
This
Wyeomyia smithii mosquito cannot survive without a
Sarracenia purpurea carnivorous pitcher plant. It lays its eggs on the leaves, and the wiggly larvae live in the acidic fluid, breaking down insect prey. Larvae overwinter inside the pitchers, frozen solid in a block of ice. The adults do not bite humans, and look quite different from the familiar mosquitoes that we try to avoid. I snapped a photo of this one midair, and captured the unusual way these mosquitoes hold their legs, even in flight.