TULSA
MASTER
GARDENERS


MOSQUITOES
By Ed Lee Master Gardener

Insects - Order Diptera, the True Flies, a single pair of
wings, but unlike other flies, their wings have scales
along the veins and wing margin. Female mouthparts form
a long piercing-sucking proboscis. Males have
very plumose (feathery) antennae and do not bite.
6

Mosquitoes have been the bane of mankind for millennia. In 300 B.C., Aristotle referred to mosquitoes as "empis" in his "Historia Animalium" where he documented their life cycle and metamorphic abilities.1 They can disrupt work, ruin vacations and reduce the pleasure of gardening. They are capable of transmitting diseases such as malaria, yellow fever, filariasis, and dengue to man, encephalitis to man and horses, and heartworm to dogs.

There are over 2500 different species of mosquitoes throughout the world, of which 150 species occur in the United States. 1 Common types of mosquitoes found in Oklahoma are placed in the genera Aedes, Anopheles, Culex, and Psorophora. 2

The last decade of the twentieth century saw the introduction of a new more vicious biter in Tulsa County, the Asian tiger mosquito, Aedes albopictus.

The Asian Tiger Mosuito, known as a "Container Breeder" because it deposits its eggs in small collections of contained water rather than the swamps or marshes, is a highly ornamented mosquito that is relatively easy to spot by even the casual observer. The mosquito's color pattern consists of a dark black background that is highlighted with bright white markings. The legs are broadly striped with snow white scales, the thorax has a distinct white racing stripe down its center and the abdomen has incomplete white stripes that appear as lines of bold white dots. Although the name implies formidable size, the Asian Tiger Mosquito is really quite small. A robust adult female in quest of a blood meal measures slightly less than 1/4" in total length. 4

The Asian Tiger is a persistent biter that can be a significant pest near its breeding habitat. When the species occurs in large numbers in backyard situations, people can be driven indoors. The mosquito is an opportunistic feeder which will bite as often during broad daylight as it will at dusk. Typical host-seeking behavior involves approaching at ankle level and working its way up the body to find a suitable spot to engorge. 4

Mosquito Development

The mosquito goes through four separate and distinct stages in its development cycle: Egg, Larva, Pupa, and Adult.

When adult mosquitoes emerge from the aquatic stages, they mate, and the young adult female seeks a blood meal. The young adult female mosquito taking her first blood meal does not transmit diseases. It is the older female who may have picked up a disease organism in an earlier blood meal that can transmit the disease during a subsequent blood meal.3 Plant nectar is the principle food source for the male. 2

Mosquito Control

Large-scale mosquito control cannot be obtained through individual efforts. These controls consist of eliminating breeding areas by drainage, spreading oil films over the surface of the water, using insecticides to destroy the larvae or pupae, or spraying with contact insecticides to kill the adults. Since all of these controls may also destroy habitats, kill fish, birds, or other valuable wildlife, they should be undertaken only after careful study by professionally trained people.

In the Tulsa area contact the Tulsa City-County Health Department at (918) 595-4219 for further information.

Large-scale control is vital for a successful mosquito control program, however, without the cooperation of the individual homeowner it is doomed to failure. The homeowner can use the following techniques to assist in the overall control effort.