Friday, August 2, 2013
Mosquitoes Find Some People More Delicious Than Others
Mosquito season
is in full swing. A
lucky few people seem immune to the bites of the pesky
insects. Others can’t seem to avoid them.
New research explains mosquitoes’ apparent selectivity.
According to an article in Smithsonian magazine, an
estimated 20 percent of people are “especially delicious” to
mosquitoes. (Shudder.) They are bitten more often than
others.
Why? A number of factors are at play. Chief among them is
blood type. “Not surprisingly — since, after all, mosquitoes
bite us to harvest proteins from our blood — research
shows that they find certain blood types more appetising
than others,” the article reports. Type O is at the top of the
list. Additionally, about 85 percent of people secrete a
chemical signal that indicates their blood type; these
“secretors” are more prone to bites regardless of their blood
type.
Another factor is the amount of carbon dioxide people emit
when they breathe. Larger people exhale more of the gas,
which may explain why adults tend to get bitten more often
than children. This also means that obese people are more
prone to getting bitten than average or underweight people,
tall people more prone than short. Sweat, high body
temperatures and skin bacteria also play a role. Pregnancy,
which increases body temperature and carbon dioxide
emission, may also increase the likelihood of bites.
And if you’re drinking type, you may have made yourself a
mosquito target. No one has been able to pinpoint why
drinking beer makes people more attractive to mosquitoes.
Some have theorised that the elevation in body temperature
and the amount of ethanol in sweat may play a role, but
neither theory has panned out.
Can mosquito bites be reduced?
Folks often ask whether they should befriend someone who
is more — or less — attractive (to mosquitoes). The notion
is that sitting next to a person who is more mosquito-
attractive will somehow protect you by diverting
mosquitoes from you to him/her. Genius, but the two of
you together may draw in even more mosquitoes, and you
may suffer even more bites than if you were a lone soul on
the park bench. Ah, but what about sitting next to a
mosquito-repellent person? That still may not benefit you.
Certain emanations of that person may draw in mosquitoes
from afar, but they then might home in on you once they
were close.
With all this said, there is the concept of zooprophylaxis.
Maintaining chickens, goats, or other animals in your home
can, in some cases, divert bites by mosquitoes that would
otherwise have been directed to a person. This can afford
some limited protection against malaria and other mosquito-
borne infections. Whereas this may offer a strategy for
folks who live in primitive dwellings in rural regions and
don’t have resources to protect themselves by way of
improved housing, pesticides, etc, it would not likely be
embraced by travellers. Imagine checking in your hotel and
finding a complimentary chicken in the room. Ah, but if it
was a rooster, you’d not need to set the alarm clock.
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