Anopheles konderi Galvão & Damasceno, 1942

NEOTROPICAL REGION

Family
Subfamily
Genus
Subgenus
Section
Series
Group
Subgroup
Complex

 

Etymology: Valerio Augusto Regis Konder.

Type locality: Solimões River at Coari, Amazonas, Brazil.

Type depositoryInstituto Oswaldo Cruz, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (IOC)

TAXONOMIC KEYS

Deane, L.M. et al. 1946

Causey et al. 1946

Deane, M.P. et al. 1946

Sallum, et al. 2020

 

WRBU LUCID KEYS

 

 adult mosquito key icon

WRBU - Genera - Global - Adult

 larval key icon

WRBU - Genera - Global - Larva

 adult mosquito key icon

WRBU - Genera - Neotropical - Adult

 larval key icon

WRBU - Genera - Neotropical - Larva

Exemplar DNA sequences

All Anopheles konderi sequences

Associated Pathogens

 

DISTRIBUTION NOTES

Bolivia, Brazil, Peru.

Distribution

 

IMPORTANT REFERENCES

Galvão & Damasceno 1942a: 115 (M*, P, L*)

Causey et al. 1944: 5 (E*)

Deane, L.M. et al. 1946 (F*; key, bionomics; NE Brazil & Amazonas)

Causey et al. 1946 (M*; key; NE Brazil & Amazonas)

Deane, M.P. et al. 1946 (L*; key, bionomics; NE Brazil & Amazonas)

Lane 1953: 262 (synonymy)

Belkin et al. 1971: 6 (taxonomy)

Lounibos et al. 1997a (E*)

Flores-Mendoza et al. 2004: 118 (M*, F*, P*, L*, E*; neotype designation; to species)

Sallum, et al. 2020 (keys F, M, L)

 

CURRENT SYNONYMS

None

 

CURRENT SUBSPECIES

None

 

CITED REFERENCES

Belkin, J.N., Schick, R.X., & Heinemann, S.J. (1971). Mosquito studies (Diptera, Culicidae). XXV. Mosquitoes originally described from Brazil. Contributions of the American Entomological Institute, 7(5), 1–64.

Causey, O.R., Deane, L.M., & Deane, M.P. (1944). An illustrated key to the eggs of thirty species of Brazilian anophelines, with several new descriptions. American Journal of Hygiene, 39(1), 1–7.

Causey, O.R., Deane, L.M., & Deane, M.P. (1946). II. An illustrated key by male genitalic characteristics for the identification of thirty-four species of Anophelini from the northeast and Amazon regions of Brazil, with a note on dissection technique. American Journal of Hygiene Monograph Series, 18, 21–31.

Deane, L.M., Causey, O.R., & Deane, M.P. (1946). I. An illustrated key by adult female characteristics for the identification of thirty-five species of Anophelini, with notes on the malaria vectors (Diptera, Culicidae). In Studies on Brazilian anophelines from the northeast and Amazon regions (pp. 1–18). Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press.

Deane, M.P., Causey, O.R., & Deane, L.M. (1946). III. An illustrated key by larval characteristics for the identification of thirty-two species of Anophelini, with descriptions of two larvae. In Studies on Brazilian anophelines from the northeast and Amazon regions (pp. 33–50). Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press.

Flores-Mendoza, C., Peyton, EL, Wilkerson, R.C., & Lourenço-de-Oliveira, R. (2004). Anopheles (Nyssorhynchus) konderi Galvão and Damasceno: neotype designation and resurrection from synonymy with Anopheles (Nyssorhynchus) oswaldoi (Peryassu) (Diptera: Culicidae). Proceedings of the Entomological Society of Washington, 106(1), 118–132.

Galvão, A.L.A., & Damasceno, R.G. (1942a). Anopheles (Nyssorhynchus) konderi nova espécie de Anopheles do vale do Amazonas e considerações sobre as espécies do complexo tarsimaculatus (Diptera, Culicidae). Folia clinica et biologica, 14(5–6), 115–135.

Lane, J. (1953). Neotropical Culicidae (Vols. I–II). São Paulo, Brazil: University of São Paulo.

Lounibos, L.P., Duzak, D., & Linley, J.R. (1997a). Comparative egg morphology of six species of the Albimanus Section of Anopheles (Nyssorhynchus) (Diptera: Culicidae). Journal of Medical Entomology, 34(2), 136–155.

Sallum, M.A.M., Obando, R.G., Carrejo, N. et al. Identification key to the Anopheles mosquitoes of South America (Diptera: Culicidae). Parasites and Vectors, 13, 542 (2020). https://www.biomedcentral.com/collections/id-keys-anopheles 

 

CITE THIS PAGE

Walter Reed Biosystematics Unit (Year). Anopheles konderi species page. Walter Reed Biosystematics Unit Website, http://wrbu.si.edu/mosquitoes/vectorspecies/konderi, accessed on [date (e.g. 03 February 2020) when you last viewed the site].