Culicoides
Appearance
| Culicoides | |
|---|---|
| Culicoides sonorensis after blood meal | |
| Sayantipiko na klasipikasyon | |
| Missing taxonomy template (pakarhayon): | Culicoides |
| Mga genera | |
|
Hilingon na teksto | |
An Culicoides sarong genus nin mga parakagat na mga midge sa pamilya Ceratopogonidae. Igwa nin sobra sa 1000 na species sa genus,[1][2] na nababanga sa kadakol na subgenera. An nagkapirang klase nin hayop midbid na mga paradara nin manlaen-laen na helang asin parasito na pwedeng makaapektar sa mga hayop. An genus igwa nin halawig na rekord nin fossil, na an pinakaenot na mga fossil hale sa Burmese amber, mga 99 milyones na taon an edad. [3]
Mga species
[baguhon | baguhon an source]- Subgenus Avaritia



- Culicoides brevitarsis - suspected as vector of Akabane and Aino virus
- Culicoides imicola - main vector of bluetongue virus and African Horse Sickness in Southern Europe
- Culicoides chiopterus -
- Culicoides dewulfi -
- Culicoides obsoletus -
- Culicoides scoticus -
- Subgenus Beltranmyia
- Subgenus Culicoides
- Subgenus Drymodesmyia
- Subgenus Haematomyidium
- Culicoides insinuatus
- Culicoides paraensis - vector of Oropouche virus
- Subgenus Haemophoructus
- Subgenus Hoffmania
- Subgenus Macfiella
- Subgenus Meijerehelea
- Subgenus Monoculicoides
- Subgenus Oecacta
- Culicoides furens transmits Mansonella ozzardi
- Subgenus Remmia
- Subgenus Tokunagahelea
- Subgenus Trithecoides
Toltolan
[baguhon | baguhon an source]- ↑ Meiswinkel, R. (2004). "The taxonomy of Culicoides vector complexes–unfinished business" (PDF). Veterinaria Italiana 40 (3): 151–59. PMID 20419654. https://www.izs.it/vet_italiana/2004/40_3/151.htm.
- ↑ Connelly, C. R. Biting midges: Culicoides spp. Featured Creatures, Entomology and Nematology Department, University of Florida IFAS. August 2013 Edition.
- ↑ Szadziewski, Ryszard; Dominiak, Patrycja; Sontag, Elżbieta; Krzemiński, Wiesław; Wang, Bo; Szwedo, Jacek (2019-10-24). "Haematophagous biting midges of the extant genus Culicoides Latreille (Diptera: Ceratopogonidae) evolved during the mid-Cretaceous". Zootaxa 4688 (4): 535–548. doi:. PMID 31719428. https://www.biotaxa.org/Zootaxa/article/view/zootaxa.4688.4.5.