json_metadata | "{"app":"Musing","appTags":["question","mosquito","science",""],"appCategory":"question","appTitle":"Why mosquito bites??","appBody":"<p>Female mosquitoes feed on human blood, yet not for their very own healthy purposes. They require the protein and diverse parts in the blood to make their eggs. </p><p>The mosquito has a mouthpart called a proboscis, or, as such hypodermic needle. She uses it to cut your skin and test around a bit until the point when the moment that she finds a thin to suck the blood from. </p><p>She furthermore imbues her own one of a kind bit spit, which keeps the blood from coagulating and yet is the time when she can transmit ailments direct into your bloodstream.2 </p><p>She by then sucks the blood out and into her midsection, where it advances toward getting to be prepared and used to convey eggs. In the video underneath, you can see a close-by viewpoint of an Anopheles gambiae mosquito profiting from a thin (don't watch in the event that you're sick).</p>","appDepth":2,"appParentPermlink":"p3wbuxh95","appParentAuthor":"guurry123","musingAppId":"aU2p3C3a8N","musingAppVersion":"1.1","musingPostType":"answer"}" |
---|