Taxonomy of Anopheles
Encyclopedia
Anopheles
is a genus
of mosquito
(Culicidae). There are approximately 484 recognised species: while over 100 can transmit human malaria, only 30-40 commonly transmit parasites of the genus Plasmodium
that cause malaria
which affects humans in endemic
areas. Anopheles gambiae
is one of the best known, because of its predominant role in the transmission of the deadly species - Plasmodium falciparum
.
The genus Anopheles
belongs to a subfamily Anophelinae with three genera: Anopheles Meigen (nearly worldwide distribution), Bironella Theobald (Australia
only: 11 described species) and Chagasia Cruz (Neotropics: 4 described species). The genus Bironella itself has been divided into three subgenera: Bironella Theobald (2 species), Brugella Edwards (3 species) and Neobironella Tenorio (3 species). Bironella appears to be the sister taxon to the Anopheles with Chagasia forming the outgroup in this subfamily.
The type species of the genus is Anopheles maculipennis Meigen 1818.
genitalia. The system of subgenera originated with the work of Christophers who in 1915 described three subgenera: Anopheles
(widely distributed), Myzomyia (later renamed Cellia) (Old World
) and Nyssorhynchus
(Neotropical). Nyssorhynchus was first described as Lavernia by Theobald. Edwards in 1932 added the subgenus Stethomyia
(Neotropical distribution). Kerteszia was also described by Edwards in 1932 but then recognised as a subgrouping of Nyssorhynchus. It was elevated to subgenus status by Komp in 1937: this subgenus is also found in the Neotropics. Two additional subgenera have since been recognised: Baimaia (Southeast Asia only) by Harbach et al. in 2005 and Lophopodomyia (Neotropical) by Antunes in 1937.
One species within each subgenus has been identified as the type species of that particular subgenus:
Within the genus Anopheles there are two main groupings: one formed by the Cellia and Anopheles subgenera and a second by Kerteszia, Lophopodomyia and Nyssorhynchus. Subgenus Stethomyia is an outlier with respect to these two taxa. Within the second group Kerteszia and Nyssorhynchus appear to be sister taxa. Cellia appears to be more closely related to the Kerteszia-Lophopodomyia-Nyssorhynchus group than to Anopheles or Stethomyia tentatively suggesting the following branching order: ( Stethomyia ( Anopheles ( Cellia ( Lophopodomyia ( Kerteszia, Nyssorhynchus))))).
The number of species currently recognised within the subgenera is given here in parentheses: Anopheles (206 species), Baimaia (1), Cellia (239), Kerteszia (12), Lophopodomyia (6), Nyssorhynchus (34) and Stethomyia (5).
The subgeus Baimaia may be elevated to genus level as it appears to be a sister group to Bironella and all other Anopheles.
The ancestors of Drosophila
and Anopheles diverged . The Old and New World Anopheles species subsequently diverged between 80 and .
The first species complex was described in 1926 when the problem of non trasnmission of whom the malaria by Anopheles gambiae
was solved by Falleroni who recognised that An. gambiae was a complex of 6 species of which only 4 could transmit malaria. This complex has subsequently been revised to a total of seven species of which five transmit malaria.
Subgenus Nyssorhynchus has been divided in three sections: Albimanus (19 species), Argyritarsis (11 species) and Myzorhynchella (4 species). The Argyritarsis section has been sub divided into Albitarsis and Argyritarsis groups.
The Anopheles Group was divided by Edwards into four series: Anopheles (worldwide), Myzorhynchus (Palearctic, Oriental, Australasian and Afrotropical), Cycloleppteron (Neotropical) and Lophoscelomyia (Oriental); and two groups, Arribalzagia (Neotropical) and Christya (Afrotropical). Reid and Knight (1961) modified this classification by subdividing the subgenus Anopheles into two sections, Angusticorn and Laticorn and six series. The division was based on the shape of the pupa
l trumpet
. The Laticorn Section was created for those species with a wide funnel-shaped trumpet having the longest axis transverse to the stem and the Angusticorn Section for species with a semi-tubular trumpet having the longest axis vertical more or less in line with the stem. The earlier Arribalzagia and Christya Groups were considered to be series. The Angusticorn Section includes members of the Anopheles, Cycloleppteron and Lophoscelomyia Series and the Laticorn Section includes the Arribalzagia (24 species), Christya and Myzorhynchus Series.
Cellia is the largest subgenus: all species within this subgenus are found in the Old World. It has been divided into six series - Cellia (8 species), Myzomyia (69 species), Neocellia (33 species), Neomyzomyia (99 species), Paramyzomyia (6 species) and Pyretophorus (22 species). This classification was developed by Grjebine (in 1966), Reid (in 1968) and Gillies & de Meillon (also in 1968) based on the work by Edwards in 1932. Series definition within this subgenus is based on the cibarial armature - a collection of specialized spicules borne ventrally at the posterior margin of the cibarium - which was first used as a taxonomic method by Christophers in 1933.
Kerteszia is a small subgenus found in South America
whose larvae have specific ecological requirements: these can only delevop within water that accumulates at the base of the follicular axis of the epiphytic Bromeliaceae
. Unlike the majority of mosquitoes, species in this subgenus are active during the day.
Within a number of species, separate subspecies have been identified.
The diagnostic criteria and characteristic features of each subgenus are discussed on the own page.
and Venezuela
and the another occurring in the Amazon Basin
. These clades appear to have diverged and expanded in the Pleistocene
.
, a British physician win working in China
showed that a Culex
species could transmit filariasis
in 1878. This was then followed in 1897 by Ronald Ross who showed avian malaria could also be transmitted by a species of Culex
. Grassi in Italy showed that the species causing human malaria were transmitted by species of the genus Anopheles
in 1898. It was later realised that only a small number of species of mosquitoes were responsible for the vast majority of human malaria and other diseases. This generated a considerable interest in the taxonomy of this and other mosquito genera.
The species of the subgenera Baimaia, Lophopodomyia and Stethomyia are not of medical importance.
All species within the subgenus Anopheles known to carry human malaria lie within either the Myzorhynchus or the Anopheles Series. Anopheles maculipennis s.l. is a known vector of West Nile virus
.
Six species in the subgenus Kerteszia can carry human malaria. Of these only two (Anopheles bellator and Anopheles cruzii) are of importance. Anopheles bellator can also transmit Wuchereria bancrofti
.
Several species of the subgenus Nyssorhynchus are of medical importance.
All series of the subgenus Cellia contain vectors of malarial protozoa and microfilariae.
Five species of anopheline mosquitoes (Anopheles arabiensis, Anopheles funestus, Anopheles gambiae, Anopheles moucheti, Anopheles nili) all belonging to the subgenus Cellia are responsible for over 95% of total malaria transmission for Plasmodium falciparum
in continental sub-Saharan Africa
.
Anopheles sundaicus and Anopheles subpictus are important vectors of Plasmodium vivax
.
Species that have been shown to be vectors of human malaria are marked with a star (*) after the name.
Subgenus Anopheles
Series Cellia (Christophers 1924)
Series Myzomyia
Series Neocellia (Christophers 1924)
Series Neomyzomyia (Christophers 1924)
Series Paramyzomyia (Christophers & Barraud 1931)
Series Pyretophorus (Blanchard 1902)
Note: Anopheles cruzii is known to be a species complex but the number species in this complex has yet to be finalised.
Subgenus Nyssorhynchus
Subgenus Stethomyia
Anopheles
Anopheles is a genus of mosquito. There are approximately 460 recognized species: while over 100 can transmit human malaria, only 30–40 commonly transmit parasites of the genus Plasmodium, which cause malaria in humans in endemic areas...
is a genus
Genus
In biology, a genus is a low-level taxonomic rank used in the biological classification of living and fossil organisms, which is an example of definition by genus and differentia...
of mosquito
Mosquito
Mosquitoes are members of a family of nematocerid flies: the Culicidae . The word Mosquito is from the Spanish and Portuguese for little fly...
(Culicidae). There are approximately 484 recognised species: while over 100 can transmit human malaria, only 30-40 commonly transmit parasites of the genus Plasmodium
Plasmodium
Plasmodium is a genus of parasitic protists. Infection by these organisms is known as malaria. The genus Plasmodium was described in 1885 by Ettore Marchiafava and Angelo Celli. Currently over 200 species of this genus are recognized and new species continue to be described.Of the over 200 known...
that cause malaria
Malaria
Malaria is a mosquito-borne infectious disease of humans and other animals caused by eukaryotic protists of the genus Plasmodium. The disease results from the multiplication of Plasmodium parasites within red blood cells, causing symptoms that typically include fever and headache, in severe cases...
which affects humans in endemic
Endemic (ecology)
Endemism is the ecological state of being unique to a defined geographic location, such as an island, nation or other defined zone, or habitat type; organisms that are indigenous to a place are not endemic to it if they are also found elsewhere. For example, all species of lemur are endemic to the...
areas. Anopheles gambiae
Anopheles gambiae
Anopheles gambiae is a complex of at least seven morphologically distinguishable species of mosquitoes in the genus Anopheles. This complex was recognised in the 1960s and includes the most important vectors of malaria in sub-Saharan Africa and the most efficient malaria vectors known.This species...
is one of the best known, because of its predominant role in the transmission of the deadly species - Plasmodium falciparum
Plasmodium falciparum
Plasmodium falciparum is a protozoan parasite, one of the species of Plasmodium that cause malaria in humans. It is transmitted by the female Anopheles mosquito. Malaria caused by this species is the most dangerous form of malaria, with the highest rates of complications and mortality...
.
Classification
The classification of this genus began in 1901 with Theobald. Despite the passage of time the taxonomy remains incompletely settled. Classification into species is based on morphological characteristics - wing spots, head anatomy, larval and pupal anatomy, chromosome structure - and more recently on DNA sequences.The genus Anopheles
Anopheles
Anopheles is a genus of mosquito. There are approximately 460 recognized species: while over 100 can transmit human malaria, only 30–40 commonly transmit parasites of the genus Plasmodium, which cause malaria in humans in endemic areas...
belongs to a subfamily Anophelinae with three genera: Anopheles Meigen (nearly worldwide distribution), Bironella Theobald (Australia
Australia
Australia , officially the Commonwealth of Australia, is a country in the Southern Hemisphere comprising the mainland of the Australian continent, the island of Tasmania, and numerous smaller islands in the Indian and Pacific Oceans. It is the world's sixth-largest country by total area...
only: 11 described species) and Chagasia Cruz (Neotropics: 4 described species). The genus Bironella itself has been divided into three subgenera: Bironella Theobald (2 species), Brugella Edwards (3 species) and Neobironella Tenorio (3 species). Bironella appears to be the sister taxon to the Anopheles with Chagasia forming the outgroup in this subfamily.
The type species of the genus is Anopheles maculipennis Meigen 1818.
Subgenera
The genus itself has been subdivided into seven subgenera based primarily on the number and positions of specialized setae on the gonocoxites of the maleMale
Male refers to the biological sex of an organism, or part of an organism, which produces small mobile gametes, called spermatozoa. Each spermatozoon can fuse with a larger female gamete or ovum, in the process of fertilization...
genitalia. The system of subgenera originated with the work of Christophers who in 1915 described three subgenera: Anopheles
Anopheles
Anopheles is a genus of mosquito. There are approximately 460 recognized species: while over 100 can transmit human malaria, only 30–40 commonly transmit parasites of the genus Plasmodium, which cause malaria in humans in endemic areas...
(widely distributed), Myzomyia (later renamed Cellia) (Old World
Old World
The Old World consists of those parts of the world known to classical antiquity and the European Middle Ages. It is used in the context of, and contrast with, the "New World" ....
) and Nyssorhynchus
Nyssorhynchus
Nyssorhynchus is an extinct subgenus of the genus Plasmodium.There is one known species in this genus - Plasmodium dominicana. It was identified from Dominican amber....
(Neotropical). Nyssorhynchus was first described as Lavernia by Theobald. Edwards in 1932 added the subgenus Stethomyia
Stethomyia
Stethomyia is a subgenus of the mosquito genus Anopheles. The type species is Anopheles nimbus Theobald 1902. There are five species in this subgenus.-Phylogeny:...
(Neotropical distribution). Kerteszia was also described by Edwards in 1932 but then recognised as a subgrouping of Nyssorhynchus. It was elevated to subgenus status by Komp in 1937: this subgenus is also found in the Neotropics. Two additional subgenera have since been recognised: Baimaia (Southeast Asia only) by Harbach et al. in 2005 and Lophopodomyia (Neotropical) by Antunes in 1937.
One species within each subgenus has been identified as the type species of that particular subgenus:
- Subgenus Anopheles - Anopheles maculipennis Meigen 1818
- Subgenus Baimaia - Anopheles kyondawensis Abraham 1947
- Subgenus Cellia - Anopheles pharoensis Giles 1899
- Subgenus Kerteszia - Anopheles boliviensis Theobald 1905
- Subgenus Lophopodomyia - Anopheles squamifemur Antunes 1937
- Subgenus Nyssorhynchus - Anopheles argyritarsis Robineau-Desvoidy 1827
- Subgenus Stethomyia - Anopheles nimbus Theobald 1902
Within the genus Anopheles there are two main groupings: one formed by the Cellia and Anopheles subgenera and a second by Kerteszia, Lophopodomyia and Nyssorhynchus. Subgenus Stethomyia is an outlier with respect to these two taxa. Within the second group Kerteszia and Nyssorhynchus appear to be sister taxa. Cellia appears to be more closely related to the Kerteszia-Lophopodomyia-Nyssorhynchus group than to Anopheles or Stethomyia tentatively suggesting the following branching order: ( Stethomyia ( Anopheles ( Cellia ( Lophopodomyia ( Kerteszia, Nyssorhynchus))))).
The number of species currently recognised within the subgenera is given here in parentheses: Anopheles (206 species), Baimaia (1), Cellia (239), Kerteszia (12), Lophopodomyia (6), Nyssorhynchus (34) and Stethomyia (5).
The subgeus Baimaia may be elevated to genus level as it appears to be a sister group to Bironella and all other Anopheles.
The ancestors of Drosophila
Drosophila
Drosophila is a genus of small flies, belonging to the family Drosophilidae, whose members are often called "fruit flies" or more appropriately pomace flies, vinegar flies, or wine flies, a reference to the characteristic of many species to linger around overripe or rotting fruit...
and Anopheles diverged . The Old and New World Anopheles species subsequently diverged between 80 and .
Divisions below subgenus
Taxonomic units between subgenus and species are not currently recognised as official zoological names. In practice a number of taxonomic levels have been introduced. The larger subgenera (Anopheles, Cellia and Nyssorhynchus) have been subdivided into sections and series which in turn have been divided into groups and subgroups. Below subgroup but above species level is the species complex. Taxonomic levels above species complex can be distinguished on morphological grounds. Species within a species complex are either morphologically identical or extremely similar and can only be reliably separated by microscopic examination of the chromosomes or DNA sequencing. The classification continues to be revised.The first species complex was described in 1926 when the problem of non trasnmission of whom the malaria by Anopheles gambiae
Anopheles gambiae
Anopheles gambiae is a complex of at least seven morphologically distinguishable species of mosquitoes in the genus Anopheles. This complex was recognised in the 1960s and includes the most important vectors of malaria in sub-Saharan Africa and the most efficient malaria vectors known.This species...
was solved by Falleroni who recognised that An. gambiae was a complex of 6 species of which only 4 could transmit malaria. This complex has subsequently been revised to a total of seven species of which five transmit malaria.
Subgenus Nyssorhynchus has been divided in three sections: Albimanus (19 species), Argyritarsis (11 species) and Myzorhynchella (4 species). The Argyritarsis section has been sub divided into Albitarsis and Argyritarsis groups.
The Anopheles Group was divided by Edwards into four series: Anopheles (worldwide), Myzorhynchus (Palearctic, Oriental, Australasian and Afrotropical), Cycloleppteron (Neotropical) and Lophoscelomyia (Oriental); and two groups, Arribalzagia (Neotropical) and Christya (Afrotropical). Reid and Knight (1961) modified this classification by subdividing the subgenus Anopheles into two sections, Angusticorn and Laticorn and six series. The division was based on the shape of the pupa
Pupa
A pupa is the life stage of some insects undergoing transformation. The pupal stage is found only in holometabolous insects, those that undergo a complete metamorphosis, going through four life stages; embryo, larva, pupa and imago...
l trumpet
Trumpet
The trumpet is the musical instrument with the highest register in the brass family. Trumpets are among the oldest musical instruments, dating back to at least 1500 BCE. They are played by blowing air through closed lips, producing a "buzzing" sound which starts a standing wave vibration in the air...
. The Laticorn Section was created for those species with a wide funnel-shaped trumpet having the longest axis transverse to the stem and the Angusticorn Section for species with a semi-tubular trumpet having the longest axis vertical more or less in line with the stem. The earlier Arribalzagia and Christya Groups were considered to be series. The Angusticorn Section includes members of the Anopheles, Cycloleppteron and Lophoscelomyia Series and the Laticorn Section includes the Arribalzagia (24 species), Christya and Myzorhynchus Series.
Cellia is the largest subgenus: all species within this subgenus are found in the Old World. It has been divided into six series - Cellia (8 species), Myzomyia (69 species), Neocellia (33 species), Neomyzomyia (99 species), Paramyzomyia (6 species) and Pyretophorus (22 species). This classification was developed by Grjebine (in 1966), Reid (in 1968) and Gillies & de Meillon (also in 1968) based on the work by Edwards in 1932. Series definition within this subgenus is based on the cibarial armature - a collection of specialized spicules borne ventrally at the posterior margin of the cibarium - which was first used as a taxonomic method by Christophers in 1933.
Kerteszia is a small subgenus found in South America
South America
South America is a continent situated in the Western Hemisphere, mostly in the Southern Hemisphere, with a relatively small portion in the Northern Hemisphere. The continent is also considered a subcontinent of the Americas. It is bordered on the west by the Pacific Ocean and on the north and east...
whose larvae have specific ecological requirements: these can only delevop within water that accumulates at the base of the follicular axis of the epiphytic Bromeliaceae
Bromeliaceae
Bromeliaceae is a family of monocot flowering plants of around 3,170 species native mainly to the tropical Americas, with a few species found in the American subtropics and one in tropical west Africa, Pitcairnia feliciana...
. Unlike the majority of mosquitoes, species in this subgenus are active during the day.
Within a number of species, separate subspecies have been identified.
The diagnostic criteria and characteristic features of each subgenus are discussed on the own page.
Species complexes
Anopheles nuneztovari is a species complex with at least one occurring in ColombiaColombia
Colombia, officially the Republic of Colombia , is a unitary constitutional republic comprising thirty-two departments. The country is located in northwestern South America, bordered to the east by Venezuela and Brazil; to the south by Ecuador and Peru; to the north by the Caribbean Sea; to the...
and Venezuela
Venezuela
Venezuela , officially called the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela , is a tropical country on the northern coast of South America. It borders Colombia to the west, Guyana to the east, and Brazil to the south...
and the another occurring in the Amazon Basin
Amazon Basin
The Amazon Basin is the part of South America drained by the Amazon River and its tributaries that drains an area of about , or roughly 40 percent of South America. The basin is located in the countries of Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Guyana, Peru, and Venezuela...
. These clades appear to have diverged and expanded in the Pleistocene
Pleistocene
The Pleistocene is the epoch from 2,588,000 to 11,700 years BP that spans the world's recent period of repeated glaciations. The name pleistocene is derived from the Greek and ....
.
Medical and Veterinary importance
The first demonstration that mosquitoes could act as vectors of disease was by Patrick MansonPatrick Manson
Sir Patrick Manson was a Scottish physician who made important discoveries in parasitology and was the founder of the tropical medicine field....
, a British physician win working in China
China
Chinese civilization may refer to:* China for more general discussion of the country.* Chinese culture* Greater China, the transnational community of ethnic Chinese.* History of China* Sinosphere, the area historically affected by Chinese culture...
showed that a Culex
Culex
Culex is a genus of mosquito, and is important in that several species serve as vectors of important diseases, such as West Nile virus, filariasis, Japanese encephalitis, St. Louis encephalitis and avian malaria....
species could transmit filariasis
Filariasis
Filariasis is a parasitic disease and is considered an infectious tropical disease, that is caused by thread-like nematodes belonging to the superfamily Filarioidea, also known as "filariae"....
in 1878. This was then followed in 1897 by Ronald Ross who showed avian malaria could also be transmitted by a species of Culex
Culex
Culex is a genus of mosquito, and is important in that several species serve as vectors of important diseases, such as West Nile virus, filariasis, Japanese encephalitis, St. Louis encephalitis and avian malaria....
. Grassi in Italy showed that the species causing human malaria were transmitted by species of the genus Anopheles
Anopheles
Anopheles is a genus of mosquito. There are approximately 460 recognized species: while over 100 can transmit human malaria, only 30–40 commonly transmit parasites of the genus Plasmodium, which cause malaria in humans in endemic areas...
in 1898. It was later realised that only a small number of species of mosquitoes were responsible for the vast majority of human malaria and other diseases. This generated a considerable interest in the taxonomy of this and other mosquito genera.
The species of the subgenera Baimaia, Lophopodomyia and Stethomyia are not of medical importance.
All species within the subgenus Anopheles known to carry human malaria lie within either the Myzorhynchus or the Anopheles Series. Anopheles maculipennis s.l. is a known vector of West Nile virus
West Nile virus
West Nile virus is a virus of the family Flaviviridae. Part of the Japanese encephalitis antigenic complex of viruses, it is found in both tropical and temperate regions. It mainly infects birds, but is known to infect humans, horses, dogs, cats, bats, chipmunks, skunks, squirrels, domestic...
.
Six species in the subgenus Kerteszia can carry human malaria. Of these only two (Anopheles bellator and Anopheles cruzii) are of importance. Anopheles bellator can also transmit Wuchereria bancrofti
Wuchereria bancrofti
Filaria, is a parasitic filarial nematode spread by a mosquito vector. It is one of the three parasites that cause lymphatic filariasis, an infection of the lymphatic system by filarial worms. It affects over 120 million people, primarily in Africa, South America, and other tropical and...
.
Several species of the subgenus Nyssorhynchus are of medical importance.
All series of the subgenus Cellia contain vectors of malarial protozoa and microfilariae.
Five species of anopheline mosquitoes (Anopheles arabiensis, Anopheles funestus, Anopheles gambiae, Anopheles moucheti, Anopheles nili) all belonging to the subgenus Cellia are responsible for over 95% of total malaria transmission for Plasmodium falciparum
Plasmodium falciparum
Plasmodium falciparum is a protozoan parasite, one of the species of Plasmodium that cause malaria in humans. It is transmitted by the female Anopheles mosquito. Malaria caused by this species is the most dangerous form of malaria, with the highest rates of complications and mortality...
in continental sub-Saharan Africa
Africa
Africa is the world's second largest and second most populous continent, after Asia. At about 30.2 million km² including adjacent islands, it covers 6% of the Earth's total surface area and 20.4% of the total land area...
.
Anopheles sundaicus and Anopheles subpictus are important vectors of Plasmodium vivax
Plasmodium vivax
Plasmodium vivax is a protozoal parasite and a human pathogen. The most frequent and widely distributed cause of recurring malaria, P. vivax is one of the four species of malarial parasite that commonly infect humans. It is less virulent than Plasmodium falciparum, which is the deadliest of the...
.
Species that have been shown to be vectors of human malaria are marked with a star (*) after the name.
Subgenus AnophelesAnophelesAnopheles is a genus of mosquito. There are approximately 460 recognized species: while over 100 can transmit human malaria, only 30–40 commonly transmit parasites of the genus Plasmodium, which cause malaria in humans in endemic areas...
- Anopheles anthropophagus* Xu & Feng 1975
- Anopheles confusa Bonne-Wepster 1951
- Anopheles derooki Soesilo & Van Slooten 1931
- Anopheles gracilis Theobald 1905
- Anopheles hollandi Taylor 1934
- Anopheles obscura Tenorio 1975
- Anopheles papuae Swellengrebel & Swellengrebel de Graaf 1919
- Anopheles simmondsi Tenorio 1977
- Anopheles travestita Brug 1928
- Section Angusticorn
-
- Series AnophelesAnophelesAnopheles is a genus of mosquito. There are approximately 460 recognized species: while over 100 can transmit human malaria, only 30–40 commonly transmit parasites of the genus Plasmodium, which cause malaria in humans in endemic areas...
- Series Anopheles
-
-
- Anopheles algeriensis Theobald 1903
- Anopheles concolor Edwards 1938
- Anopheles marteri Senevet & Prunnelle 1927
- subspecies marteri
- subspecies sogdianus Keshishian
-
-
-
- Complex Claviger (Coluzzi et al. 1965)
- Anopheles claviger* Meigen 1804
- Anopheles petragnani Del Vecchio 1939
- Complex Claviger (Coluzzi et al. 1965)
-
-
-
- Group Aitkenii (Reid & Knight, 1961)
-
-
-
-
- Anopheles aberrans Harrison & Scanlon 1975
- Anopheles acaci Baisas 1946
- Anopheles aitkenii James 1903
- Anopheles bengalensis Puri 1930
- Anopheles borneensis McArthur 1949
- Anopheles fragilis Theobald 1903
- Anopheles insulaeflorum Swellengrebel & Swellengrebel de Graaf 1919
- Anopheles palmatus Rodenwaldt 1926
- Anopheles peytoni Kulasekera Harrison & Amerasinghe 1989
- Anopheles pilinotum Harrison & Scanlon 1974
- Anopheles pinjaurensis Barraud 1932
- Anopheles stricklandi Reid 1965
- Anopheles tigertti Scanlon & Peyton 1967
-
-
-
-
- Group Alongensis (Phan et al. 1991)
-
-
-
-
- Anopheles alongensis Evenhuis 1940
- Anopheles cucphuongensis Phan, Manh, Hinh & Vien 1991
-
-
-
-
- Group Atratipes (Lee et al 1987)
- Anopheles atratipes Skuse 1889
- Anopheles tasmaniensis Dobrowtorsky 1966
- Group Atratipes (Lee et al 1987)
-
-
-
- Group Culiciformis (Reid & Knight 1961)
-
-
-
-
- Anopheles culiciformis Cogill 1903
- Anopheles sintoni Puri 1929
- Anopheles sintonoides Ho 1938
-
-
-
-
- Group Lindesayi (Reid & Knight 1961)
-
-
-
-
-
- Anopheles mengalengensis Ma 1981
- Anopheles nilgiricus Christophers 1924
- Anopheles wellingtonianus Alcock 1912
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Complex GigasGigasGigas is a popular term for races of giants in fantasy games. Gigas is a Greek word meaning "giant", originally used to describe the race of Gigantes in Greek mythology and is used in the scientific name, as the specific epithet, of hundreds species of animals and dozens of plant species to denote...
(Harrison et al. 1991)- Anopheles baileyi Edwards 1923
- Anopheles gigas Giles 1901
- subspecies crockeri Colless
- subspecies danaubento Mochtar & Walandouw
- subspecies formosus Ludlow
- subspecies gigasGigasGigas is a popular term for races of giants in fantasy games. Gigas is a Greek word meaning "giant", originally used to describe the race of Gigantes in Greek mythology and is used in the scientific name, as the specific epithet, of hundreds species of animals and dozens of plant species to denote...
Giles - subspecies oedjalikalah Nainggolan
- subspecies pantjarbatu Waktoedi
- subspecies refutans Alcock
- subspecies simlensis James
- subspecies sumatrana Swellengrebel & Rodenwaldt
- Complex Gigas
-
-
-
-
-
- Complex Lindesayi (Harrison et al 1991)
- Anopheles lindesayi Giles 1900
- subspecies benguetensis King
- subspecies cameronensis Edwards
- subspecies japonicus Yamada
- subspecies lindesayi Giles
- subspecies pleccau Koidzumi
- Anopheles lindesayi Giles 1900
- Complex Lindesayi (Harrison et al 1991)
-
-
-
-
- Group Maculipennis (Reid & Knight 1961)
-
-
-
-
- Anopheles atropos Dyar & Knab 1906
- Anopheles aztecus Hoffmann 1935
- Anopheles lewisi Ludlow 1920
- Anopheles walkeriAnopheles walkeriAnopheles walkeri is a species of mosquito found across North America. It was described in 1901 by Frederick Vincent Theobald, based on material collected by E. M. Walker at Lake Simcoe in Ontario ....
Theobald 1901
-
-
-
-
-
- Complex Quadrimaculatus (Linton 2004)
- Anopheles diluvialis Reinert 1997
- Anopheles inundatus Reinert 1997
- Anopheles maverlius Reinert 1997
- Anopheles smaragdinus Reinert 1997
- Anopheles quadrimaculatus* Say 1824
- Complex Quadrimaculatus (Linton 2004)
-
-
-
-
-
- Subgroup Freeborni (Linton 2004)
- Anopheles earleiAnopheles earleiAnopheles earlei is a small insect found throughout North America. The Anopheles earlei larvae are found in cold, clear water in ponds and other small bodies of water that contain plant life or vegetation.-References:* *...
Vargas 1943 - Anopheles freeborni* Aitken 1939
- Anopheles hermsi Barr & Guptavanij 1989
- Anopheles earlei
- Subgroup Freeborni (Linton 2004)
-
-
-
-
-
- Subgroup Maculipennis (Linton 2004)
- Anopheles artemievi Gordeyev, Zvantsov, Goryacheva, Shaikevich & Yezhov
- Anopheles atroparvus* Van Thiel 1927
- Anopheles beklemishevi Stegnii & Kabanova 1976
- Anopheles daciae Linton, Nicolescu & Harbach 2004
- Anopheles labranchiae* Falleroni 1926
- Anopheles maculipennis Meigen 1818
- Anopheles martinius Shingarev 1926
- Anopheles melanoon* Hackett 1934
- Anopheles messeae* Falleroni 1926
- Anopheles occidentalis Dyar & Knab 1906
- Anopheles persiensis Linton, Sedaghat & Harbach
- Anopheles sacharovi* Favre 1903
- Anopheles sicaulti Roubaud 1935
- Anopheles subalpinus Hackett & Lewis 1935
- Subgroup Maculipennis (Linton 2004)
-
-
-
-
- Group Plumbeus (Reid & Knight 1961)
-
-
-
-
- Anopheles arboricola Zavortink 1970
- Anopheles barberiAnopheles barberiAnopheles barberi is a tree hole breeding mosquito in eastern North America. The larvae are predators of other mosquito larvae. It has been shown to be a vector of malaria in the laboratory, but it is not thought to be an important malaria vector in the wild.* *...
Coquillett 1903 - Anopheles barianensis James 1911
- Anopheles fausti Vargas 1943
- Anopheles judithae Zavortink 1969
- Anopheles omorii Sakakibara 1959
- Anopheles plumbeus Stegnii & Kabanova 1828
- Anopheles powderi Zavortink 1970
- Anopheles xelajuensis De Leon 1938
-
-
-
-
- Group Pseudopunctipennis (Reid & Knight 1961)
-
-
-
-
- Anopheles chiriquiensis Komp 1936
- Anopheles franciscanus McCracken 1904
- Anopheles hectoris Giaquinto-Mira 1931
- Anopheles tibiamaculatus Neiva 1906
-
-
-
-
-
- Anopheles eiseni Coquillett 1902
- subspecies eiseni Coquillett
- subspecies geometricus Corrêa
- Anopheles eiseni Coquillett 1902
-
-
-
-
-
- Anopheles parapunctipennis* Martini 1932
- subspecies guatemalensis de Leon
- subspecies parapunctipennis Martini
- Anopheles parapunctipennis* Martini 1932
-
-
-
-
-
- Anopheles pseudopunctipennis Theobald 1901
- subspecies levicastilloi Levi-Castillo
- subspecies neghmei Mann
- subspecies noei Mann
- subspecies patersoni Alvarado & Heredia
- subspecies pseudopunctipennis Theobald
- subspecies rivadeneirai Levi-Castillo
- Anopheles pseudopunctipennis Theobald 1901
-
-
-
-
- Group Punctipennis (Reid & Knight 1961)
-
-
-
-
- Anopheles perplexens Ludlow 1907
- Anopheles punctipennisAnopheles punctipennis*...
Say 1823
-
-
-
-
-
- Complex Crucians (Wilkerson et al 2004)
- Anopheles bradleyi King 1939
- Anopheles cruciansAnopheles cruciansAnopheles crucians is a mosquito that breeds in semipermanent and permanent pools, ponds, lakes and swamps. It may be a vector for malaria.* *...
Wiedemann 1828 - Anopheles georgianus King 1939
- Complex Crucians (Wilkerson et al 2004)
-
-
-
-
- Group Stigmaticus (Reid & Knight 1961)
- Anopheles colledgei Marks 1956
- Anopheles corethroides Theobald 1907
- Anopheles papuensis Dobrowtorsky 1957
- Anopheles powelli Lee 1944
- Anopheles pseudostigmaticus Dobrowtorsky 1957
- Anopheles stigmaticus Skuse 1889
- Group Stigmaticus (Reid & Knight 1961)
-
-
- Series Cycloleppteron (Edwards 1932)
-
-
- Anopheles annulipalpis Lynch 1878
- Anopheles grabhamii Theobald 1901
-
-
- Series Lophoscelomyia (Edwards 1932)
-
-
- Anopheles bulkleyi Causey 1937
-
-
-
- Group Asiaticus (Reid 1968)
- Anopheles annandalei Prashad 1918
- Anopheles noniae Reid 1963
- Group Asiaticus (Reid 1968)
-
-
-
-
- Subgroup Asiaticus (Rattanarithikul et al 2004)
- Anopheles asiaticus Leicester 1903
- Subgroup Asiaticus (Rattanarithikul et al 2004)
-
-
-
-
-
- Subgroup Interruptus (Rattanarithikul et al 2004)
- Anopheles interruptus Puri 1929
- Subgroup Interruptus (Rattanarithikul et al 2004)
-
-
- Section Laticorn (Reid & Knight 1961)
-
- Series Arribalzagia (Root 1922)
-
-
- Anopheles anchietai Correa & Ramalho 1968
- Anopheles apicimacula Dyar & Knab 1906
- Anopheles bustamentei Galvao 1955
- Anopheles calderoni Wilkerson 1991
- Anopheles costai Da Fonseca & Da Silva Ramos 1939
- Anopheles evandroi Da Costa Lima 1937
- Anopheles fluminensis Root 1927
- Anopheles forattinii Wilkerson 1999
- Anopheles gabaldoni Vargas 1941
- Anopheles guarao Anduze & Capdevielle 1949
- Anopheles intermedius Peryassu 1908
- Anopheles maculipes Theobald 1903
- Anopheles malefactor Dyar & Knab 1907
- Anopheles mattogrossensis Lutz & Neiva 1911
- Anopheles mediopunctatus Lutz 1903
- Anopheles minor Da Costa Lima 1929
- Anopheles neomaculipalpis Curry 1931
- Anopheles peryassui Dyar & Knab 1908
- Anopheles pseudomaculipes Peryassu 1908
- Anopheles punctimacula Dyar & Knab 1906
- Anopheles mediopunctatus Lutz 1903
- Anopheles rachoui Galvao 1952
- Anopheles shannoni Davis 1931
- Anopheles veruslanei Vargas 1979
- Anopheles vestitipennis Dyar & Knab 1906
-
-
- Series Christya (Christophers 1924)
-
-
- Anopheles implexus Theobald 1903
- Anopheles okuensis Brunhes, le Goff & Geoffroy 1997
-
-
- Series Myzorhynchus (Edwards 1932)
-
-
- Anopheles obscurus Grunberg 1905
-
-
-
- Anopheles bancroftii Giles 1902
- Anopheles barbirostris* Van der Wulp 1884
- Anopheles pollicaris Reid 1962
-
-
-
- Group Albotaeniatus (Reid & Knight 1961)
-
-
-
-
- Anopheles albotaeniatus Theobald 1903
- Anopheles balerensis Mendoza 1947
- Anopheles ejercitoi Mendoza 1947
- Anopheles montanus Stanton & Hacker 1917
- Anopheles saperoi Bohart & Ingram 1946
- subspecies ohamai Ohama
- subspecies saperoi Bohart & Ingram
-
-
-
-
- Group Bancroftii (Reid & Knight 1961)
-
-
-
-
- Anopheles pseudobarbirostris Ludlow 1935
-
-
-
-
-
- Anopheles bancroftii Giles 1902
- subspecies bancroftii Giles
- subspecies barbiventris Brug
- Anopheles bancroftii Giles 1902
-
-
-
-
- Group Barbirostris (Reid & Knight 1961)
- Anopheles freyi Meng 1957
- Anopheles koreicus Yamada & Watanabe 1918
- Group Barbirostris (Reid & Knight 1961)
-
-
-
-
- Subgroup Barbirostris (Reid 1968)
- Anopheles barbirostris van der Wulp 1884
- Anopheles campestris Reid 1962
- Anopheles donaldi Reid 1962
- Anopheles franciscoi Reid 1962
- Anopheles hodgkini Reid 1962
- Anopheles pollicaris Reid 1962
- Subgroup Barbirostris (Reid 1968)
-
-
-
-
-
- Subgroup Vanus (Reid 1968)
- Anopheles ahomi Chowdhury 1929
- Anopheles barbumbrosus Strickland & Chowdhury 1927
- Anopheles manalangi Mendoza 1940
- Anopheles reidi Harrison 1973
- Anopheles vanus Walker 1859
- Subgroup Vanus (Reid 1968)
-
-
-
-
- Group Coustani (Reid & Knight 1961)
- Anopheles caliginosus De Meillon 1943
- Anopheles coustani Laveran 1900
- Anopheles crypticus Coetzee 1994
- Anopheles fuscicolor Van Someren 1947
- Anopheles namibiensis Coetzee 1984
- Anopheles paludis Theobald 1900
- Anopheles symesi Edwards 1928
- Anopheles tenebrosus Donitz 1902
- Anopheles ziemanni Grunberg 1902
- Group Coustani (Reid & Knight 1961)
-
-
-
- Group Hyrcanus (Reid 1953)
-
-
-
-
- Anopheles anthropophagus Xu and Feng 1975
- Anopheles argyropus Swellengrebel 1914
- Anopheles belenrae Rueda 2005
- Anopheles changfus Ma 1981
- Anopheles chodukini Martini 1929
- Anopheles dazhaius Ma 1981
- Anopheles engarensis Kanda & Oguma 1978
- Anopheles hailarensis Xu JinJiang & Luo XinFu 1998
- Anopheles heiheensis Ma 1981
- Anopheles hyrcanus* Pallas 1771
- Anopheles junlianensis Lei 1996
- Anopheles kiangsuensis Xu and Feng 1975
- Anopheles kleini Rueda 2005
- Anopheles kummingensis Dong & Wang 1985
- Anopheles kweiyangensis Yao & Wu 1944
- Anopheles liangshanensis Kang Tan Cao Cheng Yang & Huang 1984
- Anopheles nimpe Nguyen, Tran & Harbach
- Anopheles pseudopictus Graham 1899
- Anopheles pullus Yamada 1937
- Anopheles sinensis* Wiedemann 1828
- Anopheles sineroides Yamada 1924
- Anopheles xiaokuanus Ma 1981
- Anopheles xui Dong, Zhou, Dong & Mao 2007
- Anopheles yatsushiroensis Miyazaki 1951
-
-
-
-
-
- Subgroup Lesteri (Harrison 1972)
- Anopheles crawfordi Reid 1953
- Anopheles kiangsuensis Xu & Feng 1975
- Anopheles lesteri de Meillon 1931
- Anopheles paraliae Sandosham 1959
- Anopheles peditaeniatus Leicester 1908
- Anopheles vietnamensis Manh Hinh & Vien 1993
- Subgroup Lesteri (Harrison 1972)
-
-
-
-
-
- Subgroup Nigerrimus (Harrison 1972)
- Anopheles nigerrimus* Giles 1900
- Anopheles nitidus Harrison, Scanlon & Reid 1973
- Anopheles pseudosinensis Baisas 1935
- Anopheles pursati Laveran 1902
- Subgroup Nigerrimus (Harrison 1972)
-
-
-
-
- Group Umbrosus (Reid 1950)
- Anopheles brevipalpis Roper 1914
- Anopheles brevirostris Reid 1950
- Anopheles hunteri Strickland 1916
- Anopheles samarensis Rozeboom 1951
- Anopheles similissimus Strickland & Chowdhury 1927
- Group Umbrosus (Reid 1950)
-
-
-
-
- Subgroup Baezai (Rattanarithikul et al 2004)
- Anopheles baezai Gater 1934
- Subgroup Baezai (Rattanarithikul et al 2004)
-
-
-
-
-
- Subgroup Letifer (Reid 1968)
- Anopheles collessi Reid 1963
- Anopheles letifer* Sandosham 1944
- Anopheles roperi Reid 1950
- Anopheles whartoni Reid 1963
- Subgroup Letifer (Reid 1968)
-
-
-
-
-
- Subgroup Separatus (Rattanarithikul et al 2004)
- Anopheles separatus Leicester 1908
- Subgroup Separatus (Rattanarithikul et al 2004)
-
-
-
-
-
- Subgroup Umbrosus (Rattanarithikul et al 2004)
- Anopheles umbrosus Theobald 1903
- Subgroup Umbrosus (Rattanarithikul et al 2004)
-
-
Subgenus Cellia
Anopheles rageaui Mattingly and AdamSeries Cellia (Christophers 1924)
- Anopheles argenteolobatus Gough 1910
- Anopheles brumpti Hamon & Rickenbach 1955
- Anopheles carnevalei Brunhes le Goff & Geoffroy 1999
- Anopheles cristipalpis Service 1977
- Anopheles murphyi Gillies & de Meillon 1968
- Anopheles pharoensis Theobald 1901
- Anopheles swahilicus Gillies 1964
- Group Squamosus (Grjebine 1966)
- Anopheles cydippis de Meillon 1931
- Anopheles squamosus Theobald 1901
Series Myzomyia
- Anopheles apoci Marsh 1933
- Anopheles azaniae Bailly-Choumara 1960
- Anopheles barberellus Evans 1932
- Anopheles brunnipes Theobald 1910
- Anopheles domicola Edwards 1916
- Anopheles dthali Patton 1905
- Anopheles erythraeus Corradetti 1939
- Anopheles ethiopicus Gillies & Coetzee 1987
- Anopheles flavicosta Edwards 1911
- Anopheles fontinalis Gillies & de Meillon 1968
- Anopheles majidi Young & Majid 1928
- Anopheles moucheti* Evans 1925
- subspecies bervoetsi D'Haenans 1961
- subspecies moucheti Evans 1925
- subspecies nigeriensis
- Anopheles schwetzi Evans 1934
- Anopheles tchekedii de Meillon & Leeson 1940
- Anopheles walravensi Edwards 1930
- Group Demeilloni (Gillies & De Meillon 1962)
- Anopheles carteri Evans & de Meillon 1933
- Anopheles demeilloni Evans 1933
- Anopheles freetownensis Evans 1925
- Anopheles garnhami Edwards 1930
- Anopheles keniensis Evans 1931
- Anopheles lloreti Gil Collado 1936
- Anopheles sergentii* Theobald 1907
- subspecies macmahoni Evans 1936
- subspecies sergentii Theobald 1907
- Group Funestus (Garros et al 2004)
- Anopheles jeyporiensis James 1902
-
- Subgroup Aconitus (Chen et al 2003)
- Anopheles aconitus Dönitz 1902
- Anopheles filipinae Manalang 1930
- Anopheles mangyanus Banks 1906
- Anopheles pampanai Buttiker & Beales 1959
- Anopheles varuna Iyengar 1924
- Subgroup Aconitus (Chen et al 2003)
-
- Subgroup Culicifacies (Garros et al 2004)
- Anopheles culicifaciesAnopheles culicifaciesAnopheles culicifacies is one of the major vectors of malaria on the Indian subcontinent. It has been reported to be a species complex consisting of five sibling species which have been provisionally designated as species A, B, C, D and E. It prefers to rest indoors in cattle sheds, where it feeds...
* Giles 1901
- Anopheles culicifacies
- Subgroup Culicifacies (Garros et al 2004)
-
- Subgroup Funestus (Garros et al 2004)
- Anopheles aruni Sobti 1968
- Anopheles confusus Evans & Leeson 1935
- Anopheles funestus* Giles 1900
- Anopheles funestus-like* Spillings et al 2009
- Anopheles longipalpis Type C Koekemoer et al 2009
- Anopheles parensis Gillies 1962
- Anopheles vaneedeni Gillies & Coetzee 1987
- Subgroup Funestus (Garros et al 2004)
-
- Subgroup MinimusMinimusThe Minimus books are a series of school textbooks, written by Barbara Bell, illustrated by Dr. Helen Forte, and published by the Cambridge University Press, designed to help children of primary school age to learn Latin...
(Chen et al 2003)- Anopheles flavirostris* Ludlow 1914
- Anopheles leesoni Evans 1931
- Anopheles longipalpis Type A Koekemoer et al 2009
- Subgroup Minimus
-
-
- Complex Fluviatilis (Salara et al 1993)
- Anopheles fluviatilis* James 1902
- Complex Fluviatilis (Salara et al 1993)
-
-
-
- Complex MinimusMinimusThe Minimus books are a series of school textbooks, written by Barbara Bell, illustrated by Dr. Helen Forte, and published by the Cambridge University Press, designed to help children of primary school age to learn Latin...
(Green et al 1990)- Anopheles harrisoni Harbach & Manguin 2007
- Anopheles minimus* Theobald 1901
- Complex Minimus
-
-
- Subgroup Rivulorum (Garros et al 2004)
- Anopheles brucei Service 1960
- Anopheles fuscivenosus Leeson 1930
- Anopheles rivulorum Leeson 1935
- Subgroup Rivulorum (Garros et al 2004)
- Group Marshallii (Gillies & de Meillon 1968)
- Anopheles austenii Theobald 1905
- Anopheles berghei Vincke & Leleup 1949
- Anopheles brohieri Edwards 1929
- Anopheles gibbinsi Evans 1935
- Anopheles hancocki Edwards 1929
- Anopheles hargreavesi Evans 1927
- Anopheles harperi Evans 1936
- Anopheles mortiauxi Edwards 1938
- Anopheles mousinhoi de Meillon & Pereira 1940
- Anopheles njombiensis Peters 1955
- Anopheles seydeli Edwards 1929
-
- Complex Marshalli (Gillies & Coetzee 1987)
- Anopheles hughi Lambert & Coetzee 1982
- Anopheles kosiensis Coetzee, Segerman & Hunt 1987
- Anopheles letabensis Lambert & Coetzee 1982
- Anopheles marshallii Theobald 1903
- Complex Marshalli (Gillies & Coetzee 1987)
- Group Wellcomei (Gillies & de Meillon 1968)
- Anopheles distinctus Newstead & Carter 1911
- Anopheles erepens Gillies 1958
- Anopheles theileri Edwards 1912
- Anopheles wellcomei Theobald 1904
- subspecies ugandae Evans 1934
- subspecies ungujae White 1975
- subspecies wellcomei Theobald 1904
Series Neocellia (Christophers 1924)
- Anopheles ainshamsi Gad, Harbach & Harrison 2006
- Anopheles dancalicus Corradetti 1939
- Anopheles hervyi Brunhes, le Goff & Geoffroy 1999
- Anopheles jamesii Theobald 1901
- Anopheles karwari* James 1903
- Anopheles maculipalpis Giles 1902
- Anopheles moghulensis Christophers 1924
- Anopheles paltrinierii Shidrawi & Gillies 1988
- Anopheles pattoni Christophers 1926
- Anopheles pretoriensis Theobald 1903
- Anopheles pulcherrimus* Theobald 1902
- Anopheles rufipes Gough 1910
- subspecies broussesi Edwards 1929
- subspecies rufipes Gough 1910
- Anopheles salbaii Maffi & Coluzzi 1958
- Anopheles splendidus Koidzumi 1920
- Anopheles theobaldi Giles 1901
- Complex Stephensi
- Anopheles stephensiAnopheles stephensiAnopheles albimanus is a species of mosquito....
* Liston 1901
- Anopheles stephensi
- Complex Superpictus
- Anopheles superpictus* Grassi 1899
- Group Annularis (Reid 1968)
- Anopheles pallidus Theobald 1901
- Anopheles philippinensis* Ludlow 1902
- Anopheles schueffneri Stanton 1915
-
- Complex Annularis (Reid 1968)
- Anopheles annularis* van der Wulp 1884
- Complex Annularis (Reid 1968)
-
- Complex Nivipes (Green et al 1985)
- Anopheles nivipes Theobald 1903
- Complex Nivipes (Green et al 1985)
- Group Jamesii (Rattanarithikul et al 2004)
- Anopheles jamesii Theobald 1901
- Anopheles pseudojamesi Strickland & Chowdhury 1927
- Anopheles splendidus Koidzumi 1920
- Group Maculatus (Rattanarithikul & Green 1987)
- Anopheles dispar Rattanarithikul & Harbach 1991
- Anopheles greeni Rattanarithikul & Harbach 1991
- Anopheles pseudowillmori Theobald 1910
- Anopheles willmori James 1903
-
- Subgroup Maculatus (Rattanarithikul et al 2004)
- Anopheles dravidicus Christophers 1924
- Anopheles maculatus* Theobald 1901
- Subgroup Maculatus (Rattanarithikul et al 2004)
-
- Subgroup Sawadwongporni (Rattanarithikul et al 2004)
- Anopheles notanandai Rattanarithikul & Green 1987
- Anopheles sawadwongporni Rattanarithikul & Green 1987
- Subgroup Sawadwongporni (Rattanarithikul et al 2004)
Series Neomyzomyia (Christophers 1924)
- Anopheles amictus Edwards 1921
- Anopheles annulatus Haga 1930
- Anopheles aurirostris Watson 1910
- Anopheles dualaensis Brunhes le Goff & Geoffroy 1999
- Anopheles hilli Woodhill & Lee 1944
- Anopheles incognitus Brug 1931
- Anopheles kochi Dönitz 1901
- Anopheles kokhani Vythilingam, Jeffery & Harbach 2007
- Anopheles kolambuganensis Baisas 1932
- Anopheles longirostris Brug 1928
- Anopheles mascarensis de Meillon 1947
- Anopheles meraukensis Venhuis 1932
- Anopheles novaguinensis Venhuis 1933
- Anopheles saungi Colless 1955
- Anopheles stookesi Colless 1955
- Anopheles watsonii Leicester 1908
- Complex Annulipes
- Anopheles annulipes Walker 1856
- Complex Lungae
- Anopheles lungae Belkin & Schlosser 1944
- Anopheles nataliae Belkin 1945
- Anopheles solomonis Belkin, Knight & Rozeboom 1945
- Complex Punctulatus
- Anopheles clowi Rozeboom & Knight 1946
- Anopheles farauti* Laveran 1902
- Anopheles hinesorum Schmidt 2001
- Anopheles irenicus Schmidt 2003
- Anopheles koliensis Owen 1945
- Anopheles punctulatus Dönitz 1901
- Anopheles torresiensis Schmidt 2001
- Group Ardensis (Gillies & de Meillon 1968)
- Anopheles ardensis Theobald 1905
- Anopheles buxtoni Service 1958
- Anopheles cinctus Newstead & Carter 1910
- Anopheles deemingi Service 1970
- Anopheles eouzani Brunhes le Goff & Bousses 2003
- Anopheles kingi Christophers 1923
- Anopheles machardyi Edwards 1930
- Anopheles maliensis Bailly-Choumara & Adam 1959
- Anopheles millecampsi Lips 1960
- Anopheles multicinctus Edwards 1930
- Anopheles natalensis Hill & Haydon 1907
- Anopheles vernus Gillies & de Meillon 1968
- Anopheles vinckei de Meillon 1942
-
- Complex Nili (Gillies & de Meillon 1968)
- Anopheles carnevalei Brunhes, le Geoff & Geoffrey 1999
- Anopheles nili* Theobald 1904
- Anopheles ovengensis Awono-Ambene Simard Antonio-Nkonkjio & Fontenille 2004
- Anopheles somalicus Rivola & Holstein 1957
- Complex Nili (Gillies & de Meillon 1968)
- Group Kochi (Rattanarithikul et al 2004)
- Anopheles kochi Donitz 1901
- Group Leucosphyrus
- Anopheles baisasi Colless 1957
- Anopheles cristatus King & Baisas
-
- Subgroup Elegans
- Anopheles elegans James 1903
- Subgroup Elegans
-
- Subgroup Hackeri
- Anopheles hackeri Edwards 1921
- Anopheles mirans Sallum & Peyton 2005
- Anopheles pujutensis Colless 1948
- Anopheles recens Sallum & Peyton 2005
- Anopheles sulawesi* Waktoedi 1954
- Subgroup Hackeri
-
- Subgroup Leucosphyrus
- Anopheles baimaii* Sallum & Peyton 2005
- Anopheles cracens Sallum & Peyton 2005
- Anopheles scanloni Sallum & Peyton 2005
- Subgroup Leucosphyrus
-
-
- Complex Dirus
- Anopheles dirusAnopheles dirusAnopheles dirus is a vector of malaria in Asian forested zones.-Taxonomy:It is often seen as a species complex including at least seven closely related and efficient forest-based malaria vectors in Asia. Hence, its geographical distribution is overlapping with areas of high malaria prevalence rates...
* Peyton & Harrison 1979 - Anopheles nemophilous Peyton & Ramalingam 1988
- Anopheles takasagoensis Morishita 1946
- Anopheles dirus
- Complex Dirus
-
-
-
- Complex Leucosphyrus (Peyton 1990)
- Anopheles balabacensis* Baisas 1936
- Anopheles introlatusAnopheles introlatusAnopheles introlatus is the main vector for Plasmodium cynomolgi in Malaya....
Colless 1957 - Anopheles latensAnopheles latensThe Anopheles latens mosquito is an important vector for the transmission of malaria in humans and monkeys in Southeast Asia...
* Sallum & Peyton 2005 - Anopheles leucosphyrus* Dönitz 1901
- Complex Leucosphyrus (Peyton 1990)
-
-
- Subgroup Riparis (Peyton 1990)
- Anopheles cristatus King & Baisas
- Anopheles macarthuri Colless 1956
- Anopheles riparis King & Baisas 1936
- Subgroup Riparis (Peyton 1990)
- Group Tessellatus (Rattanarithikul et al 2004)
- Anopheles tessellatus Theobald
- subspecies kalawara Stoker & Waktoedi
- subspecies orientalis Swellengrebel & Swellengrebel de Graaf
- subspecies tessellatus Theobald
- Anopheles tessellatus Theobald
Series Paramyzomyia (Christophers & Barraud 1931)
- Group Cinereus (Gillies & de Mellion 1968)
- Anopheles azevedoi Ribeiro 1969
- Anopheles cinereus Theobald 1901
- subspecies cinereus Theobald 1901
- subspecies hispaniolaHispaniolaHispaniola is a major island in the Caribbean, containing the two sovereign states of the Dominican Republic and Haiti. The island is located between the islands of Cuba to the west and Puerto Rico to the east, within the hurricane belt...
Theobald 1903
-
- Complex Turkhudi (Liston)
- Anopheles turkhudi Liston 1901
- subspecies telamali Saliternik & Theodor 1942
- subspecies turkhudi Liston 1901
- Anopheles turkhudi Liston 1901
- Complex Turkhudi (Liston)
- Group Listeri (Gillies & de Mellion 1968)
- Anopheles listeri de Mellion 1931
- Anopheles multicolor* Cambouliu 1902
- Anopheles seretsei Abdulla-Chan Coetzee & Hunt 1998
Series Pyretophorus (Blanchard 1902)
- Anopheles christyi Newstead & Carter 1911
- Anopheles daudi Coluzzi 1958
- Anopheles indefinitus Ludlow 1904
- Anopheles limosus King 1932
- Anopheles litoralis King 1932
- Anopheles ludlowae Theobald 1903
- subspecies ludlowae Theobald 1903
- subspecies torakala Stoker & Waktoedi 1949
- Anopheles parangensis Ludlow 1914
- Anopheles vagus* Dönitz 1902
- Complex Gambiae (White 1985)
- Anopheles arabiensis* Patton 1905
- Anopheles bwambae White 1985
- Anopheles comorensis Brunhes le Goff & Geoffroy 1997
- Anopheles gambiaeAnopheles gambiaeAnopheles gambiae is a complex of at least seven morphologically distinguishable species of mosquitoes in the genus Anopheles. This complex was recognised in the 1960s and includes the most important vectors of malaria in sub-Saharan Africa and the most efficient malaria vectors known.This species...
* Giles 1902 - Anopheles melas* Theobald 1903
- Anopheles merus Dontiz 1902
- Anopheles quadriannulatus Theobald 1911
- Complex Subpictus (Sugana et al 1994)
- Anopheles subpictusAnopheles subpictusAnopheles subpictus is a species complex of four species of mosquito belonging to the genus Anopheles.-Subgenus classification:...
* Grassi 1899
- Anopheles subpictus
- Complex Sundaicus (Sukowati 1999)
- Anopheles epiroticus Linton & Harbach 2005
- Anopheles sundaicus* Rodenwaldt 1925
Subgenus Kerteszia
- Anopheles auyantepuiensis Harbach & Navarro 1996
- Anopheles bambusicolus Komp 1937
- Anopheles bellator* Dyar & Knab 1906
- Anopheles boliviensis Theobald 1905
- Anopheles cruzii* Dyar & Knab 1908
- Anopheles gonzalezrinconesi Cova Garcia, Pulido & de Ugueto, 1977
- Anopheles homunculus Komp 1937
- Anopheles laneanus Corrêa & Cerqueira 1944
- Anopheles lepidotus Zavortink 1973
- Anopheles neivai Howard, Dyar & Knab 1913
- Anopheles pholidotus Zavortink 1973
- Anopheles rollai Cova Garcia, Pulido & de Ugueto 1977
Note: Anopheles cruzii is known to be a species complex but the number species in this complex has yet to be finalised.
Subgenus Lophopodomyia
- Anopheles gilesi Peryassu 1928
- Anopheles gomezdelatorrei Levi-Castillo 1955
- Anopheles oiketorakras Osorno-Mesa 1947
- Anopheles pseudotibiamaculata Galvao & Barretto 1941
- Anopheles squamifemur Antunes 1937
- Anopheles vargasi Gabaldon Cova Garcia & Lopez 1941
Subgenus NyssorhynchusNyssorhynchusNyssorhynchus is an extinct subgenus of the genus Plasmodium.There is one known species in this genus - Plasmodium dominicana. It was identified from Dominican amber....
- Anopheles dominicanus Zavortinkb and Poinarab 2000
- Section Albimanus
- Anopheles noroestensis Galvao and Lane 1937
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- Series Albimanus (Faran 1980)
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- Anopheles albimanusAnopheles albimanusAnopheles albimanus is a species of mosquito.-Habitat:Larvae of this species live in a wide range of permanent freshwater habitats. They are, however, salt tolerant. They live in sites that contain abundant amounts of floating, emergent vegetation. The larvae can also live in floating algae and scum...
* Weidemann 1820
- Anopheles albimanus
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- Series Oswaldoi (Faran 1980)
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- Group Oswaldoi (Faran 1980)
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- Subgroup Oswaldoi (Faran 1980)
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- Anopheles anomalphyllus Komp
- Anopheles aquasalis* Curry 1932
- Anopheles dunhamii Causey 1945
- Anopheles evansae Brethes 1926
- Anopheles galvaoi Causey, Deane and Deane 1943
- Anopheles ininii Sevenet & Abonnenc 1938
- Anopheles konderi Galvfio & Damasceno 1942
- Anopheles oswaldoi Peryassú 1922
- Anopheles rangeli Galabadon, Cova-Garcia & Lopez 1941
- Anopheles sanctielii Sevenet & Abonnenc 1938
- Anopheles trinkae Faran 1980
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- Complex Nuneztovari (Conn et al 1993)
- Anopheles geoeldii Rozeboom and Gabaldón 1941
- Anopheles nuneztovari* Galbadón 1940
- Complex Nuneztovari (Conn et al 1993)
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- Subgroup Strodei (Faran 1980)
- Anopheles benarrochi Galabadon, Cova-Garcia & Lopez
- Anopheles rondoni Neiva & Pinto 1922
- Anopheles strodei Root 1926
- Subgroup Strodei (Faran 1980)
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- Group Triannulatus
- Anopheles halophylus do Nascimento & de Oliveira 2002
- Anopheles triannulatus Neiva & Pinto 1922
- Group Triannulatus
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- Section Argyritarsis (Levi Castillo 1949)
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- Series Albitarsis (Linthicum 1988)
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- Anopheles rooti Brethes 1926
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- Group Albitarsis (Linthicum 1988)
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- Anopheles albitarsis Linthicum 1988
- Anopheles deaneorum Rosa-Freitas 1989
- Anopheles janconnae Wilkerson & Sallum 2009
- Anopheles oryzalimnetes Wilkerson & Motoki 2009
- Anopheles marajoara* Galvao & Damesceno 1942
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- Group Braziliensis (Linthicum 1988)
- Anopheles braziliensis Chagas 1907
- Group Braziliensis (Linthicum 1988)
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- Series Argyritarsis (Linthicum 1988)
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- Group Argyritarsis (Linthicum 1988)
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- Anopheles argyitarsis Robineau-Desvoidy 1827
- Anopheles sawyeri Causey, Deane, Deane & Sampaio 1943
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- Group Darlingi (Linthicum 1988)
- Anopheles darlingi* Root
- Group Darlingi (Linthicum 1988)
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- Group Lanie (Linthicum 1988)
- Anopheles lanei Galvao & Amaral 1938
- Group Lanie (Linthicum 1988)
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- Group Pictipennis (Linthicum 1988)
- Anopheles pictipennis Phillippi 1865
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- Section Myzorhynchella (Peyton et al 1992)
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- Anopheles antunesi Galvao & Amaral 1940
- Anopheles lutzii Cruz 1901
- Anopheles nigritarsis Chagas 1907
- Anopheles parvus Chagas 1907
Subgenus StethomyiaStethomyiaStethomyia is a subgenus of the mosquito genus Anopheles. The type species is Anopheles nimbus Theobald 1902. There are five species in this subgenus.-Phylogeny:...
- Anopheles acanthotorynus Komp 1937
- Anopheles canorii Floch & Abonnenc 1945
- Anopheles kompi Edwards 1930
- Anopheles nimbus Theobald 1902
- Anopheles thomasi Shannon 1933
External links
- Mosquito taxonomy web site: http://mosquito-taxonomic-inventory.info/en/taxonomy/term/6047
- Walter Reed Biosystematics: http://wrbu.si.edu/