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A SIMPLE CHARACTER FOR RECOGNIZING SECOND AND THIRD INSTAR LARVAE OF FIVE CANADIAN MOSQUITO GENERA (DIPTERA: CULICIDAE)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 May 2012

Roger Savignac
Affiliation:
Groupe de recherche sur les insectes piqueurs, Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières G9A 5H7
Alain Maire
Affiliation:
Groupe de recherche sur les insectes piqueurs, Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières G9A 5H7

Abstract

Second and third instar mosquito larvae of 34 Canadian species belonging to the genera Anopheles, Aedes, Culex, Culiseta, and Wyeomyia may be reliably and simply separated by the absence or presence of the thoracic setae, 8-M and 7-T, and even more so by the number of the metathoracic setal support plates. As the 7-T seta is always inserted on a plate, a larva in the third stage will bear one more plate than in the second stage. In the species studied, the number of metathoracic plates is constant for a given genus at a given instar. Thus an intermediate instar larva, once identified to genus, can be assigned to second or third instar fairly readily by counting the number of setal plates on one side of the metathorax.

Résumé

L’absence ou la présence des soies thoraciques, 8-M et 7-T, permet de différencier sans difficulté les deuxième et troisième stades larvaires de 34 espèces canadiennes de moustiques représentant les genres Anopheles, Aedes, Culex, Culiseta et Wyeomyia. Les plaques sclérotisées à la base des soies permettent de les distinguer encore plus facilement. La soie 7-T s’insérant toujours sur une plaque sclérotisée, une larve de troisième stade portera toujours de chaque côté du métathorax une plaque de plus qu’au stade précédent. Chez les espèces étudiées, le nombre de plaques est fixé pour un genre donné à un stade donné de sorte qu’une larve identifée au genre peut immédiatement être classée selon son stade par le nombre de plaques situées de chaque côté du métathorax.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Entomological Society of Canada 1981

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