Anopheles hackeri Edwards, 1921

INDOMALAYAN REGION

Family
Subfamily
Genus
Subgenus
Series
Group
Subgroup

 

Etymology: Henry Pollard Hacker

Type locality: Malaya [Malaysia]

Type depository: Natural History Museum, London, England, United Kingdom (NHMUK)

TAXONOMIC KEYS

Rattanarithikul & Harrison 1973

Rattanarithikul et al. 2006b

WRBU LUCID KEYS

 

 adult mosquito key icon

WRBU - Genera - Global - Adult

 larval key icon

WRBU - Genera - Global - Larva

 adult mosquito key icon

WRBU - Genera - Indomalaya - Adult

 larval key icon

WRBU - Genera - Indomalaya - Larva

adult mosquito key icon

WRBU - Genera - Oriental - Adult

larval key icon

WRBU - Genera - Oriental - Larva

adult mosquito key icon

WRBU - Anopheles Subgenera and Series - Indomalaya - Adult

larval key icon

WRBU - Anopheles Subgenera and Series - Indomalaya - Larva

adult mosquito key icon

WRBU - Anopheles Subgenera and Series - Oriental - Adult

larval key icon

WRBU - Anopheles Subgenera and Series - Oriental - Larva

adult mosquito key icon

WRBU - Anopheles (Cel.) Neomyzomyia Series - Indomalaya - Adult

larval key icon

WRBU - Anopheles (Cel.) Neomyzomyia Series - Indomalaya - Larva

adult mosquito key icon

WRBU - Anopheles (Cel.) Neomyzomyia Series - Oriental - Adult

larval key icon

WRBU - Anopheles (Cel.) Neomyzomyia Series - Oriental - Larva

Exemplar DNA sequences

All Anopheles hackeri DNA sequences

Associated Pathogens

 

DISTRIBUTION NOTES

Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Thailand.

 

IMPORTANT REFERENCES

Edwards 1921c: 70 (F; leucosphyrus variety)

Bonne-Wepster & Swellengrebel 1953: 295 (to species)

Colless 1956: 78 (M, F*, P*, L*, E)

Reid 1968: 300 (M, F*, P*, L*, E; taxonomy)

Rattanarithikul & Harrison 1973 (L*; key; Thailand)

Sallum et al. 2005: 67 (M*, F*, P*, L*; distribution)

Rattanarithikul et al. 2006b (F*, L*; bionomics, distribution, keys)

 

CURRENT SYNONYMS

None

 

CURRENT SUBSPECIES

None

 

CITED REFERENCES

Bonne-Wepster, J., & Swellengrebel, N.H. (1953). The anopheline mosquitoes of the Indo-Australian Region. Amsterdam, The Netherlands: de Bussy.

Colless, D.H. (1956). The Anopheles leucosphyrus group. Transactions of the Royal Entomological Society of London, 108(3), 37–116.

Edwards, F.W. (1921c). Mosquito notes. II. Bulletin of Entomological Research, 12(1), 69–80.

Rattanarithikul, R., & Harrison, B.A. (1973). An illustrated key to the Anopheles larvae of Thailand. US Army Medical Component, SEATO, Bangkok, Thailand.

Rattanarithikul, R., Harrison, B.A., Harbach, R.E., Panthusiri, P., & Coleman, R.E. (2006b). Illustrated keys to the mosquitoes of Thailand. IV. Anopheles. Southeast Asian Journal of Tropical Medicine and Public Health, 128(Suppl. 2), 2.

Reid, J.A. (1968). Anopheline mosquitoes of Malaya and Borneo. Studies from the Institute for Medical Research Malaysia, 31, 1–520.

Sallum, M.A.M., Peyton, EL, & Wilkerson, R.C. (2005a). Six new species of the Anopheles leucosphyrus group, reinterpretation of An. elegans and vector implications. Medical and Veterinary Entomology, 19, 158–199.

 

CITE THIS PAGE

Walter Reed Biosystematics Unit (Year). Anopheles hackeri species page. Walter Reed Biosystematics Unit Website, http://wrbu.si.edu/vectorspecies/mosquitoes/hackeri, accessed on [date (e.g. 03 February 2020) when you last viewed the site].