A Comparative Study of Larval Culicid Species at Peach Creek Equestrian Center (College Station, TX)

Authors

  • Brittany Addison Crawford Texas A&M University

Abstract

It has long been noted that mosquitos pose a substantial threat to humans not only in
the United States, but also on an international land. Deemed the most dangerous animals in the
world, the family Culicidae (Diptera) are highly potent vectors of some of the world’s most
deadly diseases including but not limited to Malaria, Chikungunya, Dengue Fever, and Yellow
Fever. Given the overall danger associated with these animals, the study of their populations and
the epidemic potential that they pose is of the utmost importance in global public health. This
study focused on establishing a relative population comparison of the bodies of water at Peach
Creek Equestrian Center, a relatively isolated ranch south of College Station, TX, and found that
the only species discovered in three bodies of water was Psorophora sp. (Diptera, Culicidae).
Key words: vector, Culicidae, public health, survey, comparison

References

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Ragasa, Ephraim, Kaufman, Phillip. 2012. Mosquitoes : Psorophora ciliata. University of

Florida. (http://entomology.ifas.ufl.edu/creatures/AQUATIC/Ps_ciliata.htm)

Trumble, John T. 1943. Studies of the Flight Range of Mosquitoes. Journal of Economic

Entomology. (http://jee.oxfordjournals.org/content/36/1/121)

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Published

2019-01-31