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Elephant Mosquito (Toxorhynchites rutilus)
Regenerative
88Six Legs
Bug Bite · From the file on Elephant Mosquito

Increasingly deployed as biological control for dengue, yellow fever, Zika, and chikungunya mosquito vector populations in tropical regions.

AgencyWHOVerified by sources
Read the full file on Elephant Mosquito

More Regenerative bites

Chinese Giant Stick Insect (Phryganistria chinensis)
Regenerative
Six Legs74

Stick insects can regrow lost legs at their next molt — a regenerative ability shared with few insect groups.

Ogre-Faced Spider (Deinopis spinosa)
Regenerative
Six Legs79

The light-sensitive cells in their eyes are too sensitive to survive daylight — they're destroyed each morning and rebuilt fresh each evening.

Ogre-Faced SpiderVerified by sources
Carrot Rust Fly (Psila rosae)
Regenerative
Six Legs76

Modern control approaches include ROW COVERS — physical barriers (lightweight fabric over carrot beds) preventing fly access to host plants. Increasingly used in organic carrot production.

Carrot Rust FlyVerified by sources
Striped Cucumber Beetle (Acalymma vittatum)
Regenerative
Six Legs79

Modern control includes KAOLIN CLAY APPLICATIONS — white powdery clay sprayed on cucurbit foliage that repels feeding beetles by changing visual and tactile cues. Increasingly used in organic cucurbit production.

Striped Cucumber BeetleVerified by sources
Ant-Decapitating Fly (Pseudacteon obtusus)
Regenerative
Six Legs89

Foundational case study in modern BIOCONTROL of fire ants — deliberately introduced from South America to southern US fire-ant-infested regions since 1990s, established across major southern US fire ant populations.

Ant-Decapitating FlyVerified by sources
Codling Moth (Cydia pomonella)
Regenerative
Six Legs83

MILLIONS OF HECTARES OF APPLE ORCHARDS globally are treated with codling moth pheromone dispensers as a primary control method — saturating the air with female pheromone so males cannot locate actual females.

Codling MothVerified by sources