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biting midge

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biting midge

n.
Any of various minute, biting flies of the family Ceratopogonidae. Also called no-see-um, punkie, sandfly.
The American Heritage® Medical Dictionary Copyright © 2007, 2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
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References in periodicals archive
FANAR, Lebanon: A biting midge, now encased in amber, bit a dinosaur 135 million years ago in what is today the country of Lebanon.
Researchers at the University of Edinburgh's Centre for Tropical Veterinary Medicine found that the Highland biting midge is particularly attracted to the sweat of certain individuals.
This emergence of BT into parts of Europe never before affected was attributed mainly to climate change and was linked to the northern expansion of the major Old World vector Culicoides imicola (Kieffer), which is an Afro-Asiatic species of biting midge (13).
Management of North American Culicoides biting midges: current knowledge and research needs.
Apart from biting midges some other vectors like arthropods; ticks and mosquitoes are also responsible for the transmission of BTV virus.
Floridians and Florida vacationers can rely on Reynolds Pest Management, Inc for further information on the commonly encountered Biting Midges also known as No-See-Ums.
On the basis of 12 years' research of using bacterial preparations, we have identified that the concentration of 3.0 g of product per liter is lethal to larvae of biting midges. The data obtained from the treated and untreated areas indicate a considerable decrease in the number of midges' larvae.
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