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The Mosquito Fauna of Arizona: Species Composition and Public Health Implications
by
Johnston, Murray A.
, Ruberto, Irene
, Paaijmans, Krijn P.
, Franz, Nico M.
, Townsend, John
, Will, James B.
, Yule, Kelsey M.
, Malone, Adele B.
, Jobe, Ndey Bassin
in
animal reservoirs
/ Animals
/ Aquatic insects
/ Arizona
/ Chikungunya virus
/ Culicidae
/ decision making
/ Dengue fever
/ Drainage districts
/ Encephalitis
/ fauna
/ Health aspects
/ Identification and classification
/ Infectious diseases
/ Introduced species
/ Invasive species
/ irrigation and drainage
/ Malaria
/ medical and veterinary entomology
/ monitoring
/ Mosquitoes
/ New records
/ Public health
/ Review
/ risk
/ Scientists
/ Sonoran desert
/ species
/ Species composition
/ Species diversity
/ spillover effect
/ Surveillance
/ Tropical diseases
/ vector control
/ Vector-borne diseases
/ Vectors
/ West Nile virus
/ Wildlife
/ Zika virus
2024
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The Mosquito Fauna of Arizona: Species Composition and Public Health Implications
by
Johnston, Murray A.
, Ruberto, Irene
, Paaijmans, Krijn P.
, Franz, Nico M.
, Townsend, John
, Will, James B.
, Yule, Kelsey M.
, Malone, Adele B.
, Jobe, Ndey Bassin
in
animal reservoirs
/ Animals
/ Aquatic insects
/ Arizona
/ Chikungunya virus
/ Culicidae
/ decision making
/ Dengue fever
/ Drainage districts
/ Encephalitis
/ fauna
/ Health aspects
/ Identification and classification
/ Infectious diseases
/ Introduced species
/ Invasive species
/ irrigation and drainage
/ Malaria
/ medical and veterinary entomology
/ monitoring
/ Mosquitoes
/ New records
/ Public health
/ Review
/ risk
/ Scientists
/ Sonoran desert
/ species
/ Species composition
/ Species diversity
/ spillover effect
/ Surveillance
/ Tropical diseases
/ vector control
/ Vector-borne diseases
/ Vectors
/ West Nile virus
/ Wildlife
/ Zika virus
2024
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Do you wish to request the book?
The Mosquito Fauna of Arizona: Species Composition and Public Health Implications
by
Johnston, Murray A.
, Ruberto, Irene
, Paaijmans, Krijn P.
, Franz, Nico M.
, Townsend, John
, Will, James B.
, Yule, Kelsey M.
, Malone, Adele B.
, Jobe, Ndey Bassin
in
animal reservoirs
/ Animals
/ Aquatic insects
/ Arizona
/ Chikungunya virus
/ Culicidae
/ decision making
/ Dengue fever
/ Drainage districts
/ Encephalitis
/ fauna
/ Health aspects
/ Identification and classification
/ Infectious diseases
/ Introduced species
/ Invasive species
/ irrigation and drainage
/ Malaria
/ medical and veterinary entomology
/ monitoring
/ Mosquitoes
/ New records
/ Public health
/ Review
/ risk
/ Scientists
/ Sonoran desert
/ species
/ Species composition
/ Species diversity
/ spillover effect
/ Surveillance
/ Tropical diseases
/ vector control
/ Vector-borne diseases
/ Vectors
/ West Nile virus
/ Wildlife
/ Zika virus
2024
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The Mosquito Fauna of Arizona: Species Composition and Public Health Implications
Journal Article
The Mosquito Fauna of Arizona: Species Composition and Public Health Implications
2024
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Overview
Arizona is home to many mosquito species, some of which are known vectors of infectious diseases that harm both humans and animals. Here, we provide an overview of the 56 mosquito species that have been identified in the State to date, but also discuss their known feeding preference and the diseases they can (potentially) transmit to humans and animals. This list is unlikely to be complete for several reasons: (i) Arizona’s mosquitoes are not systematically surveyed in many areas, (ii) surveillance efforts often target specific species of interest, and (iii) doubts have been raised by one or more scientists about the accuracy of some collection records, which has been noted in this article. There needs to be an integrated and multifaceted surveillance approach that involves entomologists and epidemiologists, but also social scientists, wildlife ecologists, ornithologists, representatives from the agricultural department, and irrigation and drainage districts. This will allow public health officials to (i) monitor changes in current mosquito species diversity and abundance, (ii) monitor the introduction of new or invasive species, (iii) identify locations or specific populations that are more at risk for mosquito-borne diseases, and (iv) effectively guide vector control.
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