Behavioural and phenological studies of woodland mosquitoes in the Winnipeg area

A study was carried out in the woodlands of Charleswood and Fort Whyte within Winnipeg, to determine whether these areas contribute to Winnipeg's pest mosquito populations. The species compositon, density and seasonal abundance of larvae were monitored throughout the 1973 season. Snow-melt fl...

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Main Author: Christie, Gordon Craig
Published: 2012
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/6139
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-MWU.1993-61392014-03-29T03:44:13Z Behavioural and phenological studies of woodland mosquitoes in the Winnipeg area Christie, Gordon Craig A study was carried out in the woodlands of Charleswood and Fort Whyte within Winnipeg, to determine whether these areas contribute to Winnipeg's pest mosquito populations. The species compositon, density and seasonal abundance of larvae were monitored throughout the 1973 season. Snow-melt flooding of woodland pools was minimal in 1973 which greatly reduced the spring, univoltine species production. Heavy precipitation throughout the season reflooded some of these pools and produced broods of multivoltine Aedes. The seasonal succession and abundance of woodland adult mosquitoes was monitored using weekly CO2-baited traps and 10 minute biting-counts, throughout the 1972 and 1973 mosquito seasons. During 1972, spring univoltine species accounted for the major annoyance during late May and early June. During 1973, maximum trap catches were recorded in mid-July and consisted almost entirely of Aedes vexans. The occurrence of multivoltine Aedes was found to be dependent on the intensity and duration of summer rainfall. Although few A. vexans were produced in the woodland areas this species does appear to seek shelter there during the day. Thermal fogging with 5% Malathion proved unsuccessful in reducing mosquito populations in a wooded area along the La Salle River. A. vexans was shown to display a crepuscular activity rhythm which is probably initiated by the changing light intensities at dusk and dawn. Temperature and wind were shown to limit the nocturnal activity of A. vexans. 2012-05-15T15:54:04Z 2012-05-15T15:54:04Z 1974 http://hdl.handle.net/1993/6139
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
description A study was carried out in the woodlands of Charleswood and Fort Whyte within Winnipeg, to determine whether these areas contribute to Winnipeg's pest mosquito populations. The species compositon, density and seasonal abundance of larvae were monitored throughout the 1973 season. Snow-melt flooding of woodland pools was minimal in 1973 which greatly reduced the spring, univoltine species production. Heavy precipitation throughout the season reflooded some of these pools and produced broods of multivoltine Aedes. The seasonal succession and abundance of woodland adult mosquitoes was monitored using weekly CO2-baited traps and 10 minute biting-counts, throughout the 1972 and 1973 mosquito seasons. During 1972, spring univoltine species accounted for the major annoyance during late May and early June. During 1973, maximum trap catches were recorded in mid-July and consisted almost entirely of Aedes vexans. The occurrence of multivoltine Aedes was found to be dependent on the intensity and duration of summer rainfall. Although few A. vexans were produced in the woodland areas this species does appear to seek shelter there during the day. Thermal fogging with 5% Malathion proved unsuccessful in reducing mosquito populations in a wooded area along the La Salle River. A. vexans was shown to display a crepuscular activity rhythm which is probably initiated by the changing light intensities at dusk and dawn. Temperature and wind were shown to limit the nocturnal activity of A. vexans.
author Christie, Gordon Craig
spellingShingle Christie, Gordon Craig
Behavioural and phenological studies of woodland mosquitoes in the Winnipeg area
author_facet Christie, Gordon Craig
author_sort Christie, Gordon Craig
title Behavioural and phenological studies of woodland mosquitoes in the Winnipeg area
title_short Behavioural and phenological studies of woodland mosquitoes in the Winnipeg area
title_full Behavioural and phenological studies of woodland mosquitoes in the Winnipeg area
title_fullStr Behavioural and phenological studies of woodland mosquitoes in the Winnipeg area
title_full_unstemmed Behavioural and phenological studies of woodland mosquitoes in the Winnipeg area
title_sort behavioural and phenological studies of woodland mosquitoes in the winnipeg area
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/6139
work_keys_str_mv AT christiegordoncraig behaviouralandphenologicalstudiesofwoodlandmosquitoesinthewinnipegarea
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