Introduction -Mosquitoes (Culicidae of Mississippi) by Jerome Goddard
Archived: 2026-04-23 17:27
Introduction -Mosquitoes (Culicidae of Mississippi) by Jerome Goddard
Introduction
Mississippi species
Species in MEM collection
References
Acknowledgments
Links
MEM Home
Mosquitoes in Mississippi - Introduction
and Background
by
Jerome Goddard
2 August 2010
There has never been a systematic statewide study of mosquitoes in Mississippi. Various authors have reported mosquito collection records as a result of surveys of military installations in the state and/or public health malaria inspections and localized surveys. The first published mosquito records from Mississippi were
Aedes grossbecki, Ae. thibaulti, Ae. fulvus-pallens
(as
bimaculatus
)
, Ae. vexans, Culex erraticus
, and
Culistea inornata
(Dyar 1922). Five years later there was a malaria vector (anopheline) survey which reported
An. crucians, An. punctipennis An. pseudopunctipennis
, and
An. quadrimaculatus
(Carley and Balfour 1929). Another malaria study in the Mississippi Delta reported
An. quadrimaculatus, An. punctipennis
, and
An. crucians
(Perez 1930). A State Board of Health publication discussed
Anopheles
population densities in Mississippi, but reported no specific species names (Bradley et al. 1940). During the 1940’s several military-related studies in Mississippi provided further records of mosquitoes (King and Bradley 1941, King et al. 1943, Middlekauff and Carpenter 1944, Carpenter et al. 1945, Miles and Rings 1946, Michener 1947, Rings and Richmond 1953). The most complete work revealed 47 species from Camp Shelby near Hattiesburg in south Mississippi (Michener 1947). In addition, a study on chemical control of rice field mosquitoes in 1952-53 in Bolivar County mentioned
Ps. columbiae
(as
confinnis
) (Mathis et al. 1954). These earlier works were later summarized (King et al. 1960), stating that there was a total of 53 species occurring in Mississippi.
In 1969 the U.S. Department of Agriculture conducted mosquito surveillance in Hancock County as part of a pest monitoring program and reported 10 relatively common species (USDA 1969). Also, in the late 1960’s, a seasonality study of mosquitoes in Hancock County was conducted which recorded a total of 33 species (Harden and Poolson 1969). Almost all mosquito records from the 1970’s, 1980’s and early 1990’s resulted from collections made by U.S. Air Force personnel at installations in Harrison and Lowndes Counties (USAF 1971, 1975, 1977, 1978, 1979, 1980b, a, 1981, 1983, 1984, 1986, 1987, 1988), although no voucher specimens are known for these surveys. Air Force records from 1989 show the first known presence of the introduced species
Ae. albopictus
in Mississippi (USAF 1989). Results of an unpublished master’s thesis demonstrated species composition and seasonality of mosquitoes in Clay, Lowndes and Oktibbeha counties from March 1972 – November 1973 (Fulton 1974). Fortunately, representatives from all of his collections were verified by Richard F. Darsie Jr., with specimens deposited in the Mississippi Entomological Museum (MEM), Mississippi State University, Starkville, MS. Some of the most unusual findings in that study included
Anopheles walkeri, Orthopodomyia alba, Culex pilosus
and
Culex peccator
. Research on the pitcher-plant mosquito,
Wyeomyia smithii,
led to collections of this species from George County (Bradshaw and Lounibos 1977, Bradshaw 1983). In 1982, a small mosquito survey was conducted at Mays Lake in Jackson, MS, to determine relative abundance and species composition there and the authors recorded 13 species in five genera from March through September (Nelson et al. 1985). In the late 1990’s, arbovirus research in northeast Mississippi resulted in a report of 23 mosquito species from Tishomingo County (Cupp et al. 2004).
Unusual mosquito records.
Several unusual records of mosquitoes have been reported for Mississippi. King included a record of two
Ae. stimulans
from Electric Mills, MS in Kemper County (King et al. 1960). The occurrence of this species several hundred miles south of its recorded range is unexpected; however, voucher specimens are available and the record has been confirmed (Goddard and Harrison 2005). A collection record of
Ae. dorsalis
, which occurs primarily in the western U.S., was reported from Como, MS (Miles and Rings 1946). Although the collection was identified by Alan Stone, a culicid specialist, no voucher specimen is available to confirm this record (Goddard and Harrison 2005).
Psorophora pygmea
was reported from Horn Island, MS (Harden et al. 1967), but no expert made the identification and no voucher specimen has been seen to confirm this record. Since this species is restricted in the USA to the Florida Keys, the record must be deleted (Goddard and Harrison 2005). There is one record of
Ae. nigromaculis
from Harrison County, MS (USAF 1990). The distribution of
Ae. nigromaculis
borders the western edge of Mississippi (Darsie and Ward 2005), so finding this species in Mississippi is possible. Nonetheless, we have no voucher specimen and no positive verification of this species in Mississippi.
Recent mosquito work in Mississippi
. In 2000, the Mississippi Department of Health received a West Nile surveillance grant from the Centers for Disease Control that provided funding for more intensive mosquito collecting and West Nile testing in selected areas around the state. As a result, several new state records for mosquitoes have been found. One was
Mansonia titillans
, recorded from Madison, Copiah and Rankin counties, and another was
Aedes trivittatus
from Marshall County (Goddard and Harrison 2005). The most recent new record for Mississippi is
Culex coronator,
typically occurring in Central and South America, but collected in November of 2004 from Copiah County (Varnado et al. 2005). Previously, this species was only collected in the U.S. from Arizona, New Mexico and Texas. In addition, intensive searches/collections have been made during the last five years to locate
Aedes atropalpus
(Coquillett) and
Aedes j. japonicus
(Theobald) in Mississippi. To date, these two species have not been found in Mississippi. Many gaps remain in our knowledge of Mississippi mosquitoes.
References
Bradley, G. H., R. E. Bellamy, and T. T. Bracken. 1940.
The work of state board of health entomologists on malaria control. South. Med. J. 33: 892-894.
Bradshaw, W. E. 1980.
Blood-feeding and capacity for increase in the pitcher-plant mosquito,
Wyeomyia smithii
. Environ. Entomol. 9: 86-89.
Bradshaw, W. E. 1983.
Interaction between the mosquito
Wyeomyia smithii
, the midge
Metriocnemus knabi,
and their carnivorous host
Sarracenia purpurea
, pp. 161-189.
In
J. H. Frank and L. P. Lounibos [eds.], Phytotelmata: Terrestrial Plants as Hosts for Aquatic Insect Communities. Plexus Publishing, Inc., Medford, NJ.
Bradshaw, W. E., and L. P. Lounibos. 1977.
Evolution of dormancy and its photoperiodic control in pitcher-plant mosquitoes. Evolution 31: 543-565.
Carley, P. S., and M. C. Balfour. 1929.
Prevalence of malaria in Humphreys and Sunflower counties, Mississippi, in 1927-1928. South. Med. J. 22(4): 377-382.
Carpenter, S. J., and LaCasse. 1955.
Mosquitoes of North America: North of Mexico. University of California Press, Berkeley and Los Angeles.
Carpenter, S. J., R. W. Chamberlain, and J. F. Wanamaker. 1945.
New distribution records for the mosquitoes of the southeastern states in 1944. J. Econ. Entomol. 38: 402-403.
Carter, W. B. 1976.
Species composition and seasonal distribution of mosquitoes in Lafayette County, Mississippi, 1975-1976. M.S. Thesis, University of Mississippi Biology Department, 37 pp.
Cupp, E. W., K. J. Tennessen, W. K. Oldland, H. K. Hassan, G. E. Hill, C. R. Katholi, and T. R. Unnasch. 2004.
Mosquito and arbovirus activity during 1997-2002 in a wetland in northeastern Mississippi. J. Med. Entomol. 41: 495-501.
Darsie, R. F., and R. A. Ward. 1981.
Identification and Geographical Distribution of the Mosquitoes of North America, North of Mexico. Mosq. Syst. Suppl. 1: 1-313.
Darsie, R. F., and C. D. Morris. 2000.
Keys to the adult females and fourth-instar larvae of the mosquitoes of Florida. Florida Mosquito Control Assoc., Tech. Bull. No. 1 (revised): 1-159.
Darsie, R. F., and R. A. Ward. 2005.
Identification and Geographical Distribution of the Mosquitoes of North America, North of Mexico. University Press of Florida, Gainesville, FL.
Dyar, H. G. 1922.
The mosquitoes of the United States. Proceedings of the U.S. National Museum, Vol. 62, Art. 1, pp. 1-119.
Dyar, H. G. 1928.
The Mosquitoes of the Americas. Carnegie Institute Publication No. 387, Washington, DC, 267 pp.
Fulton, H. R. 1974.
The seasonal occurrence of mosquitoes in Clay, Lowndes, and Oktibbeha Counties, Mississippi and their associated pathogens, M.S. Thesis, pp. 54, Entomology Department. Mississippi State University, Starkville, MS.
Goddard, J., and B. A. Harrison. 2005.
New, recent, and questionable mosquito records from Mississippi. J. Am. Mosquito Contr. Assoc. 21: 10-14.
Goddard, J., W. C. Varnado, and B. A. Harrison. 2006.
Notes on the ecology of
Culex coronator
in Mississippi. J. Am. Mosquito Contr. Assoc. 22: 622-625.
Goddard, J., G. Waggy, W. C. Varnado, and B. A. Harrison. 2007.
Taxonomy and ecology of the pitcher-plant mosquito,
Wyeomyia smithii,
in Mississippi. Proc. Entomol. Soc. Wash. 109: 684-688.
Harden, F. W., and B. J. Poolson. 1969.
Seasonal distribution of mosquitoes of Hancock County, Mississippi, 1964-1968. Mosq. News 29: 407-414.
Harden, F. W., H. R. Hepburn, and B. J. Ethridge. 1967.
A history of mosquitoes and mosquito-borne diseases in Mississippi 1699-1965. Mosq. News 27: 60-66.
Harrison, B. A., W. C. Varnado, P. B. Whitt, and J. Goddard. 2008.
New diagnostic characters and key for females of
Psorophora
(Janthinosoma) species in the U.S.A., with notes on
Psorophora mexicana
(Bellardi) (Diptera: Culicidae). J. Vector Ecol. 33: 232-237.
King, W. V., and G. H. Bradley. 1941.
Distribution of the Nearctic species of
Anopheles
, pp. 71-78.
In
F. R. Moulton [ed.], A Symposium on Human Malaria. Amer. Assoc. Adv. Sci., Washington, D.C.
King, W. V., L. Roth, J. Toffaleti, and W. W. Middlekauff. 1943.
New distribution records for the mosquitoes of the southeastern United States during 1942. J. Econ. Entomol. 36: 573-577.
King, W. V., G. H. Bradley, C. N. Smith, and W. C. McDuffie. 1960.
A handbook of the mosquitoes of the southeastern United States. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Washington, D.C., Agri. Handbk. No. 173, 188 pp.
Mathis, W., V. B. Pickett, and W. O. Miller. 1954.
Chemical control of rice field mosquitoes in Mississippi. U.S. Publ. Hlth. Rep. 69(9): 803-807.
Michener, C. D. 1947.
Mosquitoes of a limited area in southern Mississippi. Am. Midl. Nat. 37: 325-374.
Middlekauff, W. W., and S. J. Carpenter. 1944.
New distribution records for the mosquitoes of the southeastern United States in 1943. J. Econ. Entomol. 37: 88-92.
Miles, V. I., and R. W. Rings. 1946.
Distribution records for mosquitoes of the southeastern states in 1945. J. Econ. Entomol. 39: 387-394.
Nelson, F. R. S., C. C. Osuji, and A. K. Mohamed. 1985.
A study of mosquitoes in Mayes Lake Park, Hinds County, Mississippi. J. Florida Anti-Mosq. Assoc. 56: 5-7.
Perez, M. 1930.
An anopheline survey of the State of Mississippi. Am. J. Hyg. 11: 696-710.
Reinert, J. F. 2001.
Revised list of abbreviations for genera and subgenera of Culicidae (Diptera) and notes on generic and subgeneric changes. J. Am. Mosquito Contr. Assoc. 17: 51-55.
Reinert, J. F., P. E. Kaiser, and J. A. Seawright. 1997.
Analysis of the
Anopheles
(Anopheles)
quadrimaculatus
complex of sibling species (diptera: culicidae) using morphological, cytological, molecular, genetic, biochemical, and ecological techniques in an integrated approach. J. Am. Mosquito Contr. Assoc. 13(suppliment): 1-102.
Rings, R. W., and E. A. Richmond. 1953.
Mosquito survey of Horn Island, Mississippi. Mosq. News 13: 252-255.
Slaff, M., and C. Apperson. 1989.
A key to the mosquitoes of North Carolina and the Mid-Atlantic states. North Carolina State Univ. Agri. Ext. Serv. Publ. No. AG-412:1-38
USAF. 1971.
Mosquito Identifications for CY 1971, pp. 117 p. USAF Sch. Aerosp. Med., Entomol. Br., Epidemiol. Div., Brooks AFB, Texas.
USAF. 1975.
Mosquito Identifications for CY 1975, pp. 144 p. USAF Sch. Aerosp. Med., Entomol. Br., Epidemiol. Div., Brooks AFB, Texas.
USAF. 1977.
Mosquito Identifications for CY 1977. 69.
USAF. 1978.
Mosquito Identifications for CY 1978. 82.
USAF. 1979.
Mosquito Identifications for CY 1979, pp. 73 p. USAF Sch. Aerosp. Med., Entomol. Br., Epidemiol. Div., Brooks AFB, Texas.
USAF. 1980a.
Mosquito Identifications for CY 1980, pp. 77 p. USAF Sch. Aerosp. Med., Entomol. Br., Epidemiol. Div., Brooks AFB, Texas.
USAF. 1980b.
Distribution of mosquitoes in the continental United States. USAF School of Aerospace Medicine, Brooks AFB, TX, Publ. No. SAM-TR-80-45, 54 pp.
USAF. 1981.
Mosquito Identifications for CY 1981. 86.
USAF. 1983.
Mosquito Identifications for CY 1983. 97.
USAF. 1984.
Mosquito Identifications for CY 1984. 113.
USAF. 1986.
Mosquito Identifications for CY 1986. 87.
USAF. 1987.
Mosquito Identifications for CY 1987, pp. 112 p. USAF Sch. Aerosp. Med., Entomol. Br., Epidemiol. Div., Brooks AFB, Texas.
USAF. 1988.
Mosquito Identifications for CY 1988. 114.
USAF. 1989.
Unpublished mosquito records. Unpublished data, U.S. Air Force School of Aerospace Medicine, Epidemiology Services Branch, Brooks AFB, TX.
USAF. 1990.
Mosquito identifications for calendar year 1989. U.S. Air Force, Disease Surveillance Branch, Epidemiology Division, School of Aerospace Medicine, Brooks AFB, TX.
USDA. 1969.
Mississippi mosquito collections, pp. 174, Cooperative Economic Insect Report. USDA, Coop. Econ. Insect Rpt., Washington, DC.
Varnado, W. C., J. Goddard, and B. A. Harrison. 2005.
New state record of
Culex coronator
Dyar and Knab from Mississippi. Proc. Entomol. Soc. Wash. 107: 476-477.
Whitehead, F. E. 1951.
Host preference of
Psorophora confinnis
and
p. discolor
. J. Econ. Entomol. 44: 1019.
Wilkerson, R. C., J. F. Reinert, and C. Li. 2004.
Ribosomal DNA ITS2 sequences differentiate six species in the
Anopheles crucians
Complex. J. Med. Entomol. 41: 392-401.
MEM
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Author -
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and
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Introduction
Mississippi species
Species in MEM collection
References
Acknowledgments
Links
MEM Home
Mosquitoes in Mississippi - Introduction
and Background
by
Jerome Goddard
2 August 2010
There has never been a systematic statewide study of mosquitoes in Mississippi. Various authors have reported mosquito collection records as a result of surveys of military installations in the state and/or public health malaria inspections and localized surveys. The first published mosquito records from Mississippi were
Aedes grossbecki, Ae. thibaulti, Ae. fulvus-pallens
(as
bimaculatus
)
, Ae. vexans, Culex erraticus
, and
Culistea inornata
(Dyar 1922). Five years later there was a malaria vector (anopheline) survey which reported
An. crucians, An. punctipennis An. pseudopunctipennis
, and
An. quadrimaculatus
(Carley and Balfour 1929). Another malaria study in the Mississippi Delta reported
An. quadrimaculatus, An. punctipennis
, and
An. crucians
(Perez 1930). A State Board of Health publication discussed
Anopheles
population densities in Mississippi, but reported no specific species names (Bradley et al. 1940). During the 1940’s several military-related studies in Mississippi provided further records of mosquitoes (King and Bradley 1941, King et al. 1943, Middlekauff and Carpenter 1944, Carpenter et al. 1945, Miles and Rings 1946, Michener 1947, Rings and Richmond 1953). The most complete work revealed 47 species from Camp Shelby near Hattiesburg in south Mississippi (Michener 1947). In addition, a study on chemical control of rice field mosquitoes in 1952-53 in Bolivar County mentioned
Ps. columbiae
(as
confinnis
) (Mathis et al. 1954). These earlier works were later summarized (King et al. 1960), stating that there was a total of 53 species occurring in Mississippi.
In 1969 the U.S. Department of Agriculture conducted mosquito surveillance in Hancock County as part of a pest monitoring program and reported 10 relatively common species (USDA 1969). Also, in the late 1960’s, a seasonality study of mosquitoes in Hancock County was conducted which recorded a total of 33 species (Harden and Poolson 1969). Almost all mosquito records from the 1970’s, 1980’s and early 1990’s resulted from collections made by U.S. Air Force personnel at installations in Harrison and Lowndes Counties (USAF 1971, 1975, 1977, 1978, 1979, 1980b, a, 1981, 1983, 1984, 1986, 1987, 1988), although no voucher specimens are known for these surveys. Air Force records from 1989 show the first known presence of the introduced species
Ae. albopictus
in Mississippi (USAF 1989). Results of an unpublished master’s thesis demonstrated species composition and seasonality of mosquitoes in Clay, Lowndes and Oktibbeha counties from March 1972 – November 1973 (Fulton 1974). Fortunately, representatives from all of his collections were verified by Richard F. Darsie Jr., with specimens deposited in the Mississippi Entomological Museum (MEM), Mississippi State University, Starkville, MS. Some of the most unusual findings in that study included
Anopheles walkeri, Orthopodomyia alba, Culex pilosus
and
Culex peccator
. Research on the pitcher-plant mosquito,
Wyeomyia smithii,
led to collections of this species from George County (Bradshaw and Lounibos 1977, Bradshaw 1983). In 1982, a small mosquito survey was conducted at Mays Lake in Jackson, MS, to determine relative abundance and species composition there and the authors recorded 13 species in five genera from March through September (Nelson et al. 1985). In the late 1990’s, arbovirus research in northeast Mississippi resulted in a report of 23 mosquito species from Tishomingo County (Cupp et al. 2004).
Unusual mosquito records.
Several unusual records of mosquitoes have been reported for Mississippi. King included a record of two
Ae. stimulans
from Electric Mills, MS in Kemper County (King et al. 1960). The occurrence of this species several hundred miles south of its recorded range is unexpected; however, voucher specimens are available and the record has been confirmed (Goddard and Harrison 2005). A collection record of
Ae. dorsalis
, which occurs primarily in the western U.S., was reported from Como, MS (Miles and Rings 1946). Although the collection was identified by Alan Stone, a culicid specialist, no voucher specimen is available to confirm this record (Goddard and Harrison 2005).
Psorophora pygmea
was reported from Horn Island, MS (Harden et al. 1967), but no expert made the identification and no voucher specimen has been seen to confirm this record. Since this species is restricted in the USA to the Florida Keys, the record must be deleted (Goddard and Harrison 2005). There is one record of
Ae. nigromaculis
from Harrison County, MS (USAF 1990). The distribution of
Ae. nigromaculis
borders the western edge of Mississippi (Darsie and Ward 2005), so finding this species in Mississippi is possible. Nonetheless, we have no voucher specimen and no positive verification of this species in Mississippi.
Recent mosquito work in Mississippi
. In 2000, the Mississippi Department of Health received a West Nile surveillance grant from the Centers for Disease Control that provided funding for more intensive mosquito collecting and West Nile testing in selected areas around the state. As a result, several new state records for mosquitoes have been found. One was
Mansonia titillans
, recorded from Madison, Copiah and Rankin counties, and another was
Aedes trivittatus
from Marshall County (Goddard and Harrison 2005). The most recent new record for Mississippi is
Culex coronator,
typically occurring in Central and South America, but collected in November of 2004 from Copiah County (Varnado et al. 2005). Previously, this species was only collected in the U.S. from Arizona, New Mexico and Texas. In addition, intensive searches/collections have been made during the last five years to locate
Aedes atropalpus
(Coquillett) and
Aedes j. japonicus
(Theobald) in Mississippi. To date, these two species have not been found in Mississippi. Many gaps remain in our knowledge of Mississippi mosquitoes.
References
Bradley, G. H., R. E. Bellamy, and T. T. Bracken. 1940.
The work of state board of health entomologists on malaria control. South. Med. J. 33: 892-894.
Bradshaw, W. E. 1980.
Blood-feeding and capacity for increase in the pitcher-plant mosquito,
Wyeomyia smithii
. Environ. Entomol. 9: 86-89.
Bradshaw, W. E. 1983.
Interaction between the mosquito
Wyeomyia smithii
, the midge
Metriocnemus knabi,
and their carnivorous host
Sarracenia purpurea
, pp. 161-189.
In
J. H. Frank and L. P. Lounibos [eds.], Phytotelmata: Terrestrial Plants as Hosts for Aquatic Insect Communities. Plexus Publishing, Inc., Medford, NJ.
Bradshaw, W. E., and L. P. Lounibos. 1977.
Evolution of dormancy and its photoperiodic control in pitcher-plant mosquitoes. Evolution 31: 543-565.
Carley, P. S., and M. C. Balfour. 1929.
Prevalence of malaria in Humphreys and Sunflower counties, Mississippi, in 1927-1928. South. Med. J. 22(4): 377-382.
Carpenter, S. J., and LaCasse. 1955.
Mosquitoes of North America: North of Mexico. University of California Press, Berkeley and Los Angeles.
Carpenter, S. J., R. W. Chamberlain, and J. F. Wanamaker. 1945.
New distribution records for the mosquitoes of the southeastern states in 1944. J. Econ. Entomol. 38: 402-403.
Carter, W. B. 1976.
Species composition and seasonal distribution of mosquitoes in Lafayette County, Mississippi, 1975-1976. M.S. Thesis, University of Mississippi Biology Department, 37 pp.
Cupp, E. W., K. J. Tennessen, W. K. Oldland, H. K. Hassan, G. E. Hill, C. R. Katholi, and T. R. Unnasch. 2004.
Mosquito and arbovirus activity during 1997-2002 in a wetland in northeastern Mississippi. J. Med. Entomol. 41: 495-501.
Darsie, R. F., and R. A. Ward. 1981.
Identification and Geographical Distribution of the Mosquitoes of North America, North of Mexico. Mosq. Syst. Suppl. 1: 1-313.
Darsie, R. F., and C. D. Morris. 2000.
Keys to the adult females and fourth-instar larvae of the mosquitoes of Florida. Florida Mosquito Control Assoc., Tech. Bull. No. 1 (revised): 1-159.
Darsie, R. F., and R. A. Ward. 2005.
Identification and Geographical Distribution of the Mosquitoes of North America, North of Mexico. University Press of Florida, Gainesville, FL.
Dyar, H. G. 1922.
The mosquitoes of the United States. Proceedings of the U.S. National Museum, Vol. 62, Art. 1, pp. 1-119.
Dyar, H. G. 1928.
The Mosquitoes of the Americas. Carnegie Institute Publication No. 387, Washington, DC, 267 pp.
Fulton, H. R. 1974.
The seasonal occurrence of mosquitoes in Clay, Lowndes, and Oktibbeha Counties, Mississippi and their associated pathogens, M.S. Thesis, pp. 54, Entomology Department. Mississippi State University, Starkville, MS.
Goddard, J., and B. A. Harrison. 2005.
New, recent, and questionable mosquito records from Mississippi. J. Am. Mosquito Contr. Assoc. 21: 10-14.
Goddard, J., W. C. Varnado, and B. A. Harrison. 2006.
Notes on the ecology of
Culex coronator
in Mississippi. J. Am. Mosquito Contr. Assoc. 22: 622-625.
Goddard, J., G. Waggy, W. C. Varnado, and B. A. Harrison. 2007.
Taxonomy and ecology of the pitcher-plant mosquito,
Wyeomyia smithii,
in Mississippi. Proc. Entomol. Soc. Wash. 109: 684-688.
Harden, F. W., and B. J. Poolson. 1969.
Seasonal distribution of mosquitoes of Hancock County, Mississippi, 1964-1968. Mosq. News 29: 407-414.
Harden, F. W., H. R. Hepburn, and B. J. Ethridge. 1967.
A history of mosquitoes and mosquito-borne diseases in Mississippi 1699-1965. Mosq. News 27: 60-66.
Harrison, B. A., W. C. Varnado, P. B. Whitt, and J. Goddard. 2008.
New diagnostic characters and key for females of
Psorophora
(Janthinosoma) species in the U.S.A., with notes on
Psorophora mexicana
(Bellardi) (Diptera: Culicidae). J. Vector Ecol. 33: 232-237.
King, W. V., and G. H. Bradley. 1941.
Distribution of the Nearctic species of
Anopheles
, pp. 71-78.
In
F. R. Moulton [ed.], A Symposium on Human Malaria. Amer. Assoc. Adv. Sci., Washington, D.C.
King, W. V., L. Roth, J. Toffaleti, and W. W. Middlekauff. 1943.
New distribution records for the mosquitoes of the southeastern United States during 1942. J. Econ. Entomol. 36: 573-577.
King, W. V., G. H. Bradley, C. N. Smith, and W. C. McDuffie. 1960.
A handbook of the mosquitoes of the southeastern United States. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Washington, D.C., Agri. Handbk. No. 173, 188 pp.
Mathis, W., V. B. Pickett, and W. O. Miller. 1954.
Chemical control of rice field mosquitoes in Mississippi. U.S. Publ. Hlth. Rep. 69(9): 803-807.
Michener, C. D. 1947.
Mosquitoes of a limited area in southern Mississippi. Am. Midl. Nat. 37: 325-374.
Middlekauff, W. W., and S. J. Carpenter. 1944.
New distribution records for the mosquitoes of the southeastern United States in 1943. J. Econ. Entomol. 37: 88-92.
Miles, V. I., and R. W. Rings. 1946.
Distribution records for mosquitoes of the southeastern states in 1945. J. Econ. Entomol. 39: 387-394.
Nelson, F. R. S., C. C. Osuji, and A. K. Mohamed. 1985.
A study of mosquitoes in Mayes Lake Park, Hinds County, Mississippi. J. Florida Anti-Mosq. Assoc. 56: 5-7.
Perez, M. 1930.
An anopheline survey of the State of Mississippi. Am. J. Hyg. 11: 696-710.
Reinert, J. F. 2001.
Revised list of abbreviations for genera and subgenera of Culicidae (Diptera) and notes on generic and subgeneric changes. J. Am. Mosquito Contr. Assoc. 17: 51-55.
Reinert, J. F., P. E. Kaiser, and J. A. Seawright. 1997.
Analysis of the
Anopheles
(Anopheles)
quadrimaculatus
complex of sibling species (diptera: culicidae) using morphological, cytological, molecular, genetic, biochemical, and ecological techniques in an integrated approach. J. Am. Mosquito Contr. Assoc. 13(suppliment): 1-102.
Rings, R. W., and E. A. Richmond. 1953.
Mosquito survey of Horn Island, Mississippi. Mosq. News 13: 252-255.
Slaff, M., and C. Apperson. 1989.
A key to the mosquitoes of North Carolina and the Mid-Atlantic states. North Carolina State Univ. Agri. Ext. Serv. Publ. No. AG-412:1-38
USAF. 1971.
Mosquito Identifications for CY 1971, pp. 117 p. USAF Sch. Aerosp. Med., Entomol. Br., Epidemiol. Div., Brooks AFB, Texas.
USAF. 1975.
Mosquito Identifications for CY 1975, pp. 144 p. USAF Sch. Aerosp. Med., Entomol. Br., Epidemiol. Div., Brooks AFB, Texas.
USAF. 1977.
Mosquito Identifications for CY 1977. 69.
USAF. 1978.
Mosquito Identifications for CY 1978. 82.
USAF. 1979.
Mosquito Identifications for CY 1979, pp. 73 p. USAF Sch. Aerosp. Med., Entomol. Br., Epidemiol. Div., Brooks AFB, Texas.
USAF. 1980a.
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USAF. 1980b.
Distribution of mosquitoes in the continental United States. USAF School of Aerospace Medicine, Brooks AFB, TX, Publ. No. SAM-TR-80-45, 54 pp.
USAF. 1981.
Mosquito Identifications for CY 1981. 86.
USAF. 1983.
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Mosquito Identifications for CY 1984. 113.
USAF. 1986.
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Mosquito Identifications for CY 1987, pp. 112 p. USAF Sch. Aerosp. Med., Entomol. Br., Epidemiol. Div., Brooks AFB, Texas.
USAF. 1988.
Mosquito Identifications for CY 1988. 114.
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Unpublished mosquito records. Unpublished data, U.S. Air Force School of Aerospace Medicine, Epidemiology Services Branch, Brooks AFB, TX.
USAF. 1990.
Mosquito identifications for calendar year 1989. U.S. Air Force, Disease Surveillance Branch, Epidemiology Division, School of Aerospace Medicine, Brooks AFB, TX.
USDA. 1969.
Mississippi mosquito collections, pp. 174, Cooperative Economic Insect Report. USDA, Coop. Econ. Insect Rpt., Washington, DC.
Varnado, W. C., J. Goddard, and B. A. Harrison. 2005.
New state record of
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Dyar and Knab from Mississippi. Proc. Entomol. Soc. Wash. 107: 476-477.
Whitehead, F. E. 1951.
Host preference of
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Ribosomal DNA ITS2 sequences differentiate six species in the
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MEM
|
Research Taxa
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Introduction
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Mississippi species
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MEM species list
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References
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Acknowledgments
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Links
Author -
Jerome Goddard
and
Joe MacGown
Uploaded on 2 August 2010, last updated on
2 August 2015
For other questions or comments about this site contact
Joe MacGown
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