EXPLAINER

Has climate change brought mosquitoes to Iceland?

Iceland is no longer among the few places in the world free of mosquitoes. Scientists point to rising temperatures.

Mosquitoes of the species Culiseta annulata, not known to carry diseases, have been found in Iceland [File: Representative image courtesy of Creative Commons]

By Sarah Shamim

Published On 23 Oct 202523 Oct 2025

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Mosquitoes were detected in Iceland for the first time this month, resulting in the country losing its status as one of the only places in the world without them. The findings were confirmed by the country’s national science institute on Monday.

This follows record-breaking heat this past summer, which has sped up the glacial melting in the country.

When were mosquitoes detected in Iceland?

On October 16, insect enthusiast Bjorn Hjaltason posted on a Facebook group Skordýr og Nytjadýr Á Íslandi (Insects in Iceland) that he had spotted mosquitoes in Kidafell, Kjos at dusk that day.

He said he had caught some using a red wine ribbon, a trap using sweetened wine as bait to attract insects. Kjos is a glacial valley around 52km (32 miles) northeast of the Icelandic capital Reykjavik.

Hjaltason sent the mosquitoes to the Natural Science Institute of Iceland, where entomologist Matthias Alfredsson confirmed they were indeed mosquitoes.

Which type of mosquitoes have been found?

Alfredsson identified the mosquitoes as belonging to the Culiseta annulata species. This cold-resistant species is native to the Palearctic, which refers to Europe, North Africa and most of Asia north of the Himalayas. The Cuilseta annulata are not known to carry disease, but are generally considered a nuisance.

“It has adapted to a rather cold climate, surviving the winter as an adult and then staying in shelter, such as outbuildings and basements. The fly stings but is not considered dangerous to humans as it does not carry any known infections in these areas,” a news release published by the Natural Science Institute on Tuesday stated.

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Mosquito species that are well-adapted to cooler conditions and can survive winters as eggs or larvae do not tend to carry disease.

“However, their development is slower, their active season shorter, and most tropical diseases cannot complete their life cycle before cold weather sets in,” British entomologist Luke Tilley, from the Royal Entomological  Society, told Al Jazeera. “Cooler regions, therefore, tend to have mosquitoes, but with lower disease risk.”

Why did Iceland not have any mosquitoes before?

There are more than 3,500 species of mosquitoes around the globe, and they can be found in most parts of the world, bar a very few, including Iceland and Antarctica.

Mosquitoes breed in shallow, stagnant bodies of water, which Iceland is, in fact, abundant with. Despite having many marshes and ponds, however, it has never had a native mosquito population.

This is because mosquitoes are cold-blooded, which means they thrive in warmer environments. Male mosquitoes also feed on flowers, which thrive in warmer temperatures.

“Warmer air and water speed up their growth, feeding and reproduction, and also allow disease‑causing organisms inside them to develop more quickly. Longer warm seasons mean more generations of mosquitoes each year, and changes in rainfall can create new pools and puddles for breeding,” Tilley said.

Iceland is generally cold throughout the year. Its average temperature varies from -1 degree Celsius (30 degrees Fahrenheit) in the winter to 11 degrees Celsius (52 degrees Fahrenheit) in the warmer months.

Mosquitoes lay their eggs during cold weather, and when the water thaws, the larvae hatch from the eggs. In Iceland, however, water typically freezes and thaws several times a year – making the landscape generally inhospitable for mosquitoes.

Before mosquitoes were spotted this month, the closest they had come to Iceland was in the 1980s, when biologist Gisli Mar Gislason spotted one inside his aeroplane that had arrived at Keflavík International Airport from Greenland. The mosquito is preserved at the Icelandic Institute of Natural History.

Cottongrass grows on marshy ground near the melting Svinafellsjokull glacier in August 2021 near Svinafell, Iceland. Until now, Icelandic marshes have been too cold – and undergone too many annual freezing cycles – to support mosquitoes. Climate change may be changing this as glaciers retreat [File: Sean Gallup/Getty Images]

Why are mosquitoes appearing in Iceland now?

In a statement, the Natural Science Institute said it is unclear how these particular mosquitoes came to be in Iceland. However, it added: “It is likely that it was transported by freight. It is uncertain whether it has settled here permanently, but everything indicates that it can survive in Icelandic conditions.”

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A growing number of new insect species are being observed in Iceland due to a warming climate and increased transportation, the institute said.

The country is warming at an unprecedented rate. In May this year, Iceland and neighbouring Greenland experienced record-breaking heat due to a persistent weather pattern that brought unusually warm air from the south. In May, temperatures recorded in Iceland were some 13 degrees Celsius (23.4 degrees Fahrenheit) warmer than the 1990-2020 average – 10 times higher than the average warming of 1.3 degrees (2.3 degrees Fahrenheit) across the world as a whole.

The country’s glaciers have been rapidly melting, and are projected to lose about half of their volume by 2100, the country’s Vatnajokull National Park website states.

An aerial view of Svinafellsjokull glacier in Iceland on April 15, 2023 [File: Athanasios Gioumpasis/Getty Images]

Are mosquitoes making new appearances in other parts of the world as well?

Yes. Warming temperatures are changing how mosquitoes behave in many parts of the world.

The World Health Organization (WHO) has identified the increase in insect-borne disease as one of the biggest health threats to humans associated with climate change.

“Warmer conditions can allow mosquitoes and the pathogens [diseases] they carry to survive in new regions, extending the potential range of diseases such as dengue, chikungunya and West Nile virus,” Tilley said.

“International travel, trade and changes in land use also play a part. The key is careful monitoring and preparedness to prevent local transmission.”

In September 2023, the United Kingdom found the eggs of Aedes aegypti mosquitoes in the country for the first time near Heathrow Airport. Then, in August 2024, four Aedes albopictus eggs were found at a motorway service station in Kent. No further specimens were found on investigation.

The Aedes aegypti mosquito is responsible for the spread of diseases such as dengue, chikungunya and Zika. Aedes albopictus can also transmit diseases such as dengue and chikungunya.

European countries have reported increasing cases of mosquito-borne illnesses recently. Last year, Italy had more than 200 local dengue cases. France and Spain also reported cases of the disease. This year, France has recorded 500 cases of chikungunya.

Warmer countries that already have high rates of mosquito-borne illnesses are seeing a surge in numbers. In September this year, Bangladesh recorded the largest single-day rise in both deaths and hospital admissions from dengue fever when 12 people died and 740 new people were hospitalised in just 24 hours.

Besides increasing temperatures, heavy rainfall can also allow mosquitoes to thrive. The rain flushes mosquito eggs, larvae, and pupae from areas in which they breed to new areas. If rainwater does not drain away properly, it leaves pools of shallow, stagnant water, which serve as ideal breeding grounds for mosquitoes.

Tilley explained that besides the spread of disease, changing mosquito populations can also create shifts in the ecosystem. “More mosquitoes can benefit their predators such as bats, dragonflies and birds, but disease in wildlife may also rise,” he said.

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Tilley added that these shifts in mosquito behaviour also allow insect scientists to study patterns in climate change, noting, “Insects like mosquitoes are valuable indicators of environmental change, helping insect scientists track how ecosystems respond to a warming climate.”