Difference between revisions of "Aedes albopictus"
Line 6: | Line 6: | ||
''Ae. albopictus'' is a vector of dengue fever, yellow fever, various types of encephalitis, dog heartworm (''Dirofilaria immitis'') and other diseases (e.g. chikungunya viruses). Vector control is often the only or the most appropriate method to combat these diseases. | ''Ae. albopictus'' is a vector of dengue fever, yellow fever, various types of encephalitis, dog heartworm (''Dirofilaria immitis'') and other diseases (e.g. chikungunya viruses). Vector control is often the only or the most appropriate method to combat these diseases. | ||
− | + | {{VN | |
+ | |de=Asiatische Tigermücke | ||
+ | |en=Asian tiger mosquito | ||
+ | |es=mosquito tigre | ||
+ | |fr=moustique-tigre | ||
+ | }} | ||
'''Synonyms:'''<br/> | '''Synonyms:'''<br/> | ||
Stegomyia albopictus | Stegomyia albopictus |
Revision as of 20:34, 14 January 2014
Taxonomic position
|
---|
no parent categories |
Literature database |
---|
1812 articles sorted by: |
• year (recent ones first) |
• research topics |
• countries/regions |
• list of natural enemies |
Aedes albopictus (Skuse) - (Asian tiger mosquito)
is an aggressive, human-biting mosquito, closely associated with the human environment where it usually breeds in containers. It is native to Asia and is found since 1986 in North America. South America has been invaded around the same time and since 1987 it has been also reported from Europe. Since it can lay diapausing eggs it survives even in colder regions.
Ae. albopictus is a vector of dengue fever, yellow fever, various types of encephalitis, dog heartworm (Dirofilaria immitis) and other diseases (e.g. chikungunya viruses). Vector control is often the only or the most appropriate method to combat these diseases.
Vernacular names | |
---|---|
• Deutsch: | Asiatische Tigermücke |
• English: | Asian tiger mosquito |
• Español: | mosquito tigre |
• Français: | moustique-tigre |
Synonyms:
Stegomyia albopictus
For details see the respective page in Wikipedia.
The literature database currently contains 1812 publications for Aedes albopictus. (See box above/on left.)