font settings and languages

Font Size: Large | Normal | Small
Font Face: Verdana | Geneva | Georgia
Languages:

Aedes albopictus

(Asian Tiger Mosquito)

Overview

[ Back to top ]

Insect. The Asian tiger mosquito was introduced to the USA and other countries via used tyre imports. It is associated with the transmission of dengue fever, eastern equine encephalitis and dog heartworm, and possibly with St . Louis and LaCrosse encephalitis viruses.

Common Names

[ Back to top ]

Click on the language to view common names.

Common Names in English:

Asian Tiger Mosquito, Forest Day Mosquito

Common Names in Italian:

Zanzare Tigre

Description

[ Back to top ]

Physical Description

Species Aedes albopictus

Relatively small mosquito species. Abdomen and legs broadly banded with black and white scales . Dorsal band of white scales on the thorax.

Habitat

Biome: natural forest , urban areas

Ecology: Aggressive daytime biter . Potential vector of a number of mosquito-borne viruses with eastern equine encephalitis the major concern.

Biology

[ Back to top ]

Reproduction

Lays eggs singly above the water level on the sides of a variety of containers that serve as breeding habitat . Relies on rainfall to raise the water level in the container and inundate the eggs for hatching .150-250 eggs per oviposition. 1-4 ovipositions per female. Breeding populations present from June- September.

This mosquito has a limited flight range and does not disperse quickly through migration. The species does, however, move great distances via movement of used tire casings that hold eggs.

Taxonomy

[ Back to top ]

Notes

Name Status: Accepted Name . Latest taxonomic scrutiny: Thomson C. , 04-Mar-2005.

Similar Species

[ Back to top ]

Members of the genus Aedes

There are approximately 1162 species in this genus. Here are just 100 of them:

A. (A.) · A. (A.) cinereus · A. (Aedimorphus) · A. (Aedimorphus) vexans · A. (Finlaya) · A. (Finlaya) japonicus · A. (Finlaya) niveus · A. (Ochlerotatus) · A. (Ochlerotatus) caspius · A. (Ochlerotatus) detritus · A. (Ochlerotatus) punctor · A. (Ochlerotatus) rusticus · A. (Ochlerotatus) scapularis · A. (Stegomyia) · A. (Stegomyia) aegypti · A. (Stegomyia) albopictus · A. (Stegomyia) cretinus · A. (Stegomyia) riversi · A. (Stegomyia) simpsoni · A. abditus · A. abnormalis · A. aboriginis (Morthwest Coast Mosquito) · A. abserratus · A. acrophilus · A. aculeatus · A. adami · A. adenensis · A. adersi · A. aegypta · A. aegyptii · A. aenigmaticus · A. affirmatus · A. africanus · A. agastyai · A. agrestis · A. agrihanensis · A. aitkeni · A. akkeshiensis · A. albescens · A. albicosta · A. albifasciatus · A. albilabris · A. alboannulatus · A. alboapicus · A. albocephalus · A. albocinctus · A. albodorsalis · A. albolateralis · A. albolineatus · A. albomarginatus · A. alboniveus · A. albonotatus · A. albopictus (Asian Tiger Mosquito) · A. alboscutellatus · A. albotaeniatus · A. albothorax · A. alboventralis · A. alcasidi · A. aldrichi · A. alektorovi · A. alius · A. alleni · A. allotecnon · A. alocasicola · A. alongi · A. aloponotum · A. alorensis · A. alternans · A. alticola · A. altiusculus · A. amabilis · A. amaltheus · A. amamiensis · A. ambreensis · A. amesii · A. ananae · A. andamanensis · A. andersoni · A. andrewsi · A. anggiensis · A. angustivittatus · A. angustus · A. annandalei · A. annulipes · A. annulirostris · A. annuliventris · A. antipodeus · A. antuensis · A. aobae · A. apicoannulatus · A. apicoargenteus · A. arabiensis · A. arborealis · A. arboricola · A. argenteitarsis · A. argenteopunctatus · A. argenteoscutellatus · A. argenteoventralis · A. argentescens · A. argenteus

More Info

[ Back to top ]

Further Reading

[ Back to top ]

Notes

[ Back to top ]

Contributors

Identifiers

Last Revised: 2009-05-07