Several major outlets, including NPR, The Washington Post, and The Guardian, recently reported the discovery of three mosquitoes in Iceland as proof that global warming has arrived in the North Atlantic. According to the coverage, the presence of the species Culiseta annulata “shows how climate change is making Iceland more hospitable for insects.”
Each story followed the same template: a small event, inflated into a global narrative. But a closer look at the facts — and the research on Arctic mosquito ecology — suggests a much simpler, less dramatic explanation.
The insects identified were Culiseta annulata, a species long established throughout northern Europe and the British Isles. As the Natural Science Institute of Iceland itself explained, these mosquitoes can “live in cold weather, usually finding shelter in outbuildings and basements.” That’s an adaptation, not a symptom of climate change.
The Institute also noted that the mosquitoes likely arrived by freight or air transport — not by natural migration. Iceland is separated from other landmasses by hundreds of miles of open ocean, and mosquitoes do not travel across the Atlantic under their own power. The explanation “arrived by freight” is found directly in the NPR story — a line that would normally end any speculation about climate causation.
If temperature and latitude alone determined mosquito presence, then Alaska, Canada, and Svalbard would be insect-free. Instead, these regions are known for their intense summer mosquito swarms.
Peer-reviewed work in the Ecological Society of America’s journal Ecosphere (“Spatial heterogeneity in the abundance and fecundity of Arctic mosquitoes,” Culler et al., 2018) documented large populations of Arctic mosquitoes thriving at average summer temperatures of only 4–10°C. Figure 1 in that study shows mosquito emergence occurring at temperatures barely above freezing.
A second paper, “Spatial and temporal patterns in Arctic mosquito abundance” (Coulson et al., 2022), found densities exceeding 1,000 individuals per square kilometer in Svalbard — one of the coldest inhabited areas on Earth. If mosquitoes prosper north of 78° latitude, Iceland’s isolated incident tells us little about “warming.”
Shipping, Not Shifting Climate
Even the scientists quoted in the news stories hinted at this. In the Washington Post, Australian entomologist Philip Weinstein observed that “even for a cold-adapted species, the harsh conditions of Iceland would make it more challenging for it to survive and establish itself locally.” He added that the species is “extremely unlikely to act as a disease transmitter.” That suggests a transient occurrence, not the dawn of a new ecosystem.
Transport and trade are far more credible vectors than temperature. As global shipping and air travel expand, so does the incidental movement of insects. This pattern has been well-documented in biological literature as “anthropogenic introduction” — species traveling with humans, not with the climate.
Field studies in Alaska and Svalbard reveal that mosquito abundance depends mostly on snowmelt timing and water persistence, not gradual warming. Culler et al. (2018) demonstrated (Fig. 2) that mosquito emergence peaks when surface ponds persist into late July, regardless of mean temperature. Coulson et al. (2022) found that population density correlated more strongly with standing-water duration (R² = 0.73) than with air temperature (R² = 0.12). In short: mosquitoes need puddles, not a specific climate.
Each article used nearly identical framing. The Guardian declared that “global heating makes the country more hospitable for insects.” The Post called it “a development potentially linked to global warming.” And NPR assured readers that “the Arctic region is warming at more than double the rate of the global average.”
Yet all three also admitted that cargo and human activity probably brought the insects there. That contradiction — attributing the event to both transport and temperature — highlights the problem with treating every biological observation as a climate signal.
The Arctic already hosts thriving mosquito populations. The species Aedes nigripes and Aedes impiger have adapted to subfreezing winters and extremely short summers. Alaskans have joked for decades that “the mosquito is the state bird.” That’s not new — it’s natural history.
Iceland’s isolation, lack of wetlands, and oceanic climate have prevented these species from establishing there, not because of cold per se, but because of geography and ecology. One freight container or airplane with a few stowaway insects does not change that fundamental limitation.
Conclusion
Three mosquitoes do not constitute a climate trend. They constitute a data point in the story of global trade and species dispersal. Attributing every such event to climate change risks trivializing both science and journalism.
Real ecological studies from Alaska, Canada, and Svalbard demonstrate that mosquitoes can thrive in Arctic conditions that make Iceland seem mild by comparison. Their success depends on water availability, not climate change.
So when the next headline declares that “climate change has come to Iceland — and it’s biting,” it might be worth remembering: sometimes a mosquito is just a mosquito, and sometimes, the story got there by cargo plane.
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Another reason to defund the NPR. The NPR can be counted on to follow the Left narrative no matter the subject. Like the UN they readily stray from their mission into propaganda.
They get worse by the day. They are so shocked by Trump that all they can talk about all day and every day is how bad Trump is and his administration. I listen when driving around- since I can’t find any decent channels- so I listen to hear what crazy shit they’ll be talking about.
How propaganda is not the entirety of their mission?
Their mission is, and has always been, propaganda.
So have any more than those three been found? this story is a few days old now and it’s likely that lots of Icelanders are out there looking for more. Sort of like claims for UFOs, begs the question where are they?
Considering that there are left-wing individuals so deranged that they resort to arson in order to claim forest fires in California are caused by climate, it’s not too much of a stretch to consider similar lunatics might smuggle in some live mosquitoes.
In any case wait for more mosquitoes to be found.
Another article that I read a couple of days ago said that this isn’t the first time that mosquitoes have been found in Iceland. However, seasonal cold weather three times a year have always eliminated them. While this cold-adapted species may end up establishing themselves, I suspect that it is the third seasonal cold spell that may explain why mosquitoes haven’t been able to establish themselves previously. They may be adapted to Spring and Fall killing frosts, but the third one gets them. Inasmuch as ships and aircraft have been delivering mosquitoes to Iceland for decades, I’d bet that the regional climate makes it nearly impossible for them to survive long-term without evolutionary adaptation. Apparently, the Icelanders haven’t even made an attempt to eradicate them or prevent their re-introductions.
A Google search says that no mosquitoes have been found in Iceland since the Oct 16th incident. Google didn’t say if there was any effort to do so either.
On another front a polar bear came ashore in Iceland (~10 years ago?) and the Icelanders promptly went out and shot it. A google search is in order:
Hmmm one was shot last year in addition to the one in 2016 LINK
New mosquitos are produced by existing mosquitos, right? So climate change has managed to create three mosquitos out of thin air! Who would have thunk it?
I lived in Iceland for over a year.
Drying fish on racks for preservation is done everywhere. The racks most be several feet above the ground to keep the insects (flys) off them.
The smell is horrendous. When wind conditions were right we had “fish conditions” to stay inside.
Which species of fish are most commonly caught and on those racks?
Cod.
Mosquitos in Iceland? Cool. I saw one fly in Geneseo NY a few years ago.
Funny-I like it!
Great aeroplane. Being made of wood we could say it was sustainable…
The exhaust stacks are covered. Uh because the flames could be seen at night?
I saw that too. You may be right.
I’ve worked in Alaska in areas of permafrost, and the summer mosquito bloom is incredible. They don’t suck your blood, they cart you off for a party with their friends. Deet? It’s like barbecue sauce for them. Don’t go there when there is a mosquito bloom.
Malaria used to be the leading cause of non-natural deaths in Russia until the 19th century,
and a 100 years ago an estimated 18 million Russians suffered from Malaria according to Gusravo Pattaluga.
Yeah, Mosquitos must be extremely rare in cold regions 🙂
And I can only imagine how inexistent Mosquitos must have been in Iceland during the time when its neighboring and more northern island Greenland used to be … Green.
While mosquitoes may not usually fly hundreds of miles to colonize an island, storms can blow them in. The fact that there were no established mosquitoes in Iceland suggests to me that there is something unique about Iceland’s climate that makes it inhospitable for mosquitoes.
Continental climate may be the reason – or the absence of it.
While Antarctica seems to be generally too cold for insects(except for one, and all those that came along with Windows OS)
Iceland seems just to have too many sudden and massive temperature swings that are incompatible with their reproduction cycles.
The dry and cold climate does the rest of the job.
I remember one time driving through Yosemite NP and stopping along the road in Tuolumne Meadows. I wanted to inspect some bare rock outcrops. As I got farther away from the road, gray clouds started to rise up from the grass. While walking at a good pace, swinging my arms, I realized that the ‘clouds’ were mosquitoes. They were so abundant that I could feel them with my hands. I picked up my pace and made it to one of the bare granodiorite, dome-shaped outcrops. Fortunately, the mosquitoes didn’t follow me up. That gave me a chance to catch my breathe before RUNNING back to my truck! I had to drive for several miles with the windows rolled down to blow out the few mosquitoes that had followed me back.
“Three mosquitoes do not constitute a climate trend.”
Right, and… the climate nut jobs don’t enough real problems to worry about.
Oh for Pete’s sake-does Iceland even have mosquitos, like Alaska? If not, maybe they hitched a ride on a plane, or some boat’s bilge? Nothing to see here-but watch the MSM start crying about possible mosquito borne illnesses…Yellow Fever, malaria anyone?
If one in 10000 molecules can cause a global warming runaway effect,
than 3 Mosquitos can easilycause an epic national disaster as long as they identify as butterflies and flap their wings all the time.
They are a swarm in alarmaspeak.
Looking at the horizon during Summer on the North Slope of Alaska, there is a distinct brown haze of mosquitoes. Some suggest it should be the Alaska state bird.
Mosquitoes? Thanks to the very dry summer season here in Wokeachusetts- I think I only saw 2-3 mosquitoes all summer and I spent a lot of time outdoors gardening and hiking in state forests. It was a very wet spring but very dry summer. Overall, I believe total precipitation is not much below average. When I worked as a forester I spent too many hours fighting off mosquitoes so I don’t miss them at all.
First week in August here in SE Wisconsin we had wide spread flooding and lots of mosquitoes for the rest of the summer. We will probably see them next spring.
And I saw only 1 tick all summer. So, seems that a wet spring and dry summer is ideal. The farmers aren’t complaining and they usually do. My garden did very well. The lawns not so great but that’s OK- less mowing.
OMG ! A tick die-off ! Undoubtedly due to CC!….or at least bad weather that can be attributed to CC! You must report this to CoveringClimateNow.Org so that they can write up some fright-lines , add a couple of skeeterpics, and distribute it to their many media minions worldwide, who love free space-filler or maybe just like to be paid 50 cents a word for free stuff from the ClOrg…
Ohio has had a drought this Summer, and the mosquitoes were not as bad as usual.
See? Climate change!
Who imported those three bugs. Name them or its elbows up.
Swatting down such inane stories is as annoying as swatting mosquitos.
Speaking of swatting, many years ago I was camping near the top of Mt. Lassen in July, below the tree line. My friends and I decided to walk a several-mile loop trail. About half-way through the hike I decided to keep track of the mosquitoes that I actually managed to send to Mosquito Heaven. I got to about 100 by the time we got back and I probably only managed to dispatch about one-quarter of those I swung at.
“Desperation is the mother of invention.” In this case, desperate climate change fanatics need to invent another irrational pseudoscientific explanation for a story that has nothing to do with climate.
FFS These people are beyond deranged.
Around one million years ago, Iceland looked very different. The island was covered with trees, especially downy birch (Betula pubescens) and rowan (Sorbus aucuparia).
The climate changes, who knew?
Who Knew? I recall Greta Jónsdóttir exclaiming that if we didn’t stop roasting fish on open birch and ash fires all the trees would soon be gone, and ice would come bigly. Her golden-haired granddaddy claimed she was out of control and ordered her, her parents, and siblings to be banished 1 million smoots eastward.
Maybe its the heat from the lava that is allowing the mosquitos to breed.
Is lava considered climate change? If not, why not?
Irresponsible journalism is a real problem I think they do more harm than irresponsible CAGW scientists.
“If temperature and latitude alone determined mosquito presence, then Alaska, Canada, and Svalbard would be insect-free. Instead, these regions are known for their intense summer mosquito swarms.”
Growing up near 55N, I wished that.
And evaluating an airplane runway on July 2 at 61N, I wished there were no big flies.
So I Googled:
“Have more mosquitoes been found in Iceland since October 16, 2025?”
And Google said:
“AI Overview
No, more mosquitoes have not been found in Iceland since October 16, 2025.”
Manned ships have been arriving in Iceland for more than a millenium. Most carried fresh water obtained from mosquito habitat. Many insects don’t survive low air pressure at altitude. Practically and statistically, water transport is much more likely than cargo aircraft.
Iceland is known for having geothermal springs, with standing fresh water year round. There’s plenty of habitat.
Lots of migrations going on, east Atlantic currents are against going north which they could in the US as far as Nova Scotia, fossils in Massachusetts. When they worry about mosquitoes, ask if they killed cows which happened at least once on the Texas coast.
Mancinelli G, P. et al. 2017. On the Atlantic blue crab (Callinectes sapidus Rathbun 1896) in southern European coastal waters: Time to turn a threat into a resource? Fisheries Research. 194:1–8. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.fishres.2017.05.002
They must have been really, really hungry after writing the report.
Someone with a non-suspicious account, please suggest them the next story: there are rats living in Norwegian cities year round now.
Mosquitos.
My State of Victoria Australia had a very severe Covid-19 lockdown, with months of daily TV appearances by staff from our Department of Health headed by Dr Brett Sutton.
Globally, Covid-19 concerns started early in 2020. On 4th May 2020, the Medical Journal of Australia published online “Acting on climate change and health in Victoria”, authored by these very people. I promptly sent them a letter seeking a retraction based on objections I listed.
The Journal did not reply. Read all about it here.
https://www.geoffstuff.com/sutton.docx
One Sutton et al claim was “following the 2016–2017 Victorian floods, there was a large increase in mosquitos, which resulted in a 7.5‐fold increase in Ross River virus disease compared with the previous year. “
I do not claim that my argument is compelling. Here on WUWT, I seek make the point that there are many words being floated around the world by people on a mission. When such people claim to be Scientists, when their work demands a challenge, then I often try to do it because there is a need to educate people with poor Science to become people with Proper Science.
When readers here have experience in a contestable topic, you might wish to perform challenges also. Recall please that Science has often advanced by a successful challenge to the prevailing wisdom.
We have few other tools to fight the nonsense and propaganda of zealotry. Geoff S
No mosquitos are preferable. Three mosquitos are a bad omen.
One who has long used “Proper Science” in challenging alarmist narrative on the spread of Malaria to cold climates is Dr Paul Reiter who has long pointed out that global warming has little to do with the geographical spread of Malaria. Explained in this 2008 publication.
Thanks for your efforts, sherro01
England, mid-1600’s. Oliver Cromwell died with/of malaria. It’s currently somewhat warmer there and I don’t hear about thousands dying.
Each story followed the same template: a small event, inflated into a global narrative.
The global threat ‘quietly undermining’ our sleep | SBS News
I’m not surprised the Gretaheads or their poor suffering children can’t get to sleep but there’s no quietly about it.
We should be reminded that the current conditions on earth in 2025, represent a climate crisis for humans, bunny rabbits, polar bears, honey bees, crops and all good life!
However the exact same conditions on our planet are a wonderful climate optimum for bad life like: ticks, fleas, mosquitoes, bacteria and weeds!
Very, very similar to a story from 10-20 years ago when the International Institute for Sustainable Development (IISD) in Canada proclaimed mosquitoes had been found on a particular island in the Arctic for the very first time. Sadly for them, a publication by Danks et. al. listed four species that didn’t occur south of the Arctic some 30 years prior.
I’m guessing some digging through the taxonomic literature may turn up a reference from some time ago whereby a species or four are already known, though uncommon, from Iceland.
I’m afraid that concern is long past.