How to Repel Mosquitoes That Are Drawn to You & Keep Them Away All Summer Long

As far as we’re concerned, summer could be all year round, but the only downside of being able to lounge by the pool, dine outside, and go on trail runs is getting eaten alive by bugs. Some people will not get bit at all on any one outdoor outing, while another person has itchy welts all over their arms and legs where the mosquitoes got them. Are certain people mosquito magnets, even if they wear jeans on even the most sweltering summer days as armor from bug bites?

It turns out that some people really are more prone to mosquito bites than others based on things like clothing and blood type. “Mosquitoes use all their senses to find a blood source, including ‘smell’ (they use sensory receptors) to detect levels of carbon dioxide,” Robb Akridge, PhD, CEO and Founder of REA Innovations tells SheKnows. “The higher the CO2 concentration, the closer a victim.” They also use sight—they seek out dark bodies since it might mean a mammal is close by. And they have temperature sensors to go toward hotter objects (hence products like mosquito repelling lanterns to attract them and keep them away from you). Warmth could mean a warm-blooded animal is close at hand. So if you’re wearing dark clothing and you have been exercising a lot, are hot, and have labored or fast breathing, then mosquitoes will have an easier time finding you.

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As far as being extra popular with mosquitos, about 20% of the population is more attractive to mosquitoes than others. “In that subgroup they may produce more CO2 than others,” Akridge says. “If you have labored breathing (sometime seen in out of shape or unhealthy individuals), or if you are just a large person, you are producing more CO2. This mosquito-preferred group may also heat up faster, which would draw them in. However, there are many other reasons — known and unknown — why this group is a better target for a mosquito swarm.” Akridge shares a list of some possible reasons why mosquitos are drawn in:

  • Pregnancy. When you are pregnant you may have labored breathing (and therefore more CO2), and your body temperature is warmer than normal, so that can attract mosquitoes.

  • Sweat. If you sweat a lot, or exercise and then perspire, the chemical composition of your sweat can be an attractant, especially if it has high levels of lactic acid. This chemical sweat profile is linked to genetic makeup, so genetically you may be predisposed to being mosquito bait.

  • Skin biome. As most people know, there are microbes that naturally live on your skin. The organisms and the concentration that reside on your skin can vary from person to person. It appears that if you have a certain type of bacteria, they can act as attractants for mosquitoes. Linking it back to sweat, the types of bacteria that grow on your skin often depend on the food they have to feed upon, like sweat and dead skin cells. So if the sweat chemical makeup is genetic and only certain microbes can survive with a particular diet, you could end up creating a biased biome, which could then attract mosquitos.

  • Blood type. Type O seems to be the preferred blood type of mosquitoes; B is in the middle, and A is least preferred. It is not known why. And believe it or not, a larger percentage of the population secrete, through their skin, molecules that let the mosquitoes know what blood type you are. However, individuals that secrete anything through the skin are more likely than non-secretors, no matter the blood type, to be bitten.

So why do mosquitoes bite in the first place? “The female mosquito needs the blood of a mammal (humans are not first on the list; cattle and horses are easier targets) to provide proteins for her to produce eggs,” Akridge says. “The female is the only one that can extract blood. When not producing eggs, male and female mosquitoes feed on nectar.”

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To make yourself less of a mosquito target naturally, Akridge shares some things you can do:

  • Wear light colored clothing.

  • Wear clothes made of tightly woven cloth, so mosquitoes can’t pierce through them.

  • Use clothing embedded with insect repellent.

  • Limit the amount of exposed skin; wear tennis shoes instead of bare feet or sandals.

  • Move slowly so you won’t perspire as much.

  • Use outdoor fans to create a breeze, since mosquitoes can’t fly in the wind.

There are also a few foods that are thought to repel mosquitoes, including garlic, onions, vinegar, tomatoes (a diet high in thiamine is thought to repel them, but there is no proof), beans (also high in thiamine), and even grapefruit. “However, there is no scientific proof that consuming these at any amount will stop will you from being attacked by mosquitoes,” Akridge says. “And in our world of Zika and West Nile virus here in the USA, you must never depend on diet to protect you from being bitten. The only thing known to prevent mosquitoes from biting is DEET. Although to some this is a harsh repellant, it works.” Let’s say that again, louder for the folks in the back: a bug repellent that contains DEET is the only thing known to prevent mosquitos from biting.

As far as foods you should avoid in order to prevent mosquito bites, the only one with any support is beer. “Unfortunately, it is not known what causes beer to be a mosquito attractant,” Akridge says. “Another one is salt or salty foods. Lactic acid in your sweat can attract them, and apparently salty foods can increase lactic acid. So that means no beer, or a salted rim on your margaritas, and skip the chips.”

Well, you can still enjoy your margaritas and chips all summer long, but you may want to do that indoors.

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