%@LANGUAGE="VBSCRIPT"%>
|
Culex (Culex) annulirostris Skuse, 1889
It is important that the identification of your specimen is checked by a mosquito taxonomist. New Zealand Status: Not PresentIntercepted in New Zealand, Culex annulirostris is a major summer pest of inland riverine areas of southeastern Australia readily feeding on humans, other mammals and birds (Russell 1993). Vector and Disease InformationIn Australia Culex annulirostris is an efficient vector of a range of arboviruses in the laboratory, and has been incriminated in field studies as a vector of Murray Valley encephalitis, Kunjin, Barmah Forest and Ross River virus (Russell 1993). It is able to carry dog heartworm and is probably a major vector of myxomatosis (Russell 1993). Culex annulirostris as the major vector of Japanese encephalitis virus in northern Australia (Hurk et al 2003). In some areas of West Papua (Indonesia) it is an important vector of periodic filariasis (Belkin 1962). DistributionAustralasian Biogeographic Region PRESENT; ENDEMIC Australia New South Wales (widespread coastal and inland), Victoria (widespread but not common south of the Central Highlands), South Australia (widespread, particularly Murray valley), Tasmania (east coast but only one record), Queensland, Northern Territory, Western Australia (Russell 1993). Rest of the Region - Austral Islands (Tubuai), Banks Islands, Fiji, Iles Wallis, Indonesia (West Papua), Nauru, New Caledonia (including Loyalty Islands), Papua New Guinea (Bismarck Archipelago), Philippines, Rapa Island, Rotuma Island, Samoa, Society Islands, Solomon Islands (including Santa Cruz Islands), Tonga, Tuamotu Archipelago, Vanuatu (Belkin 1962). PRESENT; INTRODUCED Taxonomic PositionThis species is placed in sitiens, and sitiens of the Culex. DiagnosisA diagnosis is the minimum set of characters and states that will separate this taxon from all others in this set of taxa.
Characteristic FeaturesFEMALES - Medium-sized mosquito, brownish to dark appearance with banded legs. Head: proboscis dark scaled with a pale band in middle third, palps dark. Thorax: scutum with dark bronze and some golden narrow scales, and a few pale scales anterio-laterally and posterio-medially, postpronotum and antepronotum with numerous narrow scales brown to beige in colour. Wings: wings all dark scaled. Legs: hind legs femur mottled with pale scales and scatterd pale scales on tibia, tarsi 1-4 with pale basal bands, 5 all dark. Abdomen: tergites dark scaled with basal pale bands typically extended medially, sternites with pale scaling from base typically interupting an apical dark band (Belkin 1962, Russell 1993). |