Learn what attracts mosquitoes most

There are several factors that draw mosquitoes to us; such as carbon dioxide that we extract through breath, colors such as black and red, body heat and sweat, as well as our smell. Mosquitoes specializing in human stings, such as Aedes aegypt, know it accurately. Caroline McBride from Princeton University has seen [...]
1. VI MOANIAL RUSET. Some viruses make us more attractive to mosquitoes. A recent study has found that the Black and Dengue viruses, responsible for the same - name diseases, change people's scent to attract mosquitoes Aedes, their vector, to new victims. Scientists have isolated a wind molecule, acetopheno, the most common in mouse skin, and infected and attractive people for A. Aegypt. It is produced by Bacillus - gender bacteria present in the skin. They breed in those who are infected because a protein that controls them decreases.
2. GREAT SETS AND BINJECTS. Some studies indicate that pregnant women are a target, perhaps because of increased metabolism resulting in more CO2 emissions and heat, or a change in the wind. And then there are individual variations in the wind, linked to genetics. One study found that identical twins attract mosquitoes in the same way.
3. B IER. No food proposed to keep mosquitoes away has stood the test of science. On the contrary, as some studies have documented, beer seems to attract them. A study conducted by researchers from France and Burkina Faso after drinking a liter of beer, volunteers became more attractive to the Gambine Anopheles (the malariaal doctors). Researchers have ruled out temperature growth or O2 symptoms, assuming that there is a change in wind substances.
4. DIARSA. If you're looking for an excuse not to train so much during the summer, the study of Matthew DeGennaro of the University of Florida may provide one. The researcher has identified how mosquitoes are able to identify substances present in our sweat. He found that the genetically modified receptors in the antenna were not susceptible to lactic acid present in sweat.











