Why Do Mosquitoes Buzz In Your Ear?

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The buzzing noise made by the flapping motion of the mosquito’s wings is because of their natural tendency. Louis M. Roth, who studied yellow fever mosquitoes during the World War II, reported that male mosquitoes ignored female mosquitoes when the females were resting. A buzzing female mosquito, or a flying female mosquito, is what male mosquitoes seek to mate with.

Short answer: The buzzing noise made by the flapping motion of the mosquito’s wings is because of their natural tendency of mating.

Mosquitoes are one of the most hated creatures on the planet. They pack a potential to ruin a good night’s sleep, dine on people’s and other animals’ blood and cause a number of dreaded diseases which then leads a lot of deaths. Believe it or not, but in terms of number of human deaths they cause, mosquitoes are the deadliest creatures on Earth.

Not only that, but mosquitoes also do a fantastic job of pissing people off. As if sucking people’s blood wasn’t enough, they buzz in our ears incessantly!

Why do mosquitoes do that? Are they just cruel sadists that take pleasure in annoying other living beings, or is there a more ‘sensible’ reason behind this irritating habit?


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Why Do Mosquitoes Buzz?

The buzzing noise made by the flapping motion of the mosquito’s wings is because of their natural tendency. Louis M. Roth, who studied yellow fever mosquitoes during the World War II, reported that male mosquitoes ignored female mosquitoes when the females were resting. A buzzing female mosquito, or a flying female mosquito, is what male mosquitoes seek to mate with.

Mosquito buzzing in ear

Also Read: Why Do Mosquitoes Circle Over Your Head When It’s Gelled?

Who Buzzes More: Male Or Female Mosquitoes?

Based on the fact that among the 3,000 known species of mosquitoes, not a single male mosquito dines on human blood, most people believe that female mosquitoes buzz in people’s ears more than their male counterparts; some even think that male mosquitoes don’t buzz at all.

This is obviously not true. As insects with wings that gather almost all of their food by flying to different places, both male and female mosquitoes have to ‘fly for a living’ (pun intended). Since flying involves flapping their wings in the air, both male and female mosquitoes buzz.

no gender bias, i swear meme

Also Read: Do Animals Get Mosquito Bites?

‘Buzzing Mosquitoes Don’t Bite.’ Is That True?

There’s a common belief among people that mosquitoes buzzing in your ear don’t end up biting you, but is this belief biologically correct?

In a way, yes. You see, if a mosquito is buzzing in your ear, it means that it’s airborne in the region near your ear. This, quite logically, means that it’s not sitting on your skin, so it’s not going to bite you while it’s buzzing. However, once it lands on your body, you sure need to watch out!

Why Mosquitoes Buzz More In My Ears Than In My Friends’?

It may often seem like mosquitoes bother you more than your friends (or the other way round). There are actually a number of reasons behind that. You may be more sweaty, thus releasing more heat and carbon-dioxide, or just wearing a dark-colored t-shirt. Yes, your blood may simply be sweeter than your friends too!

let me buzz in your ears meme

All these reasons may cause female mosquitoes to target you more often than your friends. The result? The perpetual nasty whining that you hear in your ear.

As it happens, there’s no cure to shut out that annoying buzzing sound of mosquitoes. Bug repellent might keep them at a distance where they don’t irritate your ears, but even that won’t always work! The best you can do is put on a pair of headphones and play some music.

References (click to expand)
  1. Why do mosquitoes buzz in our ears? - Live Science. Live Science
  2. Why do mosquitoes bite me and not my friend? Everyday Mysteries: FunScience Facts fromthe Library of Congress - webarchive.library.unt.edu
About the Author

Ashish is a Science graduate (Bachelor of Science) from Punjabi University (India). He spearheads the content and editorial wing of ScienceABC and manages its official Youtube channel. He’s a Harry Potter fan and tries, in vain, to use spells and charms (Accio! [insert object name]) in real life to get things done. He totally gets why JRR Tolkien would create, from scratch, a language spoken by elves, and tries to bring the same passion in everything he does. A big admirer of Richard Feynman and Nikola Tesla, he obsesses over how thoroughly science dictates every aspect of life… in this universe, at least.

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