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Generally blood is sucked full.
After the blood is digested, he goes to lay eggs.
After laying eggs, bite a person.
This one is very long.
The lifespan is 3-100 days for females and 10-20 days for males.
Male mosquitoes only suck grass juice, live nectar and do not suck blood. Female mosquitoes must suck blood (human or animal blood) eggs to mature after mating, so only female mosquitoes can transmit diseases. Female mosquitoes can lay eggs once when they suck blood, and can lay eggs six to eight times in their lifetime.
So you do the math, the average lifespan of our mosquitoes is about 30 days.
If it is full of blood, it will not suck blood again for 4-5 days.
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I don't think there's a time limit, because one time I was waiting at work and a mosquito got in my trouser leg and bit me more than 20 bags, and they sucked blood before they spawned, not until they had enough.
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Only female mosquitoes bite, but they don't bite every time they encounter a person. It bites mainly and requires human blood to reproduce the next generation. The mosquito relies on its tentacles and sensors on its three pairs of legs.
When you fall asleep, you exhale carbon dioxide and mosquitoes slowly follow the scent, buzzing over your head while using its proximity sensor to measure the humidity, temperature, and composition of your sweat in order to determine if you are a suitable target.
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Bite when you're hungry.
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The lifespan of a mosquito is not related to biting. Mosquitoes have a fixed number of days of life, under natural conditions male mosquitoes end their lives about 7 to 10 days after mating, but can live up to 1 to 2 months in the laboratory, female mosquitoes live longer than male mosquitoes, female mosquitoes can live at least 1 to 2 months, and in the laboratory once lived up to 4 months.
Mosquitoes: Mosquitoes have elongated bodies, covered with scales, slender feet with fragile appearance, and mouthparts within a long snout. Male mosquitoes have filamentous antennae with ring hairs, and are generally denser than female mosquitoes.
Male mosquitoes feed on nectar and plant sap, and females sometimes eat as well, but most eggs only mature after sucking blood once. Different mosquito species have different host preferences, but there are no strict restrictions in many cases. The eggs are laid on the surface of the water and hatch into aquatic larvae (孑孓).
The larvae swim in rapid writhing motions, eat algae and organic detritus, a few carnivorous, and even eat other mosquitoes. Unlike most insects, pupae are mobile and breathe through a snorkel on their chest. Adult mosquitoes mate as soon as they emerge from their pupal shells.
Lifespan varies greatly depending on the species. Mosquitoes appear to be attracted to the host's moisture, lactic acid, carbon dioxide, body heat, and movement. Mosquitoes seem to find their host by their sense of smell.