Updated
Updated · BBC.com · Jul 10
Rockefeller Study Links Skin Acids to 100-Fold Gap in Mosquito Attraction
Updated
Updated · BBC.com · Jul 10

Rockefeller Study Links Skin Acids to 100-Fold Gap in Mosquito Attraction

2 articles · Updated · BBC.com · Jul 10

Summary

  • Rockefeller University researchers found mosquitoes strongly preferred skin-odor samples from people with higher levels of carboxylic acids, after testing nylon sleeves worn by 64 volunteers for six hours.
  • The team calculated an attractiveness score in which the most mosquito-prone person ranked 100 times higher than the least attractive, and those differences stayed stable for years despite lifestyle changes.
  • The findings add to evidence that mosquitoes first home in on carbon dioxide, heat and moisture, then use skin scent at closer range to decide whom to bite.
  • Experts say myths such as “sweet blood,” garlic or vitamin B lack support; proven protection still centers on repellents like Deet, picaridin or PMD, plus covering exposed skin.

Insights

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