because the oxygen in the reppellent stops the mosquito from stopping to bite you and haveng it being distracted to the oxygen
No. Mosquito larvae need to breathe oxygen from the air and they do so by a siphon tube at their posterior. See the related link for more information.
'cause it cuts off the oxygen supply from 'em
Wrigglers (mosquito larva) eat vegetable detritus, and "biofilm" algae and fungi. They eat below the surface, the only thing they stick above the water is their small breathing tube they use for inhaling oxygen. They only breathe when they are born in oxygen-depleated water, otherwise, they use their gills to breathe.
The mosquito pupae hang just below the surface of the water in order to draw oxygen from the atmosphere through two tubes on their backs.The pupae can also swim under the surface of the water when disturbed,but ultimately have to return to the surface at some point to draw more oxygen.If the pupae is unable to draw oxygen for some reason,for example a film of oil has appeared on the surface,then they will die. Mosquito larvae behave in the same way,drawing oxygen from tubes at the tail end,the larvae go through 4 stages of growth,shedding skin each time,before becoming pupae,which then emerge as a full adult mosquito.most species of mosquito larvae have to draw oxygen in this fashion.
mosquito Net Manufacturers
The adult mosquito can fly while the young of the mosquito cannot fly.
The mosquito was as small as a tip a tip of a pencil.
'Wrigglers' is what mosquito larvae are called. They like to hang upside down just under the water's surface. That's because they breathe through a tube that's in their tails. They often find it difficult to stay still in this position.
NO
A young mosquito.
There is no antonyms for mosquito.