
Iceland’s First Mosquitoes Signal a Warming Arctic and a Call for Global Insect Monitoring
Iceland has recorded its first mosquitoes (Culiseta annulata), underscoring rapid Arctic ecological shifts driven by warming and human activity. Researchers warn that the Arctic’s changing arthropod communities could ripple through ecosystems and climate feedbacks, but long-term, standardized monitoring remains underdeveloped. They advocate an international, coordinated arthropod monitoring network (Network for Arthropods in the Tundra) to track movements and determine whether new arrivals persist across the Arctic.