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Aedes impiger (Walker)
Mosquito
Family: Culicidae
Species account author: Peter Belton.
Extracted from The Mosquitoes of British Columbia (1983)

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Map

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Distribution of Aedes impiger in British Columbia in British Columbia
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Illustration

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Species Information

A small, dark, "hairy" mosquito with unbanded tarsi; wing length 3.3-4.2 mm.

Female

Proboscis and palps dark. Pedicels dark, pale-scaled on dorsal and median surface. Scutum with brown scales medially, anterior and lateral margins with yellowish scales. Numerous long black setae on the scutum and postpronotum give this mosquito a hairy appearance. Postprocoxal scale patch present, hypostigmal absent. Lower mesepimeral setae 3-8. Abdominal tergites with broad white basal bands. Tarsi black. Claw more sharply bent than that of the similar species, nigripes. Wings dark-scaled with a light patch at the bases of C and R.

Larva

Head setae 5 and 6-C long and unbranched. 10-15 thorn-shaped comb scales in a straggling double row. Siphon 3 x 1, pecten evenly spaced on basal third. 1-S many-branched, inserted at or before mid siphon. Saddle reaching about half way around anal segment. Papillae usually long and pointed.



Glossary of Terms [PDF]

Genus Description


Aëdes is the Greek word for disagreeable. Without the dieresis the word means house or building. Although Meigen did not use a dieresis, he translated it as troublesome. Some authorities, therefore, write the generic name Aëdes. Most species of British Columbian mosquitoes belong to this genus. The females all have short palps, usually less than one quarter of the length of the proboscis, and in both sexes the posterior margin of the scutellum is tri-lobed with the setae in three tufts.

Aedes is a large and variable genus and in the field the most reliable character to separate females from other mosquito genera is the pointed abdomen. Males can be identified in the field by their large and separated gonocoxites but if these are not obvious the thorax can be examined for the presence of postspiracular setae which are absent in the males of Culex, Culiseta, and Mansonia. A slide of the terminalia, as well as confirming the genus, can be used to determine the species. (See Wood et at. 1979).

When at the water surface, the larvae of all culicines hang downwards from the hydrophobic tip of the siphon and are thus easily distinguished from anophelines.

Aedes larvae can be distinguished from those of Culex and Culiseta by the position of the siphon seta (1-S). It is never at the base of the siphon in aedines and can be seen with a hand lens if the larva cooperates.

The pupae are hard to identify. It is usually simpler to let them emerge.

Nearly all aedine adults in British Columbia die in late summer or autumn. The eggs are laid singly or in clusters, usually in crevices at the margins of suitable breeding sites. They do not float. Most aedines overwinter as eggs.

Biology

Species Information

Most early records of nearcticus Dyar will be found to refer to impiger, whereas some of the early impiger records apply to implicatus.

One of the two major mosquito pests of the high arctic, impiger is found at increasingly higher elevations in the Rocky Mountains as far south as Colorado (Carpenter & La Casse 1955).

It has been taken at Cranbrook and Hearle (1927d) found it in several localities in Rocky Mountain Park. He observed that the larvae were numerous in pools, at or above 7,000' (2100 m), along with those of pullatus and alaskaensis. Impiger probably occurs wherever there are arctic-alpine conditions in the Province.

Status Information

Origin StatusProvincial StatusBC List
(Red Blue List)
COSEWIC
NativeS4No StatusNot Listed



BC Ministry of Environment: BC Species and Ecosystems Explorer--the authoritative source for conservation information in British Columbia.

Synonyms and Alternate Names

Ochlerotatus impiger (Walker)

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General References