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North Dakota · Mosquito Season Guide

Is it mosquito season in North Dakota?


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II. North Dakota Mosquito Season Month by month

North Dakota's mosquito situation is defined by one word: flooding. The flat Red River Valley — one of the flattest landscapes in North America — drains poorly, and spring snowmelt regularly floods thousands of acres of farmland and wetland simultaneously. The resulting Aedes vexans surges in June can be among the most intense in the United States. West Nile Virus follows in July and August as Culex tarsalis populations build in the warm residual standing water.

Fargo / Red River Valley
Fargo · Grand Forks · Wahpeton
Bismarck / Missouri River
Bismarck · Mandan · Minot
Very Low Low Moderate High Very High taller = more active · color = severity
~35
mosquito species recorded in North Dakota
Jun–Aug
compressed peak season
Red River
produces some of the worst flood-surge mosquito events in the US
53
counties — eastern valley carries highest risk

The Red River Valley: the floodwater capital

Cass County (Fargo) and Grand Forks County experience legendary mosquito pressure following Red River flooding years. The Valley's pancake-flat topography means that when the river rises, vast areas flood simultaneously. Aedes vexans eggs that have been waiting in floodplain soil hatch explosively, producing populations so dense that they have visibly blackened the sky in historical accounts. Following peak hatch, West Nile Virus builds in the resident Culex tarsalis population through July.

The Missouri River corridor: Bismarck and west

The Missouri River and its tributaries — Heart, Cannonball, Knife rivers — produce their own floodwater events in western North Dakota. Bismarck and Mandan see a compressed but real season from late June through August. Lake Oahe and the Garrison Reservoir system provide stable Culex tarsalis habitat through the summer, driving WNV transmission in some years.

Prairie potholes: the wetland driver

North Dakota sits in the Prairie Pothole Region — a vast mosaic of glacially formed wetlands that stretches into Canada. These potholes provide breeding habitat for dozens of species across the state and make North Dakota ecologically significant for waterfowl and mosquitoes alike. Culex tarsalis abundance and WNV transmission risk are closely tied to pothole water levels in any given year.

III. North Dakota's Key Mosquito Species
Aedes vexans mosquito photograph
Aedes vexans
Floodwater Mosquito

The species behind North Dakota's reputation for legendary spring mosquito emergences. When the Red River floods — and in high-water years it can inundate hundreds of thousands of acres of Cass and Grand Forks County farmland simultaneously — the Aedes vexans eggs waiting in that floodplain soil hatch en masse. The 1997 Red River flood produced one of the most severe mosquito emergences in North Dakota history; the 2009 and 2011 floods repeated the pattern. Populations can increase by orders of magnitude within a week of water recession, producing pressure that makes outdoor activity in the Fargo-Moorhead metro genuinely difficult in June of active years.

Culex tarsalis mosquito photograph
Culex tarsalis
Western Encephalitis Mosquito

The WNV vector that builds through the summer as floodwater species decline. Culex tarsalis breeds in the warm residual water of North Dakota's prairie potholes — the glacially formed wetlands that cover the eastern half of the state — and in the slow river backwaters and agricultural drainage sumps that persist through July and August. Burleigh County (Bismarck) and Cass County (Fargo) record the state's highest WNV activity. In particularly warm, dry summers, North Dakota has recorded among the nation's highest per-capita WNV rates — the combination of outdoor recreation culture, sparse population, and high tarsalis productivity makes the per-capita number stark.

Aedes albopictus mosquito photograph
Aedes albopictus
Asian Tiger Mosquito

Establishing in southeastern North Dakota, documented in Cass and Richland counties in recent years and advancing northward along the I-29 corridor. Still far less significant in North Dakota than in southern states — the short season and cold winters limit its productivity — but its container-breeding habit and daylight biting behavior make it notable in the Fargo metro. Residents accustomed to mosquitoes only at dusk may be caught off guard by a species that bites throughout the afternoon in residential backyards.

IV. North Dakota Cities at a Glance
CityPeak SeasonOff-SeasonNotes
Fargo Jun – Aug Off Sep–May Red River Valley; most intense flood-surge events; Cass County WNV active most years Check live
Bismarck Jun – Aug Off Sep–May Missouri River corridor; Culex tarsalis; shorter season than Fargo Check live
Grand Forks Jun – Aug Off Sep–May Red River; Grand Forks County; second-worst flood mosquito zone after Fargo Check live
Minot Jun – Jul Off Aug–May Souris River; shorter season; intense June peak after snowmelt Check live
Mandan Jun – Aug Off Sep–May Missouri River; adjacent to Bismarck; Heart River floodplain pressure Check live
More State Guides
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the Yakima Valley and Columbia Basin face the highest WNV risk in the Pacific Northwest — peak July through September Arizona Monsoon season (July–September) drives sudden mosquito explosions across the Valley of the Sun — WNV detected annually Colorado Front Range WNV corridor stretches Denver to Fort Collins — eastern plains carry the state's highest risk Connecticut Connecticut River valley WNV pressure meets EEE risk in inland freshwater wetlands — active May through October Delaware Chesapeake and Delaware Bay marshes create outsized pressure for the nation's second-smallest state Hawaii Year-round activity at sea level — no native species, but Ae. aegypti and tiger mosquitoes established statewide Idaho Snake River Plain irrigation districts fuel summer WNV pressure — season June through September Iowa Mississippi River corridor and prairie wetlands drive intense June–September pressure — WNV active statewide Kansas Great Plains WNV corridor — Wichita and Kansas City see peak pressure July–August; floodwater species surge after storms Kentucky Ohio River corridor and Kentucky Lake wetlands sustain a long April–October season across all 120 counties Maine Short but intense July–August season — EEE detected in some years in the southern coastal plain Massachusetts EEE fatality rate exceeds 30% — the Plymouth County swamp complex is the active epicenter — season May through October Mississippi Gulf Coast near-year-round pressure meets Delta rice-field flooding for one of the South's most intense mosquito environments Montana Yellowstone and Missouri River corridors drive a compressed June–August season — WNV detected most years in eastern MT Nebraska Platte River valley and eastern Nebraska are among the Great Plains' most active WNV zones — peak July–August Nevada Las Vegas monsoon season drives July–September activity; Reno irrigation districts fuel a parallel northern peak New Hampshire EEE detected most years — the southern lakes and coastal plain are in the active Northeast EEE corridor New Mexico Monsoon season (July–September) creates sudden breeding habitat; WNV circulates in the Rio Grande valley annually Oklahoma One of the South-Central's most intense seasons — the Arkansas and Red River corridors sustain populations April through October Oregon Eastern Oregon Columbia Basin is the state's WNV hotspot; western Oregon runs a mild coastal season June through September Rhode Island New England's densest coastal pressure — Narragansett Bay salt marshes and WNV active in all five counties South Dakota Missouri River and James River valleys drive summer WNV activity — eastern SD sees the most intense pressure Utah Salt Lake Valley WNV corridor and irrigation districts sustain a July–September peak — drier areas see limited activity Vermont Champlain Valley runs Vermont's longest season — EEE detected in the Lake Champlain lowlands in some years West Virginia Kanawha and Ohio River valleys sustain a May–October season — Ae. albopictus now established statewide Wyoming The shortest meaningful season of any contiguous US state — North Platte valley WNV window is just 6–8 weeks
West Nile, dengue, and EEE: US disease risk by region → Asian tiger mosquitoes: why you're getting bitten during the day → Eliminating standing water: the highest-leverage yard move →