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Eintrag Nr. 41822
Range expansion of the alien mosquito species Aedes japonicus (Theobald, 1901) (Di ptera: Culicidae) from 2014 2019 in Burgenland, Austria
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37738
Entomologie Nationalpark Neusiedler See - Seewinkel
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Bakran-Lebl.al.2021.Range expansion of the alien mosquito species Aedes japonicus from 2014 2019 in Burgenland, Austria.pdf
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Autor/Ersteller
Karin Bakran-Lebl, Carina Zittra, Stefan Weiss, Barbara Hodits, Thomas Zechmeister & Hans-Peter Fuehrer
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File (digital)
Jahr
2021
Monat
2
Aufbewahrungsort
-
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Entomologica Austriaca Band 28: 107118 Keywords: mosquitoes, Aedes japonicus, Asian bush mosquito, Asian rock hole mosquito, dispersal, invasive species, monitoring Abstract: Range expansion of the alien mosquito species Aedes japonicus (Theobald, 1901) (Di ptera: Culicidae) from 2014 2019 in Burgenland, Austria. In the last 30 years, various Aedes species were introduced outside their native range. The potentially invasive mosquito species Ae. japonicus was recorded in Europe in 2000 and was found for the first time in Austria in 2011. Within the scope of a mosquito-monitoring program (2014 2019) the range expansion of Ae. japonicus in the province of Burgenland (Austria) was investigated. Throughout the sampling period 130 female Ae. japonicus were collected. The first specimens were captured in 2014 in the southernmost sampling sites. In the following years this species increased its range northwards, on average covering 13.6 km/year (sd=20.87). In 2019, its northernmost distribution was in the district Mattersburg, which is located 67.9 km north of the northernmost distribution in 2014 (Gu&776;ssing). Adults of Ae. japonicus were captured from May to November, with the highest numbers trapped in July and August. The continuative range expansion of this species from the south to the north suggests that this process is driven by natural factors like active dispersal or wind. We found Ae. japonicus not to be very abundant but common in Burgenland. At present, there is no proof that Ae. japonicus is invasive in Austria. More in-depth and long-term investigations of Ae. japonicus are necessary to investigate their interactions with autochthonous species to assess whether this species can become invasive. Stechmücken
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