Abstract

The variability of 13 larval morphological characteristics in the urban mosquito, Culex pipiens f. molestus and Culex torrentium, was investigated. These species, belonging to the Culex pipiens complex, are characterized by rapid ecological and evolutionary processes following the human-induced environmental changes. A comparison of 4 geographical larval populations of C. pipiens f. molestus and Culex torrentium revealed different rates of divergence of different morphological traits. In the older form in terms of evolutionary development, C. torrentium, the two local populations differed in the structures of the trophic morphological complex characterized by a higher functional trophic load, while the structures with a lower functional load did not differ between the populations. On the contrary, the populations of the younger form, C. pipiens f. molestus, which had recently colonized new urban sites, differed in the structures with a low functional trophic load (some structures of siphon and abdominal segment IX), whereas structures of the trophic morphological complex were similar in different populations. The possible mechanisms of these morphological transformations and their role in the evolution of mosquito larvae are discussed.

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