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This is the deadliest animal in the world.
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Mosquitoes kill hundreds of thousands of people each year, the most vulnerable people: children, pregnant women…
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No other bite kills more humans—or makes more of us sick.
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[Anopheles gambiae, Malaria] [Andes aegypti, Zika, dengue fever, chikungunya] [Culex pipiens, West Nile Virus disease]
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So what makes a mosquito's bite so effective?
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For starters, they're motivated.
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Only females bite us—hey need blood to make eggs.
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And a pool of water for their babies to hatch in.
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Even a piece of trash can hold enough.
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At first glance, it looks simple: this mosquito digging her proboscis into us.
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But the tools she's using here are sophisticated.
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First, a protective sheath retracts—see it bending back?
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If you look at a mosquito's head under a microscope, you can see what that sheath protects.
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And inside there are six needles.
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Two of them have tiny teeth.
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She uses those to saw through the skin.
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They're so sharp you can barely feel her pushing.
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These other two needles hold the tissues apart while she works.
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From under the skin, you can see her probing, looking for a blood vessel.
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Receptors on the tip of one of her other needles pick up on chemicals that our blood vessels exude naturally and guide her to it.
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Then she uses this same needle like a straw.
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As her gut fills up, she separates water from the blood and squeezes it out.
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See that drop?
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That frees up space to stuff herself with more nutritious red blood cells.
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With another needle, she spits chemicals into us.
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They get our blood flowing more easily, and give us itchy welts afterwards.
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And sometimes, before she pries herself away, she leaves a parting gift in her saliva.
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A virus or a parasite that can sicken or kill us.
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There's nothing in it for her.
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The viruses and parasites are just hitching a ride.
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But this is what makes mortal enemies out of us and mosquitoes.
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They take our blood.
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Sometimes we take theirs, but often, not soon enough.
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Good—you're still there!
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These are the larvae of Culex pipiens, a.k.a. the common house mosquito here in California.
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Gross, right? Well, you can avoid them by emptying your rain gutters.
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Pet water dishes too.
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While you're at it, subscribe!
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We have so many more science videos coming your way. See you next time!