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Pest Guide Florida Insects 6 min read

No-See-Ums vs Mosquitoes in South Florida

Getting bitten but can't see what's doing it? You may have no-see-ums — not mosquitoes. They look different, bite differently, breed differently, and require somewhat different management. Here's how to tell them apart and what actually works on each.

In South Florida, "mosquitoes" is the catch-all word for any flying biting insect. But the tiny invisible things biting you at dusk on the patio might not be mosquitoes at all — they might be no-see-ums (biting midges, Culicoides species), which are a completely different type of insect with different biology, different peak times, and different breeding sources.

Understanding which pest you're dealing with changes what you do about it.

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No-See-Ums vs Mosquitoes: Side-by-Side Comparison

Factor No-See-Ums (Biting Midges) Mosquitoes
Size 1–3mm — barely visible to naked eye 4–10mm — clearly visible
Visibility Invisible in flight — hence 'no-see-ums' Visible when near you
Scientific name Culicoides species Aedes, Culex, Psorophora, others
Peak activity time Strict dusk/dawn windows (30–60 min each) Dusk/dawn (Culex); daytime shade (Aedes)
Bite character Multiple tiny dots, intense itch, longer duration Individual raised welts, moderate itch
Breeding source Moist coastal soil, salt marsh, mangroves Standing freshwater — containers to lakes
Flight range Very short (usually <100m from breeding site) 1/4 mile to 3 miles depending on species
Wind sensitivity Deterred by breeze >3–4 mph Active in light wind
Disease risk (US) None known in humans in South Florida West Nile, dengue, chikungunya, Zika
Passes through 16-mesh screen Yes — too small to be stopped No — stopped by standard screening
Professional spray effective? Yes — same pyrethroids work on both Yes

Where No-See-Um Pressure Is Worst in South Florida

No-see-ums are primarily a coastal pest — populations are concentrated near their breeding habitat (salt marsh, mangrove edges, tidal pools) and decline rapidly with distance inland. Properties with the highest no-see-um pressure in Boca Raton and Fort Lauderdale:

Intracoastal waterfront

Adjacent to tidal vegetation breeding areas; zero buffer between breeding habitat and outdoor living

Canal-front properties

Tidal influence in Fort Lauderdale canals creates brackish breeding conditions for midges

Near beach park natural areas

Spanish River Park, Hugh Taylor Birch, Markham Park have significant midge breeding in adjacent natural areas

Properties near mangrove edges

Mangrove vegetation is one of the primary Culicoides breeding habitats in South Florida

What Actually Works for Each

For No-See-Ums

→Professional barrier spray reduces resting population in adjacent vegetation
→Ceiling fans outdoors — even light air movement deters them significantly
→Avoid outdoor time in the 30 min before/after sunrise and sunset (their strict activity window)
→32-mesh no-see-um screen for enclosures — standard screen won't stop them
→Bug-proof lubricant on exposed skin (DEET, picaridin) as personal repellent

For Mosquitoes

→Professional barrier spray program — weekly or biweekly in South Florida conditions
→Eliminate standing water on your property
→IGR treatment of accessible water features
→Kill + Mask + Repel (our MPB approach) addresses the full population
→Year-round service — South Florida has no true off-season

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Frequently Asked Questions

How do I know if I'm being bitten by no-see-ums or mosquitoes?

The easiest way to tell: (1) If you can't see what's biting you despite looking carefully, it's almost certainly no-see-ums (biting midges). They are 1–3mm — barely visible to the naked eye. (2) No-see-um bites often appear as clusters of tiny red dots in exposed areas (ankles, wrists, neck), while mosquito bites tend to be individual raised welts. (3) No-see-um bites typically itch more intensely and longer than mosquito bites — the midge's saliva causes a stronger delayed immune reaction in most people. (4) Timing: if biting is worst exactly at sunrise/sunset within 50 meters of the water or coastal edge, no-see-ums are highly likely. If biting is worst at dusk in your lawn or garden, mosquitoes are more likely.

Are no-see-ums more dangerous than mosquitoes?

For disease transmission in the U.S. context, no — no-see-ums (Culicoides biting midges) are not known to transmit human diseases in the United States. In tropical regions, Culicoides can transmit bluetongue (livestock), but in South Florida they are a nuisance pest rather than a disease vector. Mosquitoes — particularly Aedes and Culex species — are the primary disease vectors in our region (West Nile, dengue, chikungunya, Zika). In terms of bite discomfort, many people find no-see-um bites worse than mosquito bites due to the more intense and prolonged itching reaction.

Can mosquito spray kill no-see-ums?

Yes — professional pyrethroid barrier spray (bifenthrin, permethrin) kills no-see-ums on contact and provides residual control against them. No-see-ums are not flying pests in the traditional sense — they are weak fliers that rest in coastal vegetation and are susceptible to the same barrier spray treatment used for mosquitoes. However, no-see-ums can enter through standard window screening (they're small enough to fit through 16-mesh screen), and their coastal breeding habitats (salt marshes, mangrove areas) cannot be treated by individual homeowners. Our barrier spray program significantly reduces no-see-um activity on treated properties.

When are no-see-ums worst in South Florida?

No-see-ums in South Florida are most active in two windows: (1) Dusk and dawn — particularly in the 30–60 minutes immediately before and after sunrise/sunset. This is a tighter and more predictable window than mosquitoes. (2) On calm, humid days near coastal areas — any reduction in wind speed allows no-see-um populations to become active. They are significantly deterred by even a light breeze (above 3–4 mph), which is why a ceiling fan can meaningfully reduce no-see-um biting on a screen porch while having little effect on mosquitoes.

Do no-see-ums breed in standing water like mosquitoes?

No — this is a key difference. No-see-ums breed in moist soil and organic debris in coastal environments — salt marsh edges, mangrove areas, moist sandy soil with decaying vegetation, and tidal pools. They do not breed in standing freshwater containers or ponds like mosquitoes do. This means that the standing water elimination advice that applies to mosquito control has no impact on no-see-um populations. No-see-um populations are driven by their coastal habitat conditions, not by homeowner-manageable water sources.

Does window screening keep out no-see-ums?

Standard 16-mesh window and door screening does NOT keep out no-see-ums — they are small enough to pass through. No-see-um screening is available with finer mesh (32-mesh or 'no-see-um screen') that does exclude them. The trade-off is reduced airflow. For screen rooms and enclosures in areas with significant no-see-um pressure, 32-mesh no-see-um screen provides meaningful protection. For most homeowners, barrier spray treatment of exterior vegetation combined with ceiling fans or light air movement provides better practical no-see-um management than trying to screen them out.

Our Service Controls Both Mosquitoes and No-See-Ums

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After nearly two decades in corporate finance — including managing a $1B+ P&L at Chico's FAS — Eric Vincent earned his MBA from Rollins College and made a deliberate pivot into pest control, completing his Pest Control Technology degree at the University of Florida while building Mosquito Shield of Boca and Fort Lauderdale from the ground up. He holds five Florida state licenses including Certified Pest Control Operator (JF341961) and Public Health licensee (PH340549), and is currently partnered with Arkion Life Sciences on next-generation all-natural mosquito control research.

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Related Reading

→ No-See-Ums in Boca Raton: What They Are and How to Get Rid of Them → No-See-Um Control in South Florida: What Actually Works → No-See-Ums Pest Library: Complete Identification Guide → Aedes aegypti: Florida's Primary Mosquito Disease Vector
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