NEW YORK (

TheStreet

) --

Google's

(GOOG) - Get Report

Android phones are the biggest consumers of network bandwidth, according to research from network management software specialist

Arieso

.

A series of Arieso studies, which measured Android phones such as Google's Nexus One and

HTC's

Desire against

Research In Motion's

(RIMM)

BlackBerry Bold 9700 and

Apple's

(AAPL) - Get Report

iPhones

, reveals that Android users score higher in terms of data call volumes, time connected to the network and data volume uploaded and downloaded.

"Smartphone subscriptions are rising and so too is subscriber appetite for mobile data," said Michael Flanagan, Arieso's CTO, in a statement. "Since the launch of the iPhone3G, we've seen a multitude of popular new smartphones arrive on the market, successfully driving app and service usage."

According to Arieso,

Samsung

Galaxy users typically upload 126% more data than iPhone3G users, and HTC Desire users download 41% more data than iPhone3G users.

There have already been signs that Android

is gaining momentum in the U.S. smartphone market.

Analyst firm

Canalys

recently reported that Android-based smartphones accounted for almost 44% of U.S. smartphone sales during the third quarter, up from 34% in the prior quarter.

With new Android phones like

Motorola's

(MOT)

Droid Pro and the

Verizon

(VZ) - Get Report

Fascinate swarming onto the market, Google's mobile OS has been going from strength to strength.

Arieso, however, warns that the deluge of data-hungry smartphones is placing new pressures on the service providers that support the devices. "Operators must now be able to quantify the impact of the devices they support, and how subscribers use them, and prepare their networks accordingly," explained Flanagan.

Verizon, which is

ramping up its next-gen 4G network

, is likely to get hit the hardest. Already the largest seller of Android handsets, Verizon is expected to add the

Apple iPhone

to its list of products early next year. Arieso noted that iPhone 4 users consume more data than their iPhone3G counterparts, suggesting that users of subsequent models of the iPhone could use even more data.

Google shares rose $1.08 or 0.20%, to $588.26, as the Nasdaq gained 0.35%.

--Written by James Rogers in New York.

>To follow the writer on Twitter, go to

http://twitter.com/jamesjrogers

.

>To submit a news tip, send an email to:

tips@thestreet.com

.