air, whereas Anopheles mosquitoes (the main vectors of malaria) lack this organ and so have to lie next to the surface to take in air. The larvae moult four times while they live in water; after the fourth time, they are ready to pupate and become adults. The entire larval stage of a mosquito’s life usually take between one and two weeks, depending on the ambient temperature.