Die (of old age or due to some intervention, for example, when feeding on attractive toxic sugar baits)
Female mosquitoes:
Move (either randomly or towards/to a target)
Feed on sugar from a source (a plant)
Blood feed on human/animal. Blood feeding can occur both outside or inside. Inside blood feeding is slightly more complicated because there is a probability that a mosquito manages to enter a house, then a probability that it manages to avoid a bednet etc.
Mate with male mosquito in swarm. Females do not swarm themselves.
Lay eggs in an aquatic site
Rest, for example on the inside/outside walls of a house after blood-feeding or, more generally, on vegetation/elsewhere
Born.
Die (of old age or when attempting to blood-feed or due to an intervention, for example, contacting with a bednet that is laden with insecticide)
Juvenile mosquitoes (generally modelled as a cohort since they are bound to life in aquatic habitats):
Progress through stages: eggs, larval (with substages) and pupae. Pupae hatch to become adults that fly.
Compete for food resources; hence eat.
Cannibalise earlier stages.
Born.
Die (either due to limited food resources, cannibalisation or predation).
A good diagram of potential mosquito actions: https://malariajournal.biomedcentral.com/track/pdf/10.1186/s12936-018-2442-y
Male mosquitoes:
Female mosquitoes:
Juvenile mosquitoes (generally modelled as a cohort since they are bound to life in aquatic habitats):