ALASKAN HEMATOPHAGOUS INSECTS, THEIR FEEDING HABITS AND POTENTIAL AS VECTORS OF PATHOGENIC ORGANISMS. 2. THE FEEDING HABITS AND COLONIZATION OF SUBARCTIC MOSQUITOES

Feeding habits of mosquitoes of the taiga and tundra were studied. Greater emphasis was given to those of the taiga, however, because of the longer mosquito season and the greater variety of genera and species present. A tower was built with platforms at 6-foot intervals up to 42 feet, to study vert...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hopla, Cluff E.
Other Authors: OKLAHOMA UNIV RESEARCH INST NORMAN
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 1965
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.dtic.mil/docs/citations/AD0469673
http://oai.dtic.mil/oai/oai?&verb=getRecord&metadataPrefix=html&identifier=AD0469673
id ftdtic:AD0469673
record_format openpolar
spelling ftdtic:AD0469673 2023-05-15T18:28:15+02:00 ALASKAN HEMATOPHAGOUS INSECTS, THEIR FEEDING HABITS AND POTENTIAL AS VECTORS OF PATHOGENIC ORGANISMS. 2. THE FEEDING HABITS AND COLONIZATION OF SUBARCTIC MOSQUITOES Hopla, Cluff E. OKLAHOMA UNIV RESEARCH INST NORMAN 1965-07 text/html http://www.dtic.mil/docs/citations/AD0469673 http://oai.dtic.mil/oai/oai?&verb=getRecord&metadataPrefix=html&identifier=AD0469673 en eng http://www.dtic.mil/docs/citations/AD0469673 Availability: Document partially illegible. DTIC AND NTIS Biology Ecology *ECOLOGY *CULICIDAE DISTRIBUTION ALASKA COLD REGIONS TERRAIN CLIMATE FOOD PLANTS(BOTANY) DISEASE VECTORS REPRODUCTION(PHYSIOLOGY) BLOOD ANALYSIS AEDES GLYCEROLS TAIGA TUNDRA Text 1965 ftdtic 2016-02-21T09:00:02Z Feeding habits of mosquitoes of the taiga and tundra were studied. Greater emphasis was given to those of the taiga, however, because of the longer mosquito season and the greater variety of genera and species present. A tower was built with platforms at 6-foot intervals up to 42 feet, to study vertical distribution and host preference. Domestic chickens, white laboratory rabbits and varying hares, along with empty control boxes, were placed at the various heights. Approximately 80% of the 10,722 specimens obtained were collected in the first 18 feet. Using insect nets, 46,123 specimens were collected in the vicinity of the tower, both from vegetation and aerially up to height of 6 feet. Only six showed evidence of a recent blood meal. Evidence indicates that most subarctic mosquitoes take but one blood meal, a fact of considerable importance when considering them as vectors of zoonoses. Studies of the natural history of Culiseta alaskaensis indicated that the unfed adult females overwinter close to the ground in dense growths of grass underneath the snow cover where the temperature range is from 16 - 20 F. in the laboratory, C. alaskaensis lived only about one week at 0 F. Chromatographic studies did not reveal the presence of glycerol compounds in the hemolymph. Text Subarctic taiga Tundra Alaska Defense Technical Information Center: DTIC Technical Reports database
institution Open Polar
collection Defense Technical Information Center: DTIC Technical Reports database
op_collection_id ftdtic
language English
topic Biology
Ecology
*ECOLOGY
*CULICIDAE
DISTRIBUTION
ALASKA
COLD REGIONS
TERRAIN
CLIMATE
FOOD
PLANTS(BOTANY)
DISEASE VECTORS
REPRODUCTION(PHYSIOLOGY)
BLOOD ANALYSIS
AEDES
GLYCEROLS
TAIGA
TUNDRA
spellingShingle Biology
Ecology
*ECOLOGY
*CULICIDAE
DISTRIBUTION
ALASKA
COLD REGIONS
TERRAIN
CLIMATE
FOOD
PLANTS(BOTANY)
DISEASE VECTORS
REPRODUCTION(PHYSIOLOGY)
BLOOD ANALYSIS
AEDES
GLYCEROLS
TAIGA
TUNDRA
Hopla, Cluff E.
ALASKAN HEMATOPHAGOUS INSECTS, THEIR FEEDING HABITS AND POTENTIAL AS VECTORS OF PATHOGENIC ORGANISMS. 2. THE FEEDING HABITS AND COLONIZATION OF SUBARCTIC MOSQUITOES
topic_facet Biology
Ecology
*ECOLOGY
*CULICIDAE
DISTRIBUTION
ALASKA
COLD REGIONS
TERRAIN
CLIMATE
FOOD
PLANTS(BOTANY)
DISEASE VECTORS
REPRODUCTION(PHYSIOLOGY)
BLOOD ANALYSIS
AEDES
GLYCEROLS
TAIGA
TUNDRA
description Feeding habits of mosquitoes of the taiga and tundra were studied. Greater emphasis was given to those of the taiga, however, because of the longer mosquito season and the greater variety of genera and species present. A tower was built with platforms at 6-foot intervals up to 42 feet, to study vertical distribution and host preference. Domestic chickens, white laboratory rabbits and varying hares, along with empty control boxes, were placed at the various heights. Approximately 80% of the 10,722 specimens obtained were collected in the first 18 feet. Using insect nets, 46,123 specimens were collected in the vicinity of the tower, both from vegetation and aerially up to height of 6 feet. Only six showed evidence of a recent blood meal. Evidence indicates that most subarctic mosquitoes take but one blood meal, a fact of considerable importance when considering them as vectors of zoonoses. Studies of the natural history of Culiseta alaskaensis indicated that the unfed adult females overwinter close to the ground in dense growths of grass underneath the snow cover where the temperature range is from 16 - 20 F. in the laboratory, C. alaskaensis lived only about one week at 0 F. Chromatographic studies did not reveal the presence of glycerol compounds in the hemolymph.
author2 OKLAHOMA UNIV RESEARCH INST NORMAN
format Text
author Hopla, Cluff E.
author_facet Hopla, Cluff E.
author_sort Hopla, Cluff E.
title ALASKAN HEMATOPHAGOUS INSECTS, THEIR FEEDING HABITS AND POTENTIAL AS VECTORS OF PATHOGENIC ORGANISMS. 2. THE FEEDING HABITS AND COLONIZATION OF SUBARCTIC MOSQUITOES
title_short ALASKAN HEMATOPHAGOUS INSECTS, THEIR FEEDING HABITS AND POTENTIAL AS VECTORS OF PATHOGENIC ORGANISMS. 2. THE FEEDING HABITS AND COLONIZATION OF SUBARCTIC MOSQUITOES
title_full ALASKAN HEMATOPHAGOUS INSECTS, THEIR FEEDING HABITS AND POTENTIAL AS VECTORS OF PATHOGENIC ORGANISMS. 2. THE FEEDING HABITS AND COLONIZATION OF SUBARCTIC MOSQUITOES
title_fullStr ALASKAN HEMATOPHAGOUS INSECTS, THEIR FEEDING HABITS AND POTENTIAL AS VECTORS OF PATHOGENIC ORGANISMS. 2. THE FEEDING HABITS AND COLONIZATION OF SUBARCTIC MOSQUITOES
title_full_unstemmed ALASKAN HEMATOPHAGOUS INSECTS, THEIR FEEDING HABITS AND POTENTIAL AS VECTORS OF PATHOGENIC ORGANISMS. 2. THE FEEDING HABITS AND COLONIZATION OF SUBARCTIC MOSQUITOES
title_sort alaskan hematophagous insects, their feeding habits and potential as vectors of pathogenic organisms. 2. the feeding habits and colonization of subarctic mosquitoes
publishDate 1965
url http://www.dtic.mil/docs/citations/AD0469673
http://oai.dtic.mil/oai/oai?&verb=getRecord&metadataPrefix=html&identifier=AD0469673
genre Subarctic
taiga
Tundra
Alaska
genre_facet Subarctic
taiga
Tundra
Alaska
op_source DTIC AND NTIS
op_relation http://www.dtic.mil/docs/citations/AD0469673
op_rights Availability: Document partially illegible.
_version_ 1766210643527991296