||A*noph"e*les (&adot;*n&obreve;f"&esl;*lēz),
n. [NL., fr. Gr. 'anwfelh`s useless,
hurtful.] (Zoöl.) A genus of mosquitoes which are
secondary hosts of the malaria parasites, and whose bite is the usual,
if not the only, means of infecting human beings with malaria. Several
species are found in the United States. They may be distinguished from
the ordinary mosquitoes of the genus Culex by the long slender
palpi, nearly equaling the beak in length, while those of the female
Culex are very short. They also assume different positions when
resting, Culex usually holding the body parallel to the surface
on which it rests and keeping the head and beak bent at an angle,
while Anopheles holds the body at an angle with the surface and
the head and beak in line with it. Unless they become themselves
infected by previously biting a subject affected with malaria, the
insects cannot transmit the disease.
||A*noph"e*les (&adot;*n&obreve;f"&esl;*lēz),
n. [NL., fr. Gr. 'anwfelh`s useless,
hurtful.] (Zoöl.) A genus of mosquitoes which are
secondary hosts of the malaria parasites, and whose bite is the usual,
if not the only, means of infecting human beings with malaria. Several
species are found in the United States. They may be distinguished from
the ordinary mosquitoes of the genus Culex by the long slender
palpi, nearly equaling the beak in length, while those of the female
Culex are very short. They also assume different positions when
resting, Culex usually holding the body parallel to the surface
on which it rests and keeping the head and beak bent at an angle,
while Anopheles holds the body at an angle with the surface and
the head and beak in line with it. Unless they become themselves
infected by previously biting a subject affected with malaria, the
insects cannot transmit the disease.