Abstract

Mosquitoes obtain large amounts of blood from hosts in a short period of time. To efficiently obtain high-quality blood without being noticed by the host, mosquitoes sense external factors such as the taste of the host blood and the surrounding environment, and integrate these signals with their own internal information to determine whether to initiate blood feeding and how long to continue feeding. With the development of gene editing and behavior monitoring techniques, the factors that control blood feeding are being identified. Elucidating the factors that contribute to blood feeding is expected to provide new ideas for artificially controlling blood feeding, which has often been overlooked behind host attraction mechanisms. Furthermore, understanding salivary components, mechanisms controlling satiety in feeding, and differences between sugar feeding and blood feeding would help us understand how some mosquitoes have adopted and developed blood feeding over the course of evolution.

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