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LiteTeel 25 Dec @ 12:32pm 
•*""*•. ¸❤ ❤¸.•*""*•. ¸❤ ❤¸.•*""*•. ¸
Post this on the 12 prettiest girls you know...
If you get 5 back your beautiful...
¸.•*""*•. ¸❤ ❤¸.•*""*•. ¸❤ ❤¸.•*""*•. ¸
kamaou 11 Dec @ 11:59am 
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kamaou 10 Dec @ 9:29am 
+rep hobophobic
kamaou 8 Dec @ 5:53pm 
You are the revolution
kamaou 7 Dec @ 2:11pm 
steam免费领取【Pankapu】
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kamaou 2 Dec @ 8:22pm 
Mosquitoes like Aedes aegypti, the yellow fever mosquito, are no mere nuisance. They are important vectors for dengue, chikungunya, Zika, and other diseases of the tropical and subtropical world. The pathogens causing these diseases are carried by mosquitoes from host to host and spread quickly wherever the mosquitoes thrive. Residents of the U.S. have been comparatively lucky. Cold winters have ensured that vectors like A. aegypti have rarely ventured north of South Carolina. Rarely, that is, until 2011, when a resident population was discovered in Washington, D.C.1 The mosquito's arrival has not yet been linked to the spread of these tropical diseases, but many are concerned that where the mosquitoes go, disease will follow.