
How Mosquitoes Use Six Needles to Suck Your Blood
Season 3 Episode 10 | 2m 55sVideo has Closed Captions
Seen up close, the anatomy of a mosquito bite is terrifying.
Seen up close, the anatomy of a mosquito bite is terrifying. The most dangerous animal in the world uses six needle-like mouthparts to saw into our skin, tap a blood vessel and sometimes leave a dangerous parting gift.

How Mosquitoes Use Six Needles to Suck Your Blood
Season 3 Episode 10 | 2m 55sVideo has Closed Captions
Seen up close, the anatomy of a mosquito bite is terrifying. The most dangerous animal in the world uses six needle-like mouthparts to saw into our skin, tap a blood vessel and sometimes leave a dangerous parting gift.
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorshipThis is the deadliest animal in the world.
Mosquitoes kill hundreds of thousands of people each year the most vulnerable people: children, pregnant women No other bite kills more humans or makes more of us sick.
So what makes a mosquitos bite so effective?
For starters, theyre motivated.
Only females bite us.
They need blood to make eggs... And a pool of water for their babies to hatch in.
Even a piece of trash can hold enough.
At first glance, it looks simple -- this mosquito digging her proboscis into us.
But the tools shes using here are sophisticated.
First, a protective sheath retracts see it bending back?
If you look at a mosquitos head under a microscope, you can see what that sheath protects.
And inside *there * are six needles!
Two of them have tiny teeth.
She uses those to saw through the skin.
Theyre so sharp you can barely feel her pushing.
These other two needles hold the tissues apart while she works.
From under the skin, you can see her probing, looking for a blood vessel.
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.
Then she uses this same needle like a straw.
As her gut fills up, she separates water from the blood and squeezes it out.
See that drop?
That frees up space to stuff herself with more nutritious red blood cells.
With another needle, she spits chemicals into us.
They get our blood flowing more easily, and give us itchy welts afterwards.
And sometimes, before she pries herself away, she leaves a parting gift in her saliva: a virus or a parasite that can sicken or kill us.
Theres nothing in it for her.
The viruses and parasites are just hitching a ride.
But this is what makes mortal enemies out of us and mosquitoes.
They take our blood.
Sometimes we take theirs.
But often, not soon enough.