When the adult mosquitos (the imagines) leave their pupa-cases they are unable to pierce the human skin until the mouth parts have hardened, and this takes at least six hours. In England they can undoubtedly feed twenty-four hours after leaving the pupa-case. When feeding, both the sensory antennae and the tactile maxillary palps are thrust forward at right angles to the proboscis. They thus test the place where the two-lobed extremity of the labium will guide the battery of stylets into the substance they are feeding on. The female is much more voracious than the male, which, as we have mentioned above, cannot pierce the human integument, and has to be content with a vegetarian diet. Sometimes the effort even of the female mosquito to insert its proboscis is fruitless, and we have watched a mosquito attempt four times to pierce the skin before it drew blood. If undisturbed during the meal the suctorial repast may last some two or three and a half minutes. So greedy at times is the mosquito that she resembles Baron Munchausen’s horse after the adventure with the portcullis—what is flowing in at one end is flowing out at the other. In fact, as Dr. Johnson said of the boys at a school ‘where discipline was maintained without recourse to corporal punishment,’ ‘But, sir, what they gain at one end they lose at the other!’ After the process of biting, of sinking-in of the piercing needles, is complete, the proboscis is withdrawn, and to do this the mosquito braces herself on her legs and raises her body.
Another curious feature about the head of Anopheles is that it is pierced by two chitinous, symmetrical tunnels—tubes which are open at each end with trumpet-shaped orifices. The use of these is probably to act as a stay or strut to strengthen the chitinous exoskeleton of the head; but these queer galleries or tubes also to some extent act as attachments for muscles.
The antennae vary very much in the two sexes. In the female there are fifteen segments, each bearing a ring of hairs, but of small and disproportionate size, whereas in the male the bushy character of the hairs is conspicuous even to the naked eye. In fact, it is the easiest criterion for judging the sex of the insect. At the base of the first joint of the male antenna is a deep cup-shaped structure packed with sense organs, and containing a large nerve ganglion. There are sixteen segments in the whole antenna, one more than in the female. The hairs are capable of movement, and as a rule are kept closed on the shaft of the antenna whilst not in use; when evening comes on they are spread out. There seems little doubt that these organs are auditory and help the male in searching for the female.
The beautiful transparent wings of the mosquito are beset with minute spikes, which serve to break up the light and to give rise to the many-coloured iridescence of the creature’s wings. The posterior border of the wing bears rows of beautifully graded scales. These add much to the symmetry and beauty of the whole structure. Just behind it are two balancers or halteres—a name derived from the Greek word ἁλτῆρες, meaning a kind of dumb-bells which athletes used in the stadium when jumping. These so-called balancers project outwards and backwards from the body when the wings are in a position of flight.
A curious distinction between the Culex and Anopheles is in regard to the position assumed by the insects when they rest. In Anopheles the proboscis and body are almost in one line, and the axis of the body is at an angle with the surface upon which it rests. Culex, on the other hand, has its proboscis at a slight angle with its body, and its body is almost parallel to the surface upon which it is perching. Culex has a much more hump-backed appearance than Anopheles, and its legs are considerably shorter and stouter. The insect generally rests upon four out of six legs; in the former case the hinder pair are held out and curved upwards. The hind legs not infrequently serve as a test for food. When feeding upon sweetened milk or fruit, the moment the hind leg touches the fluid or juice the insect will wheel round and at once begin to feed.
Anopheles maculipennis is very widely distributed, and it has been recorded from most parts of North America and Europe, and from many parts of Asia. Probably the species is much more widely distributed than we have any record, but individuals do not wander very far, of their own accord, from the breeding-places, though they may be dispersed by the wind. Cases are known where they have been blown as far as ten or even twenty miles; and in camping in Africa it is always well to keep to the windward of a native village. They are also carried about by trains, motors, and steamers. They do not indulge in any such voluntary migratory flights as the locusts, although some such flights have been from time to time recorded, but these ‘swarms’ are probably due to a high wind catching a large number of mosquitos temporarily associated.
In a joint paper which Professor Nuttall and I wrote some years ago, we drew attention to a case in which mosquitos came aboard a ship some ten miles from land, and to another in which a Spanish barque from Rio was detained in the South Atlantic quarantine station of the United States. The vessel was so much infested with mosquitos that it was rendered nearly uninhabitable, and the United States quarantine officer reported that when the forecastle was opened after fumigation ‘the mosquitos could be scooped up by hand.’ The master of the barque was positive that there had been no mosquitos on board until the twenty-second day out. Howard quotes a letter from a General living in Texas in which he states he has ‘twice seen flights of Culicidae,’ but as the species and the genus are not given, much of the interest of the statement evaporates. Generals living in Texas are not invariably remarkable for meticulous accuracy in recondite scientific matters.
CHAPTER V
THE MOSQUITO (Anopheles maculipennis)
Part II
There in a wailful choir the small gnats mourn