Mosquitos
When I was younger, I had no problem with mosquitos, they did not sting me, however, as I got older, they suddenly developed a taste for my blood. Below are a few explanations why.
When I was younger, I had no problem with mosquitos, they did not sting me, however, as I got older, they suddenly developed a taste for my blood. Below are a few explanations why.
Blood type, metabolism, exercise, shirt colour and even drinking beer can make individuals especially delicious to mosquitoes.
Smithsonian Magazine
- Joseph Stromberg
Thanks to Thomas Giotopoulos for sharing their work on Unsplash.
You come in from a summer hike covered with itchy red
mosquito bites, only to have your friends innocently proclaim that they
don’t have any. Or you wake up from a night of camping to find your
ankles and wrists aflame with bites, while your tentmates are unscathed.
You’re not alone. An estimated 20 percent of people,
it turns out, are especially delicious for mosquitoes, and get bit more
often on a consistent basis. And while scientists don’t yet have a cure
for the ailment, other than preventing bites with insect repellent
(which, we’ve recently discovered, some mosquitoes can become immune to over
time), they do have a number of ideas regarding why some of us are more
prone to bites than others. Here are some of the factors that could
play a role:
Blood Type
Not surprisingly—since, after all,
mosquitoes bite us to harvest proteins from our blood—research shows
that they may find certain blood types more appetizing than others. One study found that
in a controlled setting, mosquitoes landed on people with Type O blood
nearly twice as often as those with Type A. People with Type B blood
fell somewhere in the middle of this itchy spectrum. Additionally, based
on other genes, about 85 percent of people secrete a chemical signal
through their skin that indicates which blood type they have, while 15
percent do not, and mosquitoes are also more attracted to secretors than
nonsecretors regardless of which type they are.
Carbon Dioxide
One of the key ways mosquitoes locate their targets is by smelling the
carbon dioxide emitted in their breath—they use an organ called a maxillary palp to
do this, and can detect carbon dioxide from as far as 164 feet away. As
a result, people who simply exhale more of the gas over time—generally,
larger people—have been shown to attract more mosquitoes than others.
This is one of the reasons why children get bit less often than adults,
on the whole.
Exercise and Metabolism
In addition to carbon dioxide, mosquitoes find victims at closer range
by smelling the lactic acid, uric acid, ammonia and other substances
expelled via their sweat, and are also attracted to people with higher
body temperatures. Because strenuous exercise increases the buildup of
lactic acid and heat in your body, it likely makes you stand out to the
insects. Meanwhile, genetic factors influence the amount of uric acid
and other substances naturally emitted by each person, making some
people more easily found by mosquitos than others.
Skin Bacteria
Other research has suggested that the particular types and volume of
bacteria that naturally live on human skin affect our attractiveness to
mosquitoes. In a 2011 study,
scientists found that having large amounts of a few types of bacteria
made skin more appealing to mosquitoes. Surprisingly, though, having
lots of bacteria but spread among a greater diversity of different
species of bacteria seemed to make skin less attractive. This also might
be why mosquitoes are especially prone to biting our ankles and
feet—they naturally have more robust bacteria colonies.
Beer
Just a single 12-ounce bottle of beer can make you more attractive to the insects, one study found.
But even though researchers had suspected this was because drinking
increases the amount of ethanol excreted in sweat, or because it
increases body temperature, neither of these factors were found to
correlate with mosquito landings, making their affinity for drinkers
something of a mystery.
Pregnancy
In several different studies,
pregnant women have been found to attract roughly twice as many
mosquito bites as others, likely a result of the unfortunate confluence
of two factors: They exhale about 21 percent more carbon dioxide and are on average about 1.26 degrees Fahrenheit warmer than others.
Clothing Color
This one might seem absurd, but mosquitoes use vision (along with scent)
to locate humans, so wearing colors that stand out (black, dark blue or
red) may make you easier to find, at least according to James Day, a
medical entomologist at the University of Florida, in commentary he gave to NBC.
Genetics
As a whole, underlying genetic factors are estimated to account for 85 percent of
the variability between people in their attractiveness to
mosquitoes—regardless of whether it’s expressed through blood type,
metabolism, or other factors. Unfortunately, we don’t (yet) have a way
of modifying these genes, but…
Natural Repellents
Some researchers have started looking at the reasons why a minority of
people seem to rarely attract mosquitoes in the hopes of creating the
next generation of insect repellants. Using chromatography to isolate the particular chemicals these people emit, scientists at the UK’s Rothamsted Research lab have found that these natural repellers tend to excrete a handful of substances that
mosquitoes don’t seem to find appealing. Eventually, incorporating
these molecules into advanced bug spray could make it possible for even a
Type O, exercising, pregnant woman in a black shirt to ward off
mosquitoes for good.
Joseph Stromberg was previously a digital reporter for Smithsonian.
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