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If you feel like you're the victim of itchy mosquito bites more often than others, it may not be all in your head. Because there is some scientific evidence that mosquitoes have preferences for who to land and feed on.
Mosquitoes primarily rely on carbon dioxide to locate their targets. Body temperature and odour also play significant roles, so anything that alters these factors can make someone more or less attractive to mosquitoes.
Blood type matters sometimes: Several studies have shown mosquitoes prefer type O blood. One study published in the Journal of Medical Entomology found a mosquito species preferred to land on type O blood compared to others, but the difference was only significant between type O and type A.
Though it's often reported that mosquitoes prefer type O blood, it's worth considering the limitations of these studies.
Some studies have shown that there may be some correlation between blood type and mosquito preference, but in a comparative, there's always a winner. That doesn't necessarily mean it's the absolute winner all the time.
People who are intoxicated tend to put out more carbon dioxide and sweat more, which seems to attract mosquitoes—possibly along with other unknown factors.
Diet can also impact mosquito attraction, though the extent of its effect hasn't been fully explored. Garlic and vitamin B are often anecdotally reported to deter these bugs, but the evidence is limited.
Bananas and other high-potassium foods have shown to attract mosquitoes, perhaps because they lead to an increase in lactic acid production in the body, which helps mosquitoes locate animals.
This also impacts a person's skin microbiota, or the microorganisms living on the skin.
There is some research to support that changing your diet will make you give off different scents. "So, it may be possible to change your attractiveness to mosquitoes based on what you're eating.
Pregnancy attracts mosquitoes!
Pregnant women also seem to attract more mosquitoes, primarily because of the increased CO2 output. It's estimated that women in the advanced stages of pregnancy exhale about a 21% greater volume than non-pregnant women. This goes along with other physiological changes, like increased body temperature, that together make pregnant women easier for mosquitoes to find.
Local flavour: Sometimes mosquitoes develop more specific tastes in a location over time as an evolutionary trait.
Mosquitoes in certain neighbourhoods can become accustomed to specific scents and start to prefer those over others. Their generations are about two weeks long, and urban mosquitoes that bite humans often don't travel far. As a result, they seem to get familiar with the local scents and prefer them.
Genetic predispositions: There's still much to uncover as far as mosquito preferences. There seems to be other genetic predispositions for what attracts mosquitoes, but these aren't all clear just yet.
If you wear dark clothes, then they will attract mosquitoes too!
So what can you do to stop these blood suckers from attacking you?
Staying covered and use repellents. Wear light colour clothes. Use mosquito nets while sleeping.
Yoshikazu Shirai et al, Landing Preference of Aedes albopictus (Diptera: Culicidae) on Human Skin Among ABO Blood Groups, Secretors or Nonsecretors, and ABH Antigens, Journal of Medical Entomology (2009). DOI: 10.1603/0022-2585-41.4.796
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While a mosquito bite is often no more than a temporary bother, in many parts of the world it can be scary. One mosquito species, Aedes aegypti, spreads the viruses that cause over 100,000,000 cases of dengue, yellow fever, Zika and other diseases every year. Another, Anopheles gambiae, spreads the parasite that causes malaria. The World Health Organization estimates that malaria alone causes more than 400,000 deaths every year. Indeed, their capacity to transmit disease has earned mosquitoes the title of deadliest animal.
Male mosquitoes are harmless, but females need blood for egg development. It's no surprise that there's over 100 years of rigorous research on how they find their hosts. Over that time, scientists have discovered there is no one single cue that these insects rely on. Instead, they integrate information from many different senses across various distances.
A team of researchers has added another sense to the mosquito's documented repertoire: infrared detection. Infrared radiation from a source roughly the temperature of human skin doubled the insects' overall host-seeking behavior when combined with CO2 and human odor.
The mosquitoes overwhelmingly navigated toward this infrared source while host seeking. The researchers also discovered where this infrared detector is located and how it works on a morphological and biochemical level. The results are detailed in the journal Nature.
Craig Montell, Thermal infrared directs host-seeking behaviour in Aedes aegypti mosquitoes, Nature (2024). DOI: 10.1038/s41586-024-07848-5. www.nature.com/articles/s41586-024-07848-5
There's something about us that mosquitoes just love. In addition to our smell, and our breath, our exposed skin acts as a kind of neon sign advertising that this blood bar is open for business.
That's because mosquitoes use infrared sensing in their antennae to track down their prey, a new study has found.
In many parts of the world, mosquito bites are more than an irritation, capable of spreading pathogens like dengue, yellow fever, and Zika virus. Malaria, spread by the Anopheles gambiae mosquito, caused more than 600,000 deaths in 2022, according to World Health Organization statistics.
To avoid serious disease, or even just a case of maddening itchiness, we humans are pretty keen to find ways to prevent mosquito bites.
Research found that mosquitoes use infrared detection – along with other cues we already knew about, like a nose for the CO2 in our breath, and certain body odours, to seek out hosts.
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