The Ministry for Primary Industries has rejected claims by a Far North man that a colony of the Asian tiger mosquito, one of two species implicated in the spread of the Zika virus, has established in Northland.
Eric Albert said he had seen tiger mosquitoes in his farmer son's home in Whangarei, his son blaming them for the loss of about 30 calves, born dead or deformed, in the last three years.
Mr Albert believed the insects had arrived in the ballast of log ships, and had found Northland warm enough to survive and breed.
However, a senior communications adviser for the MPI said entomologists had confirmed that neither the Asian tiger (Aedes albopictus) nor the yellow fever (Aedes aegypti) mosquito, regarded as the major threats in spreading the Zika virus, were established anywhere in New Zealand.
The ministry's manager of surveillance and incursion investigation for animals was not aware of calf deaths associated with mosquitoes.