Anopheles ziemanni Grünberg, 1902

Coetzee, Maureen, 2022, Literature review of the systematics, biology and role in malaria transmission of species in the Afrotropical Anopheles subgenus Anopheles (Diptera: Culicidae), Zootaxa 5133 (2), pp. 182-200 : 192-193

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5133.2.2

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:A227A794-4435-4FBE-B021-45EF51C56203

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6522896

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038D87B8-FF92-FFC2-64B3-FCEC5D07FDEF

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Anopheles ziemanni Grünberg, 1902
status

 

Anopheles ziemanni Grünberg, 1902 View in CoL

1928. Anopheles mauritianus var. ziemanni View in CoL of Edwards

TYPE LOCALITY: Wuri , Cameroon .

DESCRIPTION:

Wing length: 5.0 mm.

Wing ( Fig. 10a View FIGURE 10 ): Subcostal and preapical pale spots present; pale fringe spot at apex of wing extending from R 2 to R 4+5, similar to An. fuscicolor .

Maxillary palpus: Shaggy, with four pale bands.

Legs ( Fig. 10b View FIGURE 10 ): Apex of foretibia and base of foretarsomere 1 always dark. Apex of hindtibia, base of hindtarsomere 1 and apices of hindtarsomeres 2 and 3 with pale spots at most 3 times as wide as diameter of the tarsomere; hindtarsomeres 4 and 5 pale, 0.5 of hindtarsomere 3 pale.

LARVAL HABITAT: Natural collections of clear water with aquatic and semi-aquatic vegetation, such as swamps, ponds, backwaters of streams, springs, ditches and rice fields.

ADULT BIOLOGY: Collections of An. ziemanni tested for infections of P. falciparum showed positivity rates of 0.3–2.9% in Cameroon ( Gillies & de Meillon 1968; Antonio-Nkondjio et al. 2006; Bigoga et al. 2012; Tabue et al. 2014; Bamou et al. 2018; Amvongo-Adjia et al. 2018), 0.5% in Chad ( Kerah-Hinzoumbe et al. 2009) and 10% in Rwanda ( Nyirakanani et al. 2017). Giaquinto-Mira (1950) reported a single female in Ethiopia positive for sporozoites ( Gillies & de Meillon 1968). Kamau et al. (2006) recorded 53% of females feeding on human blood in western Kenya but no parasite infections were found.

DISTRIBUTION: Widespread and abundant throughout the Afrotropical Region. Records also from northern Africa in the Mediterranean Region ( Gillies & de Meillon 1968).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Culicidae

Genus

Anopheles

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF