Anopheles barbumbrosus Strickland & Chowdhury, 1927

AUSTRALASIAN, ORIENTAL & PALEARCTIC REGIONS

Family
Subfamily
Genus
Subgenus
Section
Series
Group
Subgroup

 

Etymology: n.s. [shady or dark beard (L)]

Type locality: Possibly Mandailing, Sumatra, and Nusa Kambangan Island (= Noesa Kemba) [Indonesia] (type not designated); Bolseard, Friesland, Holland [Netherlands]

Type depository: Type non-existent (NE)

TAXONOMIC KEYS

Nguyen Thuong Hien 1968 (Vietnam)

Rattanarithikul & Harrison 1973 (Thailand)

Lee et al. 1987b (Australasian Region)

Darsie & Pradhan 1990 (Nepal)

Rattanarithikul et al. 2006b (Thailand)

 

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 (Ano.) Myzorhynchus Series - Indomalaya - Adult

larval key icon

WRBU - Anopheles (Ano.) Myzorhynchus Series - Indomalaya - Larva

Exemplar DNA sequences

All Anopheles barbumbrosus DNA sequences

 

DISTRIBUTION NOTES

Bangladesh, Bhutan, Cambodia, India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Nepal, People’s Republic of China (includes Hainan, Hong Kong), Sri Lanka, Taiwan, Thailand, Timor, Vietnam.

 

IMPORTANT REFERENCES

Strickland & Chowdhury 1927a: 18 (in footnote: new name for pallidus Swellengrebel, not Theobald 1901a)

Chow 1949a: 5 (A)

Bonne-Wepster & Swellengrebel 1953: 212 (M*, F*, L*)

Reid 1962: 29 (M*, F*, P*, L*; distribution)

Wattal et al. 1962: 63 (M*, F*; distribution)

Nguyen Thuong Hien 1968 (F*, L*; keys, taxonomy, bionomics, distribution; Vietnam)

Reid 1968: 140 (distribution)

Rattanarithikul & Harrison 1973 (L; key; Thailand)

Harrison & Klein 1975 (distribution)

Harrison & Scanlon 1975: 102 (M*, F*, P*, L*; distribution)

Ahmed 1987 (distribution; Bangladesh)

Lee et al. 1987b: 47 (F; key, taxonomy, bionomics, distribution, review)

Darsie & Pradhan 1990 (F, L; taxonomy, keys, bionomics, distribution; Nepal)

Whelan & Hapgood 2000 (bionomics, distribution; East Timor)

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

Qu & Zhu 2008 (distribution; China)

Namgay et al. 2018 (bionomics, distribution; Bhutan)

 

CURRENT SYNONYMS

syn. pallidus Swellengrebel

1919: 8 (syntype M*, L?; Myzorhynchus barbirostris variety). Type locality: Possibly Mandailing, Sumatra, and Nusa Kambangan Island (= Noesa Kemba) [Indonesia] (type not designated). References: Townsend 1990: 116 (type information).

syn. pseudumbrosus Haga

1930 (1929): 364 (M, F, L; in key couplets) [Stone, Knight & Starke 1959; Knight & Stone 1977; or Knight 1978b]. Type locality: Bolseard, Friesland, Holland [Netherlands] (NE). References: Ward 1979: 132 (lapsus calami of barbumbrosus; synonymy) [note 5].

 

CURRENT SUBSPECIES

None

 

CITED REFERENCES

Ahmed, T.U. (1987). Checklist of the mosquitoes of Bangladesh. Mosquito Systematics, 19(3), 187–200.

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

Chow, C.Y. (1949a). The anopheline mosquitoes of Taiwan (Formosa), China. Quarterly Journal of the Taiwan Museum, 2(1), 1–8.

Darsie, R.F., Jr., & Pradhan, S.P. (1990). The mosquitoes of Nepal: Their identification, distribution and biology. Mosquito Systematics, 22(2), 69–130.

Haga, J. (1930). Tabellen voor determinatie der in Nederländsch-Oost-Indië voorkomende Anophelinen. Geneeskundig tijdschrift voor Nederlandsch-Indië, 70(for 1929), 363–382.

Harrison, B.A., Scanlon, J.E., & Reid, J.A. (1973). A new synonomy and new species name in the Southeast Asian Anopheles hyrcanus complex. Mosquito Systematics, 5(4), 263–268.

Harrison, B.A., & Klein, J.M. (1975). A revised list of the Anopheles of Cambodia. Mosquito Systematics, 7(1), 11–12.

Harrison, B.A., & Scanlon, J.E. (1975). Medical entomology studies. II. The subgenus Anopheles in Thailand (Diptera: Culicidae). Contributions of the American Entomological Institute, 12(1), iv, 1–307.

Knight, K.L., & Stone, A. (1977). A catalog of the mosquitoes of the world (Diptera: Culicidae) (2nd ed.). Thomas Say Foundation, Entomological Society of America, 6. 

Knight, K.L. (1978b). Supplement to a catalog of the mosquitoes of the world (Diptera: Culicidae). Thomas Say Foundation, Entomological Society of America, 6. 

Lee, D.J., Hicks, M.M., Griffiths, M., Debenham, M.L., Bryan, J.H., Russell, R.C., . . . Marks, E.N. (1987b). The Culicidae of the Australasian Region (Vol. 5). Commonwealth Department of Health, School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine Monograph Series, 2. Canberra: Australian Government.

Namgay, R., Drukpa, T., Wangdi, T., Pemo, D., Harbach, R.E., & Somboon, P. (2018). A checklist of the Anopheles mosquito species (Diptera: Culicidae) in Bhutan. Acta Tropica, 188, 206–212.

Nguyen Thuong Hien. (1968). The genus of Anopheles in Vietnam (Military Entomology Information Service, Trans.) Saigon: Bureau of Entomology, National Malaria Program/Republic of Vietnam.

Qu, F., & Zhu, H. (2008). On a checklist of the anopheline mosquitoes in China with rectification for some specific names. Chinese Journal of Parasitology and Parasitic Diseases, 26(3), 210–216.

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. (1962). The Anopheles barbirostris group (Diptera, Culicidae). Bulletin of Entomological Research, 53(1), 1–57.

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

Strickland, C., & Chowdhury, K.L. (1927a). An illustrated key to the identification of the anopheline larvae of India, Ceylon, and Malaya, west of Wallace’s Line with practical notes on their collection. Calcutta, India: Thacker, Spink.

Swellengrebel, N.H. (1919). Eenige voor Nederl.-Indie nieuwe anophelinen. Geneeskundig tijdschrift voor Nederlandsch Indië-Batavia, 59, 1–12.

Theobald, F.V. (1901a). A monograph of the Culicidae or mosquitoes (Vol. 1). London, England: British Museum (Natural History).

Townsend, B.C. (1990). Culicidae. In B.C. Townsend, J. E. Chainey, R.W. Crosskey, A.C. Pont, R.P. Lane, J.P.T. Boorman, & C.A. Crouch (Eds.), A catalogue of the types of bloodsucking flies in the British Museum (Natural History) (pp. 35–152). London, England: British Museum (Natural History).

Ward, R.A. (1979). Corrections in the nomenclature of three anophelines (Diptera: Culicidae). Mosquito Systematics, 11(2), 130–134.

Wattal, B.L., Kalra, N.L., & Gopal, R.R. (1962). A study of Anopheles barbirostris van der Wulp in the collection of the Malaria Institute of India with first record of A. barbumbrosus Strickland and Chowdhury and A. vanus Walker in India. Indian Journal of Malariology, 16(1), 63–74.

Whelan, P., & Hapgood, G. (2000). A mosquito survey of Dili, East Timor, and implications for disease control. Arbovirus Research in Australia, 8, 405–416.

 

CITE THIS PAGE

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