Japanese Encephalitis Mosquito vs Braconid Mummy Wasp
Side-by-side species comparison
| Attribute | Japanese Encephalitis Mosquito | Braconid Mummy Wasp |
|---|---|---|
| Scientific Name | Culex tritaeniorhynchus | Aphidius matricariae |
| Order | Diptera | Hymenoptera |
| Family | Culicidae | Braconidae |
| Size | 4-5 mm | 1.5-2 mm |
| Habitat | Farmland | Farmland |
| Diet | Blood Feeders | Parasitoids |
| Regions | South, Southeast, and East Asia | Europe, Asia, North America |
| Conservation | Least Concern | Least Concern |
Japanese Encephalitis Mosquito
A medium-sized brownish mosquito with a pale band on the proboscis that is the primary vector of Japanese encephalitis virus across Asia. It breeds predominantly in rice paddies, which provide vast breeding habitat. It feeds primarily on large domestic animals, with occasional spillover biting of humans.
Did You Know?
Rice paddy agriculture creates perfect breeding habitat for this mosquito, linking Japanese encephalitis directly to rice cultivation.
Braconid Mummy Wasp
A small parasitoid wasp specializing in green peach aphids and other crop pest aphids. It is commercially reared for biological pest control.
Did You Know?
Females can detect which aphids have already been parasitized and avoid wasting eggs on them.