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Yellow Fever Mosquito (Aedes aegypti)
Medical importance
82Six Legs
Bug Bite · From the file on Yellow Fever Mosquito

The 1878 Memphis yellow fever epidemic killed 5,000+ residents and reshaped 19th-century North American urban public-health policy.

AgencyCenters for Disease Control and Prevention1878Verified by sources
Read the full file on Yellow Fever Mosquito

More Medical importance bites

Asian Giant Hornet (Vespa mandarinia)
Medical importance
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30–50 people die annually from Asian giant hornet stings in Japan — most from systemic venom load, not anaphylaxis.

Asian Giant HornetVerified by sources
Common Bed Bug (Cimex lectularius)
Medical importance
Six Legs79

Despite their reputation, bed bugs do not transmit disease to humans — there is no documented case of pathogen transmission via bed bug bite.

Common Bed BugVerified by sources
Human Botfly (Dermatobia hominis)
Medical importance
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Despite the unsettling lifecycle, botfly larvae don't transmit disease. The infection is confined to one small site under the skin.

Human BotflyVerified by sources
Brazilian Wandering Spider (Phoneutria nigriventer)
Medical importance
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A peptide from wandering spider venom (PnTx2-6) is in clinical trials as a treatment for erectile dysfunction.

Brazilian Wandering Spider (Phoneutria nigriventer)
Medical importance
Six Legs87

Brazilian antivenom developed in 1925 has reduced wandering-spider bite mortality to under 0.5% of cases.

Deathstalker Scorpion (Leiurus quinquestriatus)
Medical importance
Six Legs87

Deathstalker venom contains chlorotoxin — a peptide so specific to brain-tumor cells that surgeons use it as a fluorescent 'tumor paint' during brain surgery.

Deathstalker ScorpionVerified by sources