In-sentence examples of “mosquito”

How to use in-sentence of “mosquito”:

+ The mosquito can be recognized by white markings on legs and a marking in the form of a lyre on the thorax.

+ A year later Finlay identified the mosquito of the genus Aedes as the insect transmitting yellow fever.

+ Humans get these viruses after being bitten by an infected mosquito or tick.

+ A mosquito is a type of fly.

+ The method used to be: spray water with DDT, but that does a lot of damage, and in any event the mosquito is now highly resistant to the chemical.

+ The eastern mosquitofish, eastern gambusia, or mosquito fish is a fish that belongs to the Poeciliidae family.

In-sentence examples of mosquito
In-sentence examples of mosquito

Example sentences of “mosquito”:

+ In 1856, the priest Pedro Carrasco built a CatholicismCatholic church with the name “San Pedro Apóstol”; the church was between the two towns of Mosquito and Sol.

+ Then, if the mosquito bites a bird that does not have WNV, the mosquito can give that bird the virus.

+ If a female mosquito bites someone with dengue, the mosquito may get the dengue virus from the person’s blood.

+ For example, people may use bug spray and mosquito nets, and wear long sleeves and long pants when they are outside.

+ They thought it would eat mosquito larvae so there would be fewer mosquitoes.

+ Now the mosquito will make saliva that is infected with the dengue virus.

+ While in the nymph stage they eat mosquito larvae and other things.

+ When an uninfected mosquito bites an infected human they become infected and continue the cycle.

+ These are of the kind that have had traditional household purposes before their being used as mosquito repellents.

+ The PT boat squadrons were nicknamed “the mosquito fleet”.

+ In 1856, the priest Pedro Carrasco built a CatholicismCatholic church with the name "San Pedro Apóstol"; the church was between the two towns of Mosquito and Sol.

+ Then, if the mosquito bites a bird that does not have WNV, the mosquito can give that bird the virus.

+ Usually, if a human who has a “Flavivirus” gets bitten by a healthy mosquito or tick, the human will not have enough of the virus in their blood to infect the insect.

+ Scientists say this is because of habitat fragmentation, which means people building things in between places where the frogs live, and because of invasive species such as the mosquito fish that eat green and golden bell frog tadpoles.

+ The name comes from the Ancient GreekGreek “aēdēs”, meaning “unpleasant” or “odious”, so called because of the diseases this type of mosquito transmits, including dengue fever and yellow fever.

+ The principal mosquito borne diseases are the viral diseases yellow fever, dengue fever and malaria carried by the genera “Anopheles” and “Culex”.

+ During the World War IISecond World War RAF aircraft carrying secret equipment or that were in themselves secret had “/G” added to the end of the serial, the “G” signifying “Guard”, denoting that the aircraft was to have an armed guard at all times while on the ground., “LZ548/G”—the prototype jet fighter, or “ML926/G”—a de Havilland Mosquito XVI experimentally fitted with H2S radar.

+ A number of fish eat mosquito larvae, including goldfish, catfish, piranhas, and minnows.

+ This is likely since the mosquito that spreads the virus, “Aedes aegypti”, lives in all of the countries in the Americas, except for Canada and Chile.

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