Mosquitoes discovered in Iceland for the first time

(cnn.com)

184 points | by breve 3 days ago

22 comments

  • rootusrootus 13 hours ago
    I am surprised that I should be surprised. Aren't mosquitoes a well known nuisance in Greenland, which despite the name is colder than Iceland? I would have expected that mosquitos in Iceland were also entirely normal. TIL.
    • j_bum 13 hours ago
      This travel blog was posted a bit ago on HN [0]. Much of the nature of Greenland was a shock for me to learn about, including the severe mosquitos.

      [0] https://matduggan.com/greenland-is-a-beautiful-nightmare/

    • somenameforme 13 hours ago
      Siberia is also known to have just extremely brutal mosquito seasons. Turns out even -40C isn't enough to do away with the little persistent blood suckers.
      • telchior 3 hours ago
        I've read that there are tribes who spent a month or more at the peak of biting insect season hiding in their tents and filling them with smoke. The bugs swarm so thickly that they can kill cows. Not by biting them to death, but by clogging their nostrils until the cow suffocates.
      • mmmBacon 11 hours ago
        Not surprising at all to me after several summer trips to interior Alaska. The mosquitoes are so thick that you inhale them sometimes; which is so disgusting. I slathered myself in Deet (the only thing that works) and was mostly ok. Even then they find every square mm that you missed. I sat down for 30 minutes on a bench leaning forward talking to some people. My shirt pulled up about 1/2” (12mm). Later I counted 137 bites (some had merged due to swelling) across that strip of exposed flesh!
        • steve_adams_86 9 hours ago
          Interior British Columbia sounds similar. I used to work in the forest and they were so persistent, invasive, and aggressive. You had to just stop caring because they were relentless and virtually unstoppable. They'd end up in your clothing, in your hair, your nose, mouth... Sometimes the itch was so severe it burned.

          I don't miss that. It usually peaked and calmed down with the season, but if it was warm enough they were always around.

      • kgeist 11 hours ago
        From what I know, Siberia's mosquitoes are even more brutal than those in the more temperate regions of Russia, and there are far more of them. Iceland's lack of mosquitoes doesn't seem to be due to the cold itself; something else must be at play. Iceland's average winter temperate is around -1C.
        • EasyMark 4 hours ago
          Much shorter breeding season so maybe evolutionary selection made them even more aggressive than the typical US swamp mosquito. The worst I've ever encountered here in Texas some kind of deer fly, and they're tough and bloodthirstily agressive. I have backhanded them 20ft and they come back for more.
      • jb1991 12 hours ago
        And Alaska.
        • HowardStark 12 hours ago
          Nothing killed my dream of a private island in Alaska quite so fast as elephant mosquitoes[0]

          [0]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toxorhynchites_rutilus

          • gruez 12 hours ago
            >Tx. rutilus feeding behaviors make them strikingly different from a typical mosquito. Both adult males and females are strictly nectar-feeding and so they do not have a role in the transmission of pathogens to animals as in other mosquitoes.[7] Instead, their larvae are predacious and could potentially help curb the spread of diseases via vector mosquitoes. While they commonly prey on copepods, rotifers, ostracods, and chironomids, they also generally have a preference for certain species of mosquito larvae including common disease vectors such as Aedes albopictus, Aedes aegypti, and Aedes polynesiensis.

            what's the issue?

          • capitainenemo 12 hours ago
            The wikipedia article you linked to says that the adults of that species feed only on nectar and do not suck blood.
          • mike978 10 hours ago
            In my experience Black flies[1] and no-see-ums[2] are far worse (not counting mosquitoes born disease). It's like a massive angry cloud of micro horseflies that intend to dismember you bite by bite.

            [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_fly [2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ceratopogonidae

            • nealabq 5 hours ago
              The Blackfly song has it right then? Thank you National Film Board of Canada: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f389hIxZAOc
              • mike978 3 hours ago
                Pretty much - although after living with it for 4 year I can report it's often worse. =) The local bookstore gave a discount for the first bite of the season if you lived long enough to collect.
            • capitainenemo 8 hours ago
              FWIW black flies are also disease carriers.
              • nkurz 5 hours ago
                While technically true, I think that's in tropical Africa. Are there also diseases that they carry in North America? Even without disease, I tend to agree with the OP that black flies are worse than mosquitoes, and don't think I've ever heard of anyone getting a disease from a black fly bite in the US or Canada.
              • mike978 8 hours ago
                Yeah, they can, I was just commenting on the physical experience as to which insects would keep me away from the northern latitudes.
    • noselasd 13 hours ago
      Iceland does have a lot of gnats, midges, flies etc. that are just as big a nusance.
    • IncreasePosts 13 hours ago
      Greenland is pretty close to the main body of North America, they would only need to traverse 30 miles of water to get there. Whereas Iceland is about 200 miles from the closest point in Greenland.
      • fluoridation 12 hours ago
        Not sure Ellesmere Island counts as part of the main body of NA. If you exclude the Northern edge of Greenland, which also the most hostile I would assume, Greenland is about as close to NA as to Iceland.
      • ant6n 11 hours ago
        Actually there’s a land border between Canada and Greenland.
  • badc0ffee 12 hours ago
    Iceland doesn't have "extreme cold". It does go below freezing in the winter, though, and it's relatively isolated.

    Calgary has a few weeks of -30C every winter, and we are not short on mosquitoes.

    • sandworm101 11 hours ago
      And calgary is southern alberta, closer to the US border than it is to northern canada. Fort McMurray and areas north regularly get -40 weeks and still have loads of bugs come summer.

      (Being so far from any coast, the northern canadian praries often trade turns with inner siberia for the coldest place on earth during winter. The north pole is kept "warm" by the sea.)

  • macintux 14 hours ago
  • mooops 14 hours ago
    Likely human introduction. Far from being an isolated case: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-025-64446-3
  • minkeymaniac 12 hours ago
    I never imagined that they could survive in Alaska. From the show Life below zero... take a look at these.....https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YXq92PItsA0
    • decimalenough 12 hours ago
      Nosquitos themselves can't survive when it goes below freezing, but sadly their eggs are nearly indestructible. Siberia, Alaska and the northern parts of the Nordics are absolutely plagued with them in the summer, since snowmelt creates huge amounts of stagnant water that melts the eggs in a perfect habitat for breeding.
    • fishywang 12 hours ago
      I have a magnet that's a mosquito with text "Alaska state bird".
    • MathMonkeyMan 12 hours ago
      I've read that migrating herds change their course from year to year to avoid the recently hatched swarms of mosquitoes.
    • kulahan 12 hours ago
      Shocking considering how cold it gets there. It's cold and dry and windy where I live, and there are nearly zero skeeters. I spend most of my afternoons on the porch, and I've been bit twice all summer. But this tracks with what I've heard from campers and hikers in that region. You wake up and your tent is covered in the little bastards.
  • somat 8 hours ago
    Yes Iceland has no mosquitoes(or perhaps I should say had) but...

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yMgIVx2kUH4

    People hear "Iceland has no mosquitoes" and think that means "Iceland has no biting flys", spoiler, they do.

  • behnamoh 15 hours ago
    What's the average life span of mosquitoes? Assuming the climate in Iceland has become warm enough for them to survive there, how did they get there in the first place? Is the atmosphere just full of insect eggs?
    • dec0dedab0de 14 hours ago
      The species in the article is already adapted to cold weather. They will find out in the spring if it is adapted well enough to survive the icelandic winter

      It is remarkable this is the first time mosquitos have been found in the wild in Iceland though. Even if they died out in the winter, you would expect some to hide in shipping containers and lay eggs all summer. Which is how we got Tiger Mosquitos in New Jersey, and now it doesn't get cold enough to kill them and it is so much worse than it used to be.

      • cogogo 12 hours ago
        Saw a tiger mosquito for the first time in Boston last fall. Reported it to the state but it is a losing battle and they are steadily establishing residency. Back again this season so a moderately cold winter still did not kill them off. They are extremely annoying as their primary prey are humans and they are very good at biting you without noticing - then comes the itch. Especially in late August into Oct.

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aedes_albopictus

        • unyttigfjelltol 12 hours ago
          Lived in Mass. many years, always thought striped-leg mosquitoes were the native variety….

          What did you think the city would do about it?

    • dmicah 15 hours ago
      They probably hitched a ride on human travel. The article says "It’s unclear how the mosquito arrived in Iceland, but theories include the possibility it came via ships or containers."
    • BurningFrog 13 hours ago
      There are mosquitos all across the arctic, in colder places that Iceland.

      They typically survive the winter in egg form.

    • pixl97 14 hours ago
      Stagnant fresh water in a ship most likely.
    • axus 14 hours ago
      Isn't Iceland the green island, and Greenland the icy one?
      • BaardFigur 13 hours ago
        Iceland is plenty icy enough on its own. Lots of glaciers. But instead of covering 99% of the island, like Greenland, it's just a significant portion of it, instead. Also the weather there isn't particularly warm or great, even if it's more hospitable than Greenland
      • tokai 11 hours ago
        Iceland is more of a black stony desert.
      • lenerdenator 14 hours ago
        I went to Iceland for a trip in very late December. It's decidedly not green in winter.
        • bonzini 14 hours ago
          Tomorrow is going to be the first snowy day in Reykjavik this year.
    • paul7986 13 hours ago
      Iceland per my visits isn't frigid on average 20 to 45 degrees Fahrenheit in January. In it's capital at least. Overall im surprised they called it IceLand vs. WindLand. The wind is fierce.
      • kulahan 12 hours ago
        There's a (probably apocryphal) story that it was done for advertising reasons. Someone wanted people to sell land.
      • throwway120385 12 hours ago
        On old enough maps, I thought it was sometimes spelled Island not Iceland.
        • Tistron 11 hours ago
          Yeah, is-land means ice-land in Scandinavian languages.
  • nealabq 5 hours ago
    Since Iceland is so isolated, it may be a good place to see if a gene drive can actually eradicate.
  • hinkley 13 hours ago
    “Who cares if the world gets 2° warmer?”

    Mosquitoes. Mosquitoes care.

    • kelnos 12 hours ago
      While there are a lot of things we can blame on climate change, likely this isn't one of them. There are already several types of mosquitos adapted to cold temperatures, much lower than Iceland's. A rise in temperatures didn't help them get to Iceland.
      • hinkley 1 hour ago
        The big thing with insects is going to be less about how they got there and more about whether they can survive a typical winter. Those of us in colder regions don't realize how spoiled we are for just having to wait three months for some of the worst pests to expire. Or plants for that matter.
  • ludwigvan 11 hours ago
    I hate mosquitoes with a passion. Might be the only species that I would want eradicated from Earth.

    From my experience (based in Turkey), mosquitoes seem to be getting more and more resilient. They have become an annoyance even in autumn, and I recall catching one last winter. A few decades ago, they used to only appear in late spring and summer. Anyone have a similar experience elsewhere?

  • abstractspoon 2 days ago
    Getting more in the middle of winter in NSW Australia too
  • stackedinserter 14 hours ago
    I'm surprised that happened this year, with all those ships and travel. Mosquitos couldn't grasp hiding on cargo ships until now?
    • CaptainOfCoit 14 hours ago
      Could also be that mosquitos always managed to hitch a ride, but in so small numbers that they disappeared relatively quickly once they arrived, or it simply was too cold but some always appeared.

      But now when it's a bit warmer, the same amount arrives but more survive.

      • whycome 14 hours ago
        Also, more time for succeeding populations to have mutations that have better adapted to even the colder climate.
    • James_K 14 hours ago
      In order to produce a breeding population, several mosquitoes need to hitch a ride on the same ship and stay close enough together that they can mate after arriving. They also need to survive the trip over without that much food. I imagine its quite unlikely.
      • nobodyandproud 14 hours ago
        Strong disagree. One auto tire with a few cups of stagnant water can easily have dozens of larvae.

        On an entire ship? Probably hundreds of dozens.

      • lithocarpus 14 hours ago
        Birds can carry insects or their eggs all over the place too.
  • jamesblonde 11 hours ago
    Ireland is still pretty much free of mosquitoes. I think it is the wind and exposure that keeps them out
  • bookofjoe 14 hours ago
  • Havoc 3 days ago
    Having been seeing unseasonal ones in London too as of late
    • pfdietz 13 hours ago
      Historically there was malaria in southern England up to Victorian times.
  • dinkblam 13 hours ago
    Mosquitoes, Snakes & Jellyfish. Everyone else is welcome to live long & prosper but those 3 we should just remove from our planet...
    • RajT88 13 hours ago
      Sneks eat a lot of rodents and various garden wreckers. Unless you live somewhere where they are poisonous and bitey, they are fine. Non-poisonous snakes far outnumber the poisonous ones.
      • zikduruqe 12 hours ago
        Venomous snakes far outnumber the poisonous ones.
        • RajT88 12 hours ago
          I see I am dealing with a senior level pedant. Well done, sir!
      • Zancarius 13 hours ago
        I live in an area where we have these[1], and they're generally not something you see all that often. Their biggest danger isn't their venom (they're less venomous than the diamondback) so much as their curiosity, which can get them into locations they otherwise don't belong. They aren't overly aggressive snakes, and I've encountered them several times over the years.

        Alon with bullsnakes, they're extremely useful for getting rid of said rodents—which CAN carry awful pathogens, like hanta virus!

        [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black-tailed_rattlesnake

        • RajT88 12 hours ago
          I lived in NC for 6 months once. My boss at the time told me I'd need to watch out for copperheads in September when they come out. Indeed, I did have to shoo one off a bike path when September came.
    • lukan 13 hours ago
      Ticks are sometimes more annoying and way less ecological useful. (without mosquitos for example there would be way less birds, bats, ...)
      • acdha 13 hours ago
        I’ve seen researchers suggesting that mosquitoes aren’t a big enough part of anything’s diet to be missed:

        https://www.nature.com/articles/466432a

        • cultofmetatron 13 hours ago
          there's a large amount of endangered and critically important species for which the strongest reason the general public accepts for why we should accommodate them is "they eat X in mosquitos every night"
          • charliebwrites 13 hours ago
            What are those species?
            • kulahan 12 hours ago
              Probably tons of bats and small nocturnal mammals.
      • bryanlarsen 13 hours ago
        The serious proposals to eliminate mosquitoes only propose to eliminate the mosquito species that carry nasty human diseases. If those species were eliminated other mosquito species would quickly expand to replace the eliminated species.

        So that's good for the birds, and bad for the humans that want to get rid of all the pesky annoying mosquitoes, not just get rid of mosquito born disease.

        • henearkr 12 hours ago
          Although you can just make the disease carriers immune to the disease.

          In that case, not even need to exterminate any species.

          That's typically done by introducing some Wolbachia in their gut.

      • jvanderbot 13 hours ago
        Lots and lots of delicious ground-dwelling birds eat ticks (Turkey, Chicken, Quail), but they'd figure something else out.
        • lukan 13 hours ago
          But not as their main source of food as far as I know. Bugs, worms and spiders are way bigger and more common.
      • guelo 12 hours ago
        Yes, all the ectoparasites, look it up. We've eliminated most endoparasites that used to live inside us. If we figure out how to, we should eliminate the ectos, including mosquitos.
    • vunderba 12 hours ago
      Snakes and jellyfish sounds more like a phobia issue.

      The three on my "eliminate at all costs" have always been mosquitos, fleas, and ticks.

      • cpursley 8 hours ago
        Jellyfish blooms actually are an ecological issue in some places. They thrive under certain conditions and wreck fish populations.
    • vee-kay 12 hours ago
      Nah, snakes and jellyfish serve a valid purpose in the ecosystem.

      But yeah, mosquitoes and cockroaches should be made extinct, even if they are tough critters.

      Talking of tough though..

      Say hello to the only creature that's evolved to cheat death itself: the Immortal Jellyfish. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/immortal_jellyfish

      • kulahan 12 hours ago
        As I understand it, scientists believe that lobsters are also functionally immortal, just not invulnerable. I think the problem is that after a while, it takes so many calories to continue molting, they simply can't hold enough in their bodies or something? Anyways, they don't have an old age problem like you'd expect.
    • pfdietz 13 hours ago
      We have only nonvenomous snakes where I live. They are welcome in the yard. My only concern is running over them with the mower.
  • I_dream_of_Geni 13 hours ago
    Finally, Iceland can feel our pain....
    • lepicz 13 hours ago
      they have their own pain - there are those different mosquitoes, that tries to enter your every orifice. eyes, ears, nose, urethra. very annoying.

      after long journey we arrived into the camp. we wondered why we were the only ones there, so we got out of the car and there they were. a lot of them. that was the fastest i ever built a tent and we jumped in it and called it an early night :)

      • lagniappe 13 hours ago
        Urethra?
        • spockz 13 hours ago
          That through which the urine flows/exits.
  • lazyeye 15 hours ago
    Never understood how mosquitos could survive the sub-zero temperatures of an Alaskan winter for example.
  • nakamoto_damacy 13 hours ago
    So in case of Iceland, can we call it Global Warming again? I miss that term.

    Has the future arrived, bit it’s not equally distributed?

  • tb_technical 13 hours ago
    Kill them while you still can. The mosquitos in the Midwest are so ferocious their swarms can kidnap small children.
    • ChrisMarshallNY 12 hours ago
      I had an employee that hailed from MN.

      He had a T-shirt, with two mosquitoes on it.

      The caption was "Minnesota Air Force."

      When I lived in Nigeria, they had these swarms that were so dense, they could drain you of a measurable amount of blood, in a few minutes.

      My sister got caught in one. Not fun.

      • lawn 12 hours ago
        We have a "Mosquito Park" with the Jurassic Park logo, but with a mosquito on from where we live in the north of Sweden.
    • nerdponx 11 hours ago
      There is an hypothesis that dinosaurs were already in decline before the Cretaceous extinction due to the evolution of blood-sucking insects: https://news.oregonstate.edu/news/insect-attack-may-have-bee...
  • szundi 13 hours ago
    [dead]
  • CNNCultists 13 hours ago
    [flagged]