As it turns out, how attractive you are to a mosquito might have less to do with how your blood tastes and more to do with how you smell.
There are a trillion or so microbes that live on our skin that play a huge role in body odor. Without those bacteria, human sweat wouldn't smell at all.
However,for everyone, the bacteria vary widely. While we share 99.9% of DNA with other humans, our microbes are much more diverse, in part because they're influenced by our lifestyle.
A small 2011 study found that those microbes produce different chemicals. And some of those smell more attractive to the insects.
To demonstrate this, researchers asked 48 adult male volunteers to refrain from alcohol, garlic, spicy food, and showers for two days, as these factors could interfere with the kinds of microbes that thrive on the men's skin.
The men wore nylon socks for 24 hours to build up their collection of unique skin microbes, which the researchers then used to collect their scent as bait for some malaria-carrying Anopheles gambiae mosquitoes.
Out of the 48 men, nine proved to be especially attractive to mosquitoes. Another seven men were largely ignored by the insects.
So the researchers looked at the microbe profiles for each of the men. Not surprisingly, the "highly attractive" group had more than twice as high a concentration of one common skin microbe, and more than three times higher concentration of another common microbe compared to the "poorly attractive group."
Overall, that poorly attractive group had a more diverse bacterial colony on their skin, findings that suggest some people's smell may act as a natural deterrent for mosquitoes.
Scientists have also looked into how smells influence the behavior of the mosquito species that's responsible for transmitting Zika and dengue — the Aedes aegypti.
For one of these studies, researchers analyzed the chemicals produced by skin microbes and found that some of them appear to attract particular mosquitoes. One they found is lactic acid. (In addition to being produced naturally by our bodies, it's also found in milk and cheese.)
When mixed with the carbon dioxide we breathe out, lactic acid makes for a potent combination that attracts female A. aegypti mosquitoes. In particular, Limburger cheese, which tends to smell like body odor, was a definite mosquito attractant.
So in conclusion, being attractive to mosquitoes is all about smells, and the kinds of microbes that produce them.
Source: Business Insider
37 comments:
wow nice info.. thanks linda keji
Hmmmmmm
.... Merited happiness
Nyce one
No wonder them no dey bite me hehehehehhehe...my odour na die...lol
~Make I go drink one bottle of beer~
Lol..... Am not attractive to mosquitoes oooo
#LindaThumbsUp
Thanks for the information
Lol. * it's well*
Eat bananas too and get swarmed by mosquitos! #facts
Fcvk
Thanks for the information
Perfume would Du d trick, cus dis mosquitoes are super annoying
And in summary you told us nothing, didn't tell the particular smell that attracts the mosquitoes.
Heard
And i always thought it was cos my bllod is swit. I have a terrible resistance to mosquito bite even though i hardly fall ill to malaria.
So people with body odor can relax now after having learnt that it is a naturally given feature to deter mosquitoes and apparently Malaria.
good experiment but let's see if it can become proven as a fact.
Really? Ok
Wow, an educational and interesting piece
-D great anonymous now as Vivian Reginalds
No wonder I was wondering y mosquito like my blood. Teary. Brandyblesswilliams@gmail.com
Hmmmm good to know. So someone will not eat spicy good again bcos of mosquitoes. Ok..o
Hmmmm good to know. So someone will not eat spicy good again bcos of mosquitoes. Ok..o
what a theory
Ok seen
Seen....@ johnkoledoye@gmail.com
Interesting read. If I may add, taking your bath at night will likely reduced the odour and less attractiveness to mosquitoes.
Interesting write-up,I have always wondered why my body seem to attract mosquitos than others do
Informmative
Say what!!! Linda take note!
Hmmmmm na WA oooo
This is very enlightening and interesting.
Knowledge...thank Linda and ur admin and the researchers as well
Greatest writeup from this blog...thanks alot linlin
Hmmmm na WA......
You're a wise man. This is a baseless article really.
Smilin.....rilly nic! Dey no dey use eye see me oooo.
thanks for the info
Okay..
#FINEST
Thanks for the info
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