westchestergov.com In an emergency, let us contact you subscribecommentsfaq search home

                       Home

After Hours
Resources

A-Z
Listing

Calendar
of
Events
Current
News
Data
and
Reports
Need
a
Form?
Professionals
Corner
Services
and
Locations
Webpage
Directory
 
Contact Us
Email Us

Mosquito's Life Cycle

 

-All mosquitoes have one common requirement - they need stagnant/standing water to complete their life cycle.

-There are four stages to the life cycle of a mosquito: egg, larva, pupa and adult.

-The female mosquito needs the blood meal to develop her eggs.  Male mosquitoes do not bite - they feed solely on plant nectar.

-Female mosquitoes can develop several hundred eggs at each blood meal and lay them in or around water. The eggs are attached to one another to form a raft or the individual eggs float on the water.

-These eggs hatch within 24-48 hours releasing larvae that are commonly called "wrigglers" because you can usually see them wriggling up and down from the surface of the water.  Wrigglers occur in all kinds of standing water, such as; ditches, woodland pools and unkept bird baths - anything that holds water for more than a week.

-In about 7-10 days after the eggs hatch, larvae change to pupa before becoming adult mosquitoes.  The newly emerging mosquito has to stand on still water for a few minutes to dry its wings before it can fly away. That is one reason that mosquitoes don't breed in rapidly moving water such as running brooks and streams or even a pond that has a fountain.

-The female mosquito begins to seek out an animal to feed on several days after emerging from the water.  Adult mosquitoes can live for a period of four to eight weeks.

Mosquitoes Life Cycle

Mosquitoes life Cycle courtesy of Virginia Tech Entomology