Eau de Mosquito
“[A]dults who are convinced they are being victimized by the bloodsuckers usually are not,” reports the Wall Street Journal, raining all over a lifelong pity party that I plan on continuing anyway:
Mosquitoes find their mammalian prey through sensing the heat and carbon dioxide mammals emit. Pregnant women and larger people are sometimes the victim of multiple attacks, since they exert more energy than the average person.
Mosquitoes are also guided by their sense of smell. “Despite what my grandmother told me, I don’t have sweet blood,” says Dr. Zwiebel, since mosquitoes cannot distinguish blood quality. “Mosquitoes are attracted to our human odor, and that is largely a consequence of the bacteria on our skin,” says Dr. Zwiebel. The “flora and fauna on our skin” also smell appetizing to mosquitoes, says Dr. Zweibel, and these can increase when we sweat or spend a lot of time outdoors.
[WSJ]