Vectors
Diseases
West Nile Virus
Contact Us
News Room
Handouts and Booklets
Mosquito Control Maps
Surveillance Maps
Calendar
Glossary
Pest Identification
Planning Consultation


  • Home
  • About Us
    • History & Organization
    • Marin and Sonoma Counties
    • Mission Statement
    • Board of Trustees
    • Employment Opportunities
    • Directions
    • Sister Sites
    • Planning Consultation
      • Wetlands development guidelines
    • School Presentations
    • Public Relations
  • Vectors
    • Rat Control
      • Roof Rats and Norway Rats
      • Diseases; Rat Habitats
      • Signs of Rat Activity
      • Home Rat Control
      • Rat Prevention
      • How Rats Enter Homes
      • Rat Proof Your Home
      • Trapping; Types of Rats
      • Trap Placement; Chemical Control
      • Community Action; Clean Up
    • Rodent Control Slideshow
    • Anthropods and Public Health
    • Mosquitos of Marin and Sonoma
      • Salt Marsh Mosquito
      • Pale Marsh Mosquito
      • Treehole Mosquito
      • House Mosquito
      • Encephalitis Mosquito
      • Malaria Mosquito
    • Mosquito Surveillance
    • Mosquito Control
      • Mosquito Fish
    • Ticks
      • Babesiosis
      • Ehrlichiosis
      • Lyme Disease
    • Yellowjackets
      • In Residential Areas
      • Of Marin and Sonoma
    • Headlice
  • Diseases
    • West Nile Disease
      • First California Case
      • Impact on Wildlife
      • News Reports
      • 2007 Collection Data
    • Viral Encephalitis
      • Encephalitis Mosquito
      • Sentinel Chicken Flocks
      • Locations (map of CA)
    • Malaria
    • Lyme Disease
    • Ehrlichiosis
    • Babesiosis
    • Plague
    • American Trypanosomiasis
    • Surveillance
    • Pest Advisory and I.D.
  • Other Info
    • Glossary
    • FTP Site
    • Employee Login
    • Newspaper / Media Reports
Featured Mosquitoes

PHONE
800-231-3236 (toll free)
707-285-2200 (office)
707-285-2210 (fax)

ADDRESS
595 Helman Lane
Cotati, California
94931-9736

HOURS
Monday through Friday
7:00AM to 3:30PM

3. THE TREE HOLE MOSQUITO (OCHLEROTATUS SIERRENSIS)

[Ochlerotatus sierrensis]

The treehole mosquito is widely distributed in western North America from Mexico to British Colombia, and throughout California. Its legs and abdomen have narrow bands of white scales, while the probosis and wings are mostly dark.

In the late spring, Ochlerotatus sierrensis lays its batches of 200 to 300 eggs in holes in the trunks and branches of more than 20 different kinds of trees. Coast live oak, California bay-laurel and black walnut are the trees most often used in the Bay area. The eggs hatch when fall storms fill the holes with water. Development proceeds slowly and the adults emerge between late February and June. Usually there is only one brood per year.

Ochlerotatus sierrensis is an important pest mosquito. Females feed on a wide variety of mammals, and can be a vicious biter of man. In bad years, they generate a flood of complaints in parks, recreation districts and urban and rural areas near woodlands with older trees or mature fruit orchards. It is not an important vector of the more common human disease agents, but it is the main carrier of Dirofilaria immitis, the parasite that causes heartworm in dogs.

[Adult males emerge first]

The mating behavior of Ochlerotatus sierrensis is unusual. After a long period of larval development, adult males begin to emerge some two weeks before the females. They obtain nectar or other carbohydrates and then begin to form "mating swarms" around a variety of mammals, including man. Adult females start to appear later, and when attracted to a mammal host for a blood meal they are beset by the waiting males. This is the only mosquito in the northern San Francisco Bay area with this behavior.

Sometimes residents, when they are surrounded by flying Ochlerotatus sierrensis and not paying much attention to whether they are male or female, feel they are being attacked by blood feeders. In fact, they are only being used as a decoy by anxious males. District personnel have collected Ochlerotatus sierrensis with sweep nets and found mostly males in the two weeks after first emergence. By the end of July the two sexes are present in equal numbers.

Last updated: October 2, 2004