A new study published in the journal Nature Communications has just revealed an interesting reason why Aedes aegypti, a fairly common mosquito, finds and bites human skin.
Students at Ben Gurion University (southern Israel) have developed a biological method that uses genetically modified bacteria to kill mosquitoes.
This is all for the purpose of minimizing disease-related deaths from mosquitoes.
A new study revealed that mosquitoes target certain targets to burn by using a sequence of three signs: smell, then images and finally heat.
Scientists have discovered that mosquitoes cause a series of malaria deaths to find partners by flapping their wings, creating sound harmony with the subject.
Research shows that trying to beat mosquitoes, whether hit or not, can also help you get less mosquito bites.
The bloody lake in Mexico is the result of the accumulation of waste from slaughterhouses, attracting more than 300 giant crocodiles.
Creating mosquitoes that cannot transmit disease is the way scientists kill dangerous infectious species but leave no consequences for ecological imbalance.