Nico Moiroux
@nmoiroux.bsky.social
Research scientist · Mosquito 🦟 and Vector-borne disease Ecology · MIVEGEC @ird-fr.bsky.social 🇫🇷 · Pôle de Zoologie Médicale @ Institut Pasteur Dakar 🇸🇳
📸 Huge thanks to Nil Rahola and Luciano Mucci for their outstanding macrophotography work.
🔗 All publications are freely available on Zenodo.
#Entomology #Mosquitoes #Culicidae #Anopheles #Toxorhynchites #Biodiversity #Taxonomy #VectorBiology #Zenodo #Research #Afrotropical
🔗 All publications are freely available on Zenodo.
#Entomology #Mosquitoes #Culicidae #Anopheles #Toxorhynchites #Biodiversity #Taxonomy #VectorBiology #Zenodo #Research #Afrotropical
November 5, 2025 at 10:58 AM
📸 Huge thanks to Nil Rahola and Luciano Mucci for their outstanding macrophotography work.
🔗 All publications are freely available on Zenodo.
#Entomology #Mosquitoes #Culicidae #Anopheles #Toxorhynchites #Biodiversity #Taxonomy #VectorBiology #Zenodo #Research #Afrotropical
🔗 All publications are freely available on Zenodo.
#Entomology #Mosquitoes #Culicidae #Anopheles #Toxorhynchites #Biodiversity #Taxonomy #VectorBiology #Zenodo #Research #Afrotropical
This work is part of the ANR DIV-YOO project (“Mosquito diversity in West Africa: determinants of a probable decline and implications for vector-borne disease epidemiology and control”), coordinated in collaboration with the Medical Zoology Unit of Institut Pasteur de Dakar.
@ird-fr.bsky.social
@ird-fr.bsky.social
November 5, 2025 at 10:58 AM
This work is part of the ANR DIV-YOO project (“Mosquito diversity in West Africa: determinants of a probable decline and implications for vector-borne disease epidemiology and control”), coordinated in collaboration with the Medical Zoology Unit of Institut Pasteur de Dakar.
@ird-fr.bsky.social
@ird-fr.bsky.social
We also released, simultaneously, a key to the females of the genus Toxorhynchites (in French as well). 🔗 buff.ly/utagZhu
And the French key to Anopheles is already available on Zenodo!
🔗 buff.ly/jme4oMY
#Toxorhynchites #Anopheles
And the French key to Anopheles is already available on Zenodo!
🔗 buff.ly/jme4oMY
#Toxorhynchites #Anopheles
Clé d'identification des espèces de Toxorhynchites (Diptera : Culicidae), femelles, Région Afrotropicale.
Clé dichotomique commentée, en français, pour l'identification des espèces de moustiques du genre Toxorhynchites (DIPTERA : Culicidae) de la région afrotropicale. La clé est valide pour…
zenodo.org
November 5, 2025 at 10:58 AM
We also released, simultaneously, a key to the females of the genus Toxorhynchites (in French as well). 🔗 buff.ly/utagZhu
And the French key to Anopheles is already available on Zenodo!
🔗 buff.ly/jme4oMY
#Toxorhynchites #Anopheles
And the French key to Anopheles is already available on Zenodo!
🔗 buff.ly/jme4oMY
#Toxorhynchites #Anopheles
The key features macrophotographs mainly taken by @nil-rahola.bsky.social, and Luciano Mucci, drawn from the @arimcollection.bsky.social.
It’s designed to make mosquito identification more accessible for researchers and students working in vector biology and biodiversity.
It’s designed to make mosquito identification more accessible for researchers and students working in vector biology and biodiversity.
November 5, 2025 at 10:58 AM
The key features macrophotographs mainly taken by @nil-rahola.bsky.social, and Luciano Mucci, drawn from the @arimcollection.bsky.social.
It’s designed to make mosquito identification more accessible for researchers and students working in vector biology and biodiversity.
It’s designed to make mosquito identification more accessible for researchers and students working in vector biology and biodiversity.
They correspond to COI sequences in leaf litter. Apart from this, the whole genus is considered absent in Madagascar (no larvae or adults found)... Can you confirm this latter point @nil-rahola.bsky.social ?
October 24, 2025 at 2:37 PM
They correspond to COI sequences in leaf litter. Apart from this, the whole genus is considered absent in Madagascar (no larvae or adults found)... Can you confirm this latter point @nil-rahola.bsky.social ?
Yes, mostly at dawn and dusk. It likely is able to transmit several pathogens (rift valley fever virus, yellow fever virus etc...)
October 8, 2025 at 2:20 PM
Yes, mostly at dawn and dusk. It likely is able to transmit several pathogens (rift valley fever virus, yellow fever virus etc...)