Adult females usually live about a week or two, while adult males live only long enough to mate, about two to four days. Only female mosquitoes bite. They need the protein in blood to produce eggs.
A female can produce as many as 250 eggs from one bloodmeal. After the eggs are laid, they may hatch in a couple of days or it may be months before they hatch.
The larva, or wriggler, emerges from the egg and grows from 1/16" to 1/4" in length in four to ten days, depending on the temperature of the water they grow in.
The next stage is the pupa, or tumbler. This stage lasts only about two days. During this time the mosquito transforms from the aquatic larva into the flying adult. The pupa does not feed.
Okaloosa County Mosquito Control District
84 Ready Avenue
Fort Walton Beach, Florida 32548
Phone: (850) 651-7394 or (850) 689-5774
Fax: (850) 651-7397
E-mail
302 N. Wilson St. - Suite 302
Crestview, FL 32536
1250 N. Eglin Parkway, Suite 100
Shalimar, FL 32579
Call 850-689-5050 or 850-423-1542 for all departments.