Pest Occurrence of Aedes rossicus Close to the Arctic Circle in Northern Sweden

Major nuisance species are found among the floodwater mosquitoes and snow-pool mosquitoes, with the former being the main reason for mosquito control in most areas. Nuisance species vary with the area, and previous reports from northern areas conclude that the nuisance is most often caused by snow-p...

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Published in:Journal of Vector Ecology
Main Authors: Eric Blomgren, Jenny C. Hesson, Martina L. Schäfer, Jan O. Lundström
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Society for Vector Ecology 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1111/jvec.12280
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spelling ftbioone:10.1111/jvec.12280 2024-06-02T08:01:28+00:00 Pest Occurrence of Aedes rossicus Close to the Arctic Circle in Northern Sweden Eric Blomgren Jenny C. Hesson Martina L. Schäfer Jan O. Lundström Eric Blomgren Jenny C. Hesson Martina L. Schäfer Jan O. Lundström world 2018-06-01 text/HTML https://doi.org/10.1111/jvec.12280 en eng Society for Vector Ecology doi:10.1111/jvec.12280 All rights reserved. https://doi.org/10.1111/jvec.12280 Text 2018 ftbioone https://doi.org/10.1111/jvec.12280 2024-05-07T00:59:56Z Major nuisance species are found among the floodwater mosquitoes and snow-pool mosquitoes, with the former being the main reason for mosquito control in most areas. Nuisance species vary with the area, and previous reports from northern areas conclude that the nuisance is most often caused by snow-pool mosquitoes. We investigated the mosquito fauna and abundances of host-seeking females using CDC traps baited with carbon dioxide, in Övertorneå city near the Arctic Circle in northern Sweden, after earlier complaints about massive mosquito nuisance. The abundance of host-seeking female mosquitoes was high in 2014, with a maximum of ~15,400 individuals per CDC trap night, of which 89% was the floodwater mosquito Aedes rossicus. Surprisingly, the main nuisance species was a floodwater mosquito, occurring at the northernmost location it has ever been recorded in Sweden. Our report is probably the first documentation of such large numbers of Aedes rossicus in any locality and probably the first documentation of a severe floodwater mosquito nuisance near the Arctic Circle. Given the historical data on river discharge in the area, the nuisance is recurrent. We conclude that in northern localities, as well as in more southern localities, production of floodwater mosquitoes is a natural component of the floodplain fauna of rivers with a fluctuating water flow regime. Also, the floodwater mosquitoes Aedes sticticus and Aedes vexans were found north of their formerly known distribution in Sweden. Text Arctic Northern Sweden Övertorneå BioOne Online Journals Arctic Övertorneå ENVELOPE(23.654,23.654,66.388,66.388) Journal of Vector Ecology 43 1 36 43
institution Open Polar
collection BioOne Online Journals
op_collection_id ftbioone
language English
description Major nuisance species are found among the floodwater mosquitoes and snow-pool mosquitoes, with the former being the main reason for mosquito control in most areas. Nuisance species vary with the area, and previous reports from northern areas conclude that the nuisance is most often caused by snow-pool mosquitoes. We investigated the mosquito fauna and abundances of host-seeking females using CDC traps baited with carbon dioxide, in Övertorneå city near the Arctic Circle in northern Sweden, after earlier complaints about massive mosquito nuisance. The abundance of host-seeking female mosquitoes was high in 2014, with a maximum of ~15,400 individuals per CDC trap night, of which 89% was the floodwater mosquito Aedes rossicus. Surprisingly, the main nuisance species was a floodwater mosquito, occurring at the northernmost location it has ever been recorded in Sweden. Our report is probably the first documentation of such large numbers of Aedes rossicus in any locality and probably the first documentation of a severe floodwater mosquito nuisance near the Arctic Circle. Given the historical data on river discharge in the area, the nuisance is recurrent. We conclude that in northern localities, as well as in more southern localities, production of floodwater mosquitoes is a natural component of the floodplain fauna of rivers with a fluctuating water flow regime. Also, the floodwater mosquitoes Aedes sticticus and Aedes vexans were found north of their formerly known distribution in Sweden.
author2 Eric Blomgren
Jenny C. Hesson
Martina L. Schäfer
Jan O. Lundström
format Text
author Eric Blomgren
Jenny C. Hesson
Martina L. Schäfer
Jan O. Lundström
spellingShingle Eric Blomgren
Jenny C. Hesson
Martina L. Schäfer
Jan O. Lundström
Pest Occurrence of Aedes rossicus Close to the Arctic Circle in Northern Sweden
author_facet Eric Blomgren
Jenny C. Hesson
Martina L. Schäfer
Jan O. Lundström
author_sort Eric Blomgren
title Pest Occurrence of Aedes rossicus Close to the Arctic Circle in Northern Sweden
title_short Pest Occurrence of Aedes rossicus Close to the Arctic Circle in Northern Sweden
title_full Pest Occurrence of Aedes rossicus Close to the Arctic Circle in Northern Sweden
title_fullStr Pest Occurrence of Aedes rossicus Close to the Arctic Circle in Northern Sweden
title_full_unstemmed Pest Occurrence of Aedes rossicus Close to the Arctic Circle in Northern Sweden
title_sort pest occurrence of aedes rossicus close to the arctic circle in northern sweden
publisher Society for Vector Ecology
publishDate 2018
url https://doi.org/10.1111/jvec.12280
op_coverage world
long_lat ENVELOPE(23.654,23.654,66.388,66.388)
geographic Arctic
Övertorneå
geographic_facet Arctic
Övertorneå
genre Arctic
Northern Sweden
Övertorneå
genre_facet Arctic
Northern Sweden
Övertorneå
op_source https://doi.org/10.1111/jvec.12280
op_relation doi:10.1111/jvec.12280
op_rights All rights reserved.
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1111/jvec.12280
container_title Journal of Vector Ecology
container_volume 43
container_issue 1
container_start_page 36
op_container_end_page 43
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