Question:
why do mosquitoes like some people [like me] more than others?
Franklin
2006-08-25 10:31:22 UTC
put 9 people + myself in a windowless room by a stagnant pool in a costa rican rain forest ... and i will be the only one covered with mosquito bites ... what's up with that?
244 answers:
kristeena911
2006-08-26 21:42:37 UTC
It's about that time folks--

so thought I'd send out this reminder!!!!



OK, mosquitoes...

prepare to be repelled!!!!!



Use Bounce Fabric Softener Sheets...Best thing ever used in

Louisiana...just wipe on & go...Great for Babies



Bob, a fisherman, takes one vitamin B-1 tablet a day

April through October . He said it works. He was right.

Hasn't had a mosquito bite in 33 years. Try it.

Every one he has talked into trying it works on them.

Vitamin B-1( Thiamin Hydrochloride 100 mg.)



If you eat bananas,

the mosquitoes like you, - something about the banana oil

as your body processes it.

Stop eating bananas for the summer and the mosquitoes

will be much less interested.



This is going to floor you, but one of the best

insect repellents someone found (who is in the woods

every day), is Vick's Vaporub.



Plant marigolds around the yard, the flowers give off

a smell that bugs do not like,

so plant some in that garden also to help ward

off bugs without using insecticides.



"Tough guy" Marines who spend a great deal of time

"camping out" say that the very best mosquito

repellant you can use is

Avon Skin-So-Soft bath oil mixed about

half and half with alcohol.







One of the best natural insect repellants that I've discovered

is made from the clear real vanilla. This is the pure Vanilla that is sold in Mexico. It works great for mosquitoes and ticks,

don't know about other insects.

When all else fails--get a frog







Fight West Nile...pass this along to

all your friends in skeeter land!!!
anonymous
2014-06-15 06:24:34 UTC
So if you want to avoid an onslaught of mosquito bites at your next outdoor gathering, stake out a chaise lounge rather than a spot on the volleyball team. Here's why. As you run around the volleyball court, the mosquitoes sense your movement and head toward you. When you pant from exertion, the smell of carbon dioxide from your heavy breathing draws them closer. So does the lactic acid pouring from your sweat glands. And then -- gotcha.

Where Mosquitoes Lurk
Cheppyyyyy
2006-08-28 08:40:17 UTC
mosquitoes need to bite you, not to protect themselves or their homes as bees do, but for their dinner. That's right, female mosquitoes rely on human and animal blood for their meals (male mosquitoes don't ever bite humans, instead relying on plants and flowers for food).



Mosquitoes actually find you by detecting the carbon dioxide that you breathe out when you exhale. They can "smell" a human from more than 90 feet away, making you a sure target as long as you're breathing outdoors (which is pretty hard to avoid doing!). In fact, the reason some people get bit more than others has to do with the amount of odors that come from their bodies.
MAK
2006-08-27 22:21:09 UTC
You must be a foreigner. Mosquitos bite foreigners over Natives as they like the diversity of taste. They get tired of the same old flavours. The same thing happens in Jamaica. The locals hardly get bitten but the Mosquito Express alerts all resident mosquitos as to the exact location of all the tourists so each gets a bite. It's called the equity program for visitors. No-one is left behind. Equal bites for all ;-) lol
anonymous
2014-10-09 00:32:53 UTC
outside of the tropics overwinter as eggs, but a significant minority overwinter as larvae or adults. Mosquitoes of the genus Culex (a vector for St. Louis encephalitis) overwinter as mated adult females.The females of blood sucking species locate their victims primarily through scent, they are extremely sensitive to the carbon dioxide in exhaled breath, as well as several substances found in sweat. Some people seem to attract mosquitoes more than others. Being male, being overweight, and having type 'O' blood may increase the risk of being bitten. Mosquitoes can detect heat, so they can find warm-blooded mammals and birds very easily once they get close enough.

Source(s):
Bindhu
2015-01-12 19:18:03 UTC
Mosquitoes actually find you by detecting the carbon dioxide that you breathe out when you exhale. They can "smell" a human from more than 90 feet away, making you a sure target as long as you're breathing outdoors (which is pretty hard to avoid doing!). In fact, the reason some people get bit more than others has to do with the amount of odors that come from their bodies.
freak369xxx
2006-08-27 23:17:38 UTC
Wow. 182 answers so far. I doubt I will be able to shed any light on it but I will toss in y two cents. I get bit by anything. In the dead of winter someone will come out of hibernation just to take a bite.



It got so bad that I went to see a doctor and he came to the conclusion that it was my blood type and that I tend to sweat a lot in the summer. It doesn't matter if it is a spider or a mosquito, horse fly or flea, I am the one that gets bit. Things did improve when I started eating more garlic but at the same time, no one wanted to be around me unless I downed a gallon of mouthwash. I guess you have to trade popularity for being bite free ...
?
2014-09-01 18:20:43 UTC
Most mosquito species outside of the tropics overwinter as eggs, but a significant minority overwinter as larvae or adults. Mosquitoes of the genus Culex (a vector for St. Louis encephalitis) overwinter as mated adult females.The females of blood sucking species locate their victims primarily through scent, they are extremely sensitive to the carbon dioxide in exhaled breath, as well as several substances found in sweat. Some people seem to attract mosquitoes more than others. Being male, being overweight, and having type 'O' blood may increase the risk of being bitten. Mosquitoes can detect heat, so they can find warm-blooded mammals and birds very easily once they get close enough.
anonymous
2014-06-18 05:22:19 UTC
Hate to spray or slather yourself with any product, either chemical- or plant-based? Mosquito traps, a relatively new product, may be the answer. They work by emitting substances that biting mosquitoes find attractive -- such as carbon dioxide, heat, moisture, and other mosquito-friendly byproducts. They attract, then trap or kill female mosquitoes. When placed strategically near breeding spots "they have knocked [mosquito] populations down," Conlon tells WebMD.
?
2006-08-26 12:53:04 UTC
It's all in your attitude. I can have a very mean attitude, and it is detectable in the hormones, etc., that your body produces and comes out in your perspiration / sweat. The mosquitos come around me and many of them "light and leave" quickly. Other "newbies" actually land, only to regret what they taste or get their feet into, and they take off quickly too. If anyone of them senses how mean I am (actually just an attitude I contrive for them alone), and lives through it, they go run and tell their friends, so they all stay away, except the daring and dumb ones. Of course, what you eat also is evident in your perspiration and sweat, so they don't like a lot of what I eat too. Very spicey foods especially with garlic and onion and tobasco sauce and various taco sauces. You can keep mosquitos away with what you eat, and your attitude. Actually, I'm not very mean, so I have to work up an attitude against them as I prepare to go outside. Give it a try. God Bless you.
anonymous
2014-11-01 13:39:18 UTC
Bob, a fisherman, takes one vitamin B-1 tablet a day

April through October . He said it works. He was right.

Hasn't had a mosquito bite in 33 years. Try it.

Every one he has talked into trying it works on them.

Vitamin B-1( Thiamin Hydrochloride 100 mg.)



If you eat bananas,

the mosquitoes like you, - something about the banana oil

as your body processes it.

Stop eating bananas for the summer and the m
anonymous
2014-06-22 19:52:34 UTC
How about cold climates in places such as Alaska? You're safe for most of the year. But, says Conlon, mosquitoes flock there for a brief, three-week period between July and August. "The Arctic National Refuge is one big bog," Conlon explains, making the mosquito population there second only to that in the Florida Everglades.

With a long track record -- mosquitoes have been around for 170 million years -- and more than 175 known species in the U.S., these shrewd summertime pests clearly aren't going to disappear any time soon. But you can minimize their impact.
Joseph, II
2006-08-26 19:57:32 UTC
Well, if YOU were a starving person passing through a Costa Rican rainforest- and you came upon a crowd of people, one of whom was chowing down on a KFC chicken wing- wouldn't YOU be all over them in a second?! Mosquitos have THEIR favorites too...- & if YOU happen to be one of them- maybe you shouldn't be loitering around stagnant pools in places like Costa Rica! :)
jeb_oi812
2006-08-26 14:05:26 UTC
What we eat, creates body scent which attracts them as well as color of cloths, and some other factors.



Here is the encylopedia explenation:

Most mosquito species outside of the tropics overwinter as eggs, but a significant minority overwinter as larvae or adults. Mosquitoes of the genus Culex (a vector for St. Louis encephalitis) overwinter as mated adult females.The females of blood sucking species locate their victims primarily through scent, they are extremely sensitive to the carbon dioxide in exhaled breath, as well as several substances found in sweat. Some people seem to attract mosquitoes more than others. Being male, being overweight, and having type 'O' blood may increase the risk of being bitten. Mosquitoes can detect heat, so they can find warm-blooded mammals and birds very easily once they get close enough.
?
2014-06-01 19:20:11 UTC
While researchers have yet to pinpoint what mosquitoes consider an ideal hunk of human flesh, the hunt is on. "There's a tremendous amount of research being conducted on what compounds and odors people exude that might be attractive to mosquitoes," says Joe Conlon, PhD, technical advisor to the American Mosquito Control Association. With 400 different compounds to examine, it's an extremely laborious process. "Researchers are just beginning to scratch the surface," he says.
anonymous
2015-03-22 08:25:22 UTC
People are not the primary bloodhosts for mosquitoes, especially in temperate climates. There are few people near the Arctic Circle, for example, but millions and millions of mosquitoes. The major mosquito pests in the Southeast US seem to prefer the host-odor of small herbivorous (vegetarian) mammals, or birds. Mosquitoes that carry encephalitis seem to prefer avian (bird) bloodhosts. These mosquitoes bite people when they get the chance, but they are better at tracking the scent of animals that are most abundant in their habitat.
brucenjacobs
2006-08-27 19:18:48 UTC
As many other who have answered this question have stated, there are a myriad of factors. Body chemistry has much to do with it. This is in part because of what you eat. Also, perfume or other chemicals you put on your body such as moisturizers and even soap and shampoo can have an attraction for these little pests. I take many vitamin and natural supplements every day. Among them is an odorless garlic compound. Since I have been taking it, mosquitoes don't come near me, and, none of my friends or family can detect any odor. There are also inexpensive electronic sound generators you can buy that irritate them so they don't come near you.
anonymous
2006-08-27 09:58:47 UTC
In the quest for better repellents, scientists have learned mosquitos use heat sensors and a sense of smell to locate their next "meal". A friend of mine who likes to come backpacking has the same problem as you. He has had good luck with OFF brand repellent.



There is something about the way you smell that is appealing to those skeeters. Or, you have a slightly higher natural body temperature than average and are easy to find with their nasty little heat sensors.



OFF brand spray should help and there is a small squirt bottle that will fit in a pants pocket now that you might have luck with.



You have reason to be concerned, it is more than a nuisance now with West Nile Virus moving around the country.
FRIEND
2006-08-27 01:03:28 UTC
Mosquitoes do not feed on blood. The female mosquito requires a blood meal for development of her eggs.





People are not the primary bloodhosts for mosquitoes, especially in temperate climates. There are few people near the Arctic Circle, for example, but millions and millions of mosquitoes. The major mosquito pests in the Southeast US seem to prefer the host-odor of small herbivorous (vegetarian) mammals, or birds. Mosquitoes that carry encephalitis seem to prefer avian (bird) bloodhosts. These mosquitoes bite people when they get the chance, but they are better at tracking the scent of animals that are most abundant in their habitat.



Mosquitoes locate bloodhosts by scent, sight and heat. From 100 feet away (30 meters) mosquitoes can smell your scent, especially the carbon dioxide (CO2) you exhale. Biting flies are even better; they can smell their prey from 300 feet (100 meters) away. Because CO2 is present in the atmosphere (plants take in CO2 and give off oxygen), mosquitoes respond to higher-than-normal concentrations, especially when the CO2 is mixed with host-odor. They follow your scent upwind, and can see you at a distance of about 30 feet (10 meters).





CUT AND PASTED FROM WEBSITE BELOW:
Mrs. Mac 4
2006-08-27 17:58:27 UTC
i personally feel that people give off a scent after a while to mosquitoes that they do not need to bite us. As a child I was covered in mosquitoes bites and so was my husband. As adults we do not get bit. My brother in law gets bitten all the time. He is 28. As a child he did not get bitten. That is my theroy, I am not sure if it a right but that what I think.
?
2014-06-26 16:10:16 UTC
But the process of attraction begins long before the landing. Mosquitoes can smell their dinner from an impressive distance of up to 50 meters, explains Edman. This doesn't bode well for people who emit large quantities of carbon dioxide.
?
2016-12-11 20:17:26 UTC
solid question. i does no longer think of they do however. having pronounced that, i'm no longer an entomologist so i won't have the capacity to assert for particular. merely looks like it might possibly be greater worry than that's nicely worth provided that by the time you got here upon yet another mosquito, wrestled around with it and finally bit it the blood could be frequently digested and it does no longer be all that plenty first of all. possibly much less perplexing to come across a severe high quality fat cow in a pasture someplace and chew her.
anonymous
2014-06-25 16:17:34 UTC
Tis the bite of the Mosquito that spreads heart worms in dogs (mycrofilaria) and I don't know if I spelled the clinical name right, just guessing...I have heard that in extreme cases that people can develop a form of this condition. Twas the skeeter who helped spread Yellow Fever (Bronze John) throughout the Southern US. The skeeter can also be a carrier of Malaria in some tropical climates. Now in areas of the US they claim that they are spreading the West Nile Virus.
Celticlassie
2006-08-27 13:35:05 UTC
I really just clicked onto this question not to answer, but to find out what everybody said as I TOO am a mosquito magnet. Last time we sat out I came in with several bites on my legs - they'll even bite me through my clothes & for some reason they love my feet - and everyone else is unscathed. Glad to know I'm not alone...
the_help_d3sk
2006-08-28 10:00:27 UTC
Some mosquitos may like you more based on what drugs you may be taking at the time, and what you have been eating lately.

Also, another factor may be that you dont have enough Vitamin B12 in your blood stream to ward them off. You can buy that at your local pharmecy. MOSQUITOS ARE ALL ATTRACTED TO CO2 (YOUR BREATH!)
?
2014-07-11 21:19:21 UTC
I had hepatitis A one summer. Had lots of mosquitoes flying around me but no bites. They would zoom in on me and stop about an inch away, then take off. I am not recommending hep A as a good method to keep them skeeters away.
anonymous
2006-08-25 22:57:26 UTC
the fumes u give off. or put this way the gases that come-ing Thur the pores of ur skin. i as well attrack those pesky little creatures. i have very high sugar intake. once bitten though what are u to do? i learned this when i was a kid. if u never touch the bite. the itching will stop completely. say within 8 to10hr's the bite will all but disappear.
anonymous
2014-06-16 19:55:46 UTC
Mosquitoes also target people who produce excess amounts of certain acids, such as uric acid, explains entomologist John Edman, PhD, spokesman for the Entomological Society of America. These substances can trigger the mosquitoes' olfactory sensations, or sense of smell, causing them to launch their "landing" onto unsuspecting victims.
anonymous
2014-06-02 08:06:32 UTC
When you are bitten, you are sometimes better off to let them nearly conclude their withdrawal before smacking them, because they will also suck out a lot of the anticoagulant that they used to loosen up your blood flow, then just before they fly away smash 'em. Take care to clean and care for the bites, secondary infections from scratching can be as bad as the bites, and in tropical (hot moist places) the chances of secondary infection from bacterias breeding and spreading when you use those fingernails (hands are so dirty) to scratch, that you should try to resist the itchy uncomfortable bites. Though it's very little comfort you can get preparations that are made to help clean and deaden the itchy areas.
anonymous
2014-06-28 18:17:52 UTC
While any water source is potential breeding grounds for mosquitoes, they much prefer stagnant water. So if you crave a mosquito-free water oasis on your property, forego the backyard pond and seek out a babbling brook instead.
Karthik Durairajan
2006-08-27 13:24:08 UTC
Mosquitos don't like certain vitamins. Specifically Vitamin E and I believe K but I forget. Eat less sweet stuff it really does attract them to you and drink more beer, microbrewery type because you'll absorb more active yeast than bud or miller type beers and yeast is loaded with vitamins that kill misquitoes. Somehow they can sense it and they will leave you alone. So drink beer and eat leass candy and fatty foods you should be left alone by the swamp vamps.
Snowflake
2006-08-27 12:58:58 UTC
Hmm, very interesting to read all the answers.



Mosquitos always avoided me while eating away at other people right next to me. I seemls like it has to do a lot with your blood charachteristics. I have AB + type and I have Hepatitis B anibodies living forever in my blood. Mosquitos know better to avoid me.



No matter what I eat or wear, they avoid me all the same - not like I'm complaining. Yeah, if I wear light clothes and some particulat perfumes they fly to me but then they fly away.
favorite spicy food is jambalaya
2006-08-26 18:19:35 UTC
Mosquitos like some people better than others because of the vitamins in their blood. Some people have more of a certain vitamin than others and the mosquitos like that.
Saadi
2006-08-27 22:42:36 UTC
Everyone does not enjoy the privilege to be called as "Sweet Heart". You are lucky even if mosquitos call you so.

When mosquitos have a choice to make, they know the taste before they insert their siring.

Use anti-mosquitoe measures otherwise wish them a happy dinner.
hipichick777
2006-08-26 21:43:08 UTC
I am the same way. Heres some help:

Eat a banana thirty minutes before you go outdoors.

Keep a sheet of Bounce fabric softner in your pocket.

Dont wear bright colors.

Dont wear perfume.

Dont wear clothes with flower prints.

And for your yard:

Put one cup of lemon scented ammonia and one cup of lemon scented dish soap in your twenty gallon hose end sprayer and spray the yard in the morning and the evening. Mosquitioes hate it and its great for the lawn.

Make mosquito traps by putting lemon scented dish soap in styrofoam disposable plates everywhere.

Thats all i have.

Good luck...
shotouthype
2006-08-26 09:21:16 UTC
This is an easy one to answer. Mosquitos don't like certain vitamins. Specifically Vitamin E and I believe K but I forget. Eat less sweet stuff it really does attract them to you and drink more beer, microbrewery type because you'll absorb more active yeast than bud or miller type beers and yeast is loaded with vitamins that kill misquitoes. Somehow they can sense it and they will leave you alone. So drink beer and eat leass candy and fatty foods you should be left alone by the swamp vamps.
?
2016-02-03 10:18:16 UTC
mosquitoes need to bite you, not to protect themselves or their homes as bees do, but for their dinner. That's right, female mosquitoes rely on human and animal blood for their meals (male mosquitoes don't ever bite humans, instead relying on plants and flowers for food).
careercollegestudent69
2006-08-28 09:45:35 UTC
Eat vitamin B, B-12, and B+. Mosquitoes do not like it at all, and the reason has something to do with your diet.



Also for add lib, mosquito repellent does not repel them or kill them, it just makes them unable to see your body heat!



I do know that smoke repels them for some reason!
anonymous
2014-06-30 16:12:41 UTC
They work by emitting substances that biting mosquitoes find attractive -- such as carbon dioxide, heat, moisture, and other mosquito-friendly byproducts. They attract, then trap or kill female mosquitoes.
katieebweb
2006-08-28 05:20:44 UTC
They totally bite the crap out of me! I'm actually considering moving to get away from them! They bite my kids to but not my husband. I have a theory, I think it's blood type. I'm O- and so are all my kids. I always thought that they must have someway of knowing what blood types are, and also who bleeds well. I know just a theory not an answer, but if you are O- I just might be on to something!
arcturus pendragon
2006-08-29 01:24:50 UTC
mosquitoes bite people with a higher thermal output than people with lower levels. this means that mosquitoes are attracted to people who are warmer than others. It might be because warmer people have a much better circulation of blood. the better the circulation the fresher the blood they will get.
paintressa
2006-08-27 16:16:41 UTC
Our skin excretes carbon dioxide as does our breath. Mosquitoes are attracted to the carbon dioxide they can detect it up to 100 feet away. Some of us must give off more carbon dioxide than others. That's why they say some people get bitten while others are left alone.
Tonya in TX - Duck
2006-08-26 15:22:14 UTC
feramones. some peoples natural scent is just like candy for mosquitos. Heavy use of cologne, heavy clothing (it traps your scent), and even certain foods can contribute. Remember only the females make a sound and only the females will bite.
PP4865
2006-08-25 22:14:01 UTC
Pheromones are a chemical compound, produced and secreted by an animal, that influences the behavior and development of other members of the same species - you have the ones that mosquitoes like. Start to use lemon scented soap and they might quit liking you so much.
camieg12
2006-08-25 20:29:49 UTC
I'm the same way, my family gets a few bites and I get covered. Supposedly it's the way our sweat smells and we probably have a slightly higher body temprature. Mosquitos see heat so warmer people look more appitizing.
mommymommy
2006-08-26 16:14:48 UTC
mosquitoes are attracted to dark clothing and sweat. I am also like you! I think in someway it has to do with the type of blood people have too. I know this is no answer to your ? but I hope I have helped in someway. If you are

planning to be outside on a warm day/evening I found that lotion also attracts them.
vim
2006-08-26 04:05:29 UTC
Franklin,

I´ve got the same problem,

even worst. Anything that bites,

finds me. Very light skinned

and all that jazz, and none of

the Docs answers have ever

made any sense, so I will read

every single answer here to find

out why.



P.S. For the bite and sting,

use distilled white vinegar,

it is miraculous - I even put vinegar

on my exposed body parts before

going out and it truly helps.

Good question!
Mariah
2006-08-28 07:34:02 UTC
The chemical combinations you secrete from your skin attract them to you. Sometimes it has to do with wearing dark colors but if it's a consistant issue than it is because you are leaving off a scent that they want. Also, your skin could be thinner and that is why more of your chemicals come through.

I have a theory that it could have something to do with blood sugar and pancreas issues.
Da Great 1
2006-08-26 09:19:17 UTC
Depends on what you eat. Let's say I ate a banana and go outside full of mosquitoes then they would start biting me because they are attracted to the smell. And it also depends on people's body odors.
anonymous
2014-06-30 19:58:43 UTC
Take care to clean and care for the bites, secondary infections from scratching can be as bad as the bites, and in tropical (hot moist places) the chances of secondary infection from bacterias breeding and spreading when you use those fingernails (hands are so dirty) to scratch, that you should try to resist the itchy uncomfortable bites. Though it's very little comfort you can get preparations that are made to help clean and deaden the itchy areas.
anonymous
2006-08-27 07:45:21 UTC
I thought that was just me. Mosquitoes look at me and see an all-you-can-eat free buffet. My personal record for mosquito bites in one day is about 20--and I was wearing repellant at the time.
anonymous
2014-11-19 17:29:38 UTC
The chemical combinations you secrete from your skin attract them to you. Sometimes it has to do with wearing dark colors but if it's a consistant issue than it is because you are leaving off a scent that they want. Also, your skin could be thinner and that is why more of your chemicals come through.
Sumit
2014-07-20 19:28:06 UTC
I feel for you, I have seem people literally swarmed, so I know that some people just DO taste better to those biting little critters. Think about living in a hot dry climate (like Arizona)...(misery loves company...or I could switch places with you!) hehe...
consciousnessrevo
2006-08-26 11:11:02 UTC
Mosquitoes like the blood that taste sweet. So if you have high sugar content in your blood composition because of eating much sugary foods, then you will be most likely targeted by them.
seshu
2006-08-28 08:34:58 UTC
While endorsing some of the good resources given, I say mosquitoes (female blood suckers) are mostly after females and they are also after sweat, acidic smell and heat source.

My own discovery (can I claim exclusive rights to this finding?) and I will tell you what; they have an uncanny sense to attack exactly when we can not swat them, say when both our hands (or limbs) are engaged in any complex activity that needs lot of attention and concentration (Exclude sex).
tjmaxx17
2006-08-28 05:06:25 UTC
Forget the other answers! Mosquitos are attracted to perspiration. If there is even a slight hint that you are sweating (you might not even realize it), a mosquito will come to you.
blaqbuty
2006-08-26 06:11:06 UTC
Sweet Blood
Ace 9010
2006-08-26 10:04:40 UTC
Mosquitos are attracted to different smells and stuff like citrus will repel them and something like a banana will attract a mosquito
Cabana C
2006-08-25 20:03:52 UTC
It has to do with how much carbon monoxide your body gives off. The mosquito is attracted to the gas and will look to that person that has the more attracting body odor related to this gasous expulsion.
helixburger
2006-08-27 10:14:04 UTC
Do you wear cologne? Bingo! Drink a lot of soda? Have a high metabolism? CO2 attracts them. And some people just smell like skeeter bait! Lucky you.

Why not hire yourself out as an outdoor party protector? Ouch! Why did you throw that??!
anonymous
2014-06-10 19:01:08 UTC
.They should have been flying in formation to eat me if good smells and rare blood were their favorite! They would often land but hardly ever bite, now when they did bite it seems that they tasted and left ASAP! Which left a bad (very itchy) bite so like the girl who cannot resist scratching, I would itch and scratch like I could not stop myself often only making the few bites I got that were bad, even worse! I think they did not hang around long enough to withdraw the anti-coagulant which they inject with their initial bite to make their "withdrawal from your blood bank easier"...so my bites (the few I got seemed VERY bad)...
?
2014-07-19 18:29:03 UTC
Tell me it's not a pain in the posterior for them to like you best! I bet you used to wish you were popular, didn't you?...well now you are! I know you won't pick my answer and that is ok, cause maybe I have said something that will make you less vulnerable.
prettyqbee07
2006-08-26 15:13:21 UTC
You probably taste good and smell better than most people. Or they wearing some smelly perfume or mosquito repellent or Skin so soft.
Chicana
2006-08-25 22:38:44 UTC
I'm not sure why mosquitos like some people more than others, but they sure like to bite me and I don't have light skin.
anonymous
2014-06-30 17:35:24 UTC
The chemical IR3535, better known as Avon's Skin-So-Soft, has also been marketed as a repellent in the U.S. in recent years. To date, research shows it's much less effective than DEET.

Safety of DEET Repellents
anonymous
2006-08-28 03:21:36 UTC
Mosquitos bite everybody exactly the same but some people like me react more.
Bryan D
2006-08-27 21:52:35 UTC
Just my hair-brained theory, but I think it's because of the hormonal/pheremonal scents our bodies give off. Some are more interesting to 'skeeters than others. They don't touch this Cajun...maybe it's all the Tabasco sauce I consume!!
uchihagirl011
2006-08-27 05:43:29 UTC
mosquitoes like a certain type of blood. i have that problem too you know. also, they like sweet stuff. like for example, in the movie parent trap, the twins replaced their "stepmother to be's" mosquito repellant with water and sugar solution then mosquitoes bit her more. maybe you have sweet blood.
terri m
2006-08-26 00:44:52 UTC
My father was Native American, my mother was white. On any given occassion, mom would be covered with bites, us kids not as much and dad nearly not at all. My kids, who have a white dad, get more bites than I do, but their dad is tormented. My dad used to say they didn't like Indians.
anonymous
2006-08-27 18:41:31 UTC
your blood,scent,if u smoke it seeps out of your pores,

if you kill them it could also be bad kharma.



I used to get bit all the time,

I stopped killing and just blew them away at times,I dont were alot of perfume,stopped eating onions,and cut down on garlic.



Im sure you have some awesome answers I hope everyone has given you in sightful information.

Also if you try a scented soap try sandlewood or lemongrass,ginseng soap by bee & flower.





Good luck to you and to stop the ichy ness i have used vaporrub on the infected area it helps.
Aleksandra I
2006-08-28 09:35:54 UTC
Every person has a different smell that attracts mosquitoes in there way
m......a(t)
2006-08-28 02:34:38 UTC
Because of your skin colour mosquitoes usually bit people with a redder skin tone that , proves tht you have more blood
really????
2006-08-27 03:04:02 UTC
Your body puts out an odor that attracts them. get some tea tree oil from your local pharmacy or walmart and put a few drops in a spray bottle of water, spray it on and let dry. this should help and it's all natural.
Sam X9
2006-08-27 16:37:49 UTC
Body scent is one of the factor. The skin is the second, if it is soft and easy to penetrate, the more mosquito will come to you.
Paulknowverylittle
2006-08-27 06:03:18 UTC
Like me you are sweeter. Ticks do the same to me.. Be in a group of 6 people they have none and I have mind and all there too on me... Mostly body heat they go for.. So need to cool down some.. Or you friends are dead could be another reason.
~Chelly~
2006-08-26 14:18:06 UTC
They say they are atratted to light skin or type of blood dont know?

I am to confused on this subject because I get bit by mosquitos all the times! My bites que huge and ugly! If you find a solution please let me know!!! :(
Doug P
2006-08-26 09:15:21 UTC
Only pregnant females bite. Thier attractions are(but not limited to) your temperature(wear long sleeves and pants) and try different colors, Start with black or white. I don't like bug sprays so these have worked for me.
?
2006-08-26 07:35:53 UTC
Cause mosquitoes love sweet people and that's why i get attracted by them all the time.
emanon
2006-08-25 20:20:54 UTC
I for one can rule out the banana and beer drinking theories.. I eat bananas all the time, and drink A LOT of beer.. Every time our family goes camping, or picnicking.. or to the drive-in.. The mosquitoes ALWAYS goes after my wife.. Never me nor my daughter. Someone told me before and maybe the reason why they don't come after me or her.. We LOVE onions.. My wife NEVER eats them.. Maybe that's why.. Do you eat onions?
♠♣♥Rogue♣♥♠
2006-08-28 09:08:29 UTC
Who knows, my husband and I wondered this. We go for walks and he will get bitten before me. Hes a tad bit darker then me. We wear the same clothes; black shirt blue jeans and eat the same food. So maybe it is the chemicals that the body releases.
?
2006-08-26 09:12:30 UTC
It has to do with blood sugar and carbon dioxide. The solution,oddly enough, is accidental. Avon Skin-so-soft products repel skeeters. Even Avon doesn't know how or why.
smartycat
2006-08-27 16:05:27 UTC
Sounds funny, the way you asked, but I know it isn't... to you!

Do you 'sweat' a lot? Mosquitoes are attracted by perspiration.



Smartycat
anonymous
2014-10-31 23:35:09 UTC
Very light skinned

and all that jazz, and none of

the Docs answers have ever

made any sense, so I will read

every single answer here to find

out why.
?
2014-07-13 03:07:04 UTC
Maybe you really ARE just too darn sweet! I always had problems with fire-ants, and their bites would leave nasty little places on me, that would look like tiny blisters filled with blood and pus, and they hurt pretty bad...so while I did not taste good to the skeeters, the fire-ants thought I was mmm, mmm, good! It just goes to show you, it's always something!
karen wonderful
2006-08-26 16:27:52 UTC
Mosquitos are attracted to people who are diabetic. Maybe the little critters are telling you something.
ssart98
2006-08-25 23:59:06 UTC
I'm the same way and I don't stink or even have to use deodorant. I believe it's the amount of Co2 and your body's electrical current. Kind of on the same page I have the ability to calm the most ferocious beast yet these little flying blood sucking disease carrying pest flock to me like I'm magnet and they a little piece of metal.

Smack! just killed one...........
luvlynspecial
2006-08-28 09:39:52 UTC
Because of what you eat. Mosquitoes are attracted to certain smells.
anonymous
2006-08-26 19:22:40 UTC
there are lots of reasons

one of the main reasons is your blood types

i have A- blood, so mosquitoes and chiggers like me a lot too. they like people with sweet blood.



other reasons include smells like perfums and soaps, etc
Trick69
2006-08-26 17:14:50 UTC
You do not have enough toxic waste in your blood bro. Do more drugs and drink more beer. The little bastards will die of an over dose. They hardly ever bite me, and I live in the Ozarks.
Focused
2006-08-26 06:40:43 UTC
Other people may use mosquito repellent like OFF!
@
2006-08-28 05:09:49 UTC
this is coz

i'll ask u 1 ques:what do mosquito survive on?

ans:blood

might b ur blood would b sweeter than any 1 else

thats y it sucks ur blood
Don Eric Corleone
2006-08-26 07:31:43 UTC
I know something about a herbal powder that may help you share mosquitoes with the others (i mean solve your problem.)

Its name is CEDAR and you must mix it with water and use like a pomade (ointment) on your body and wait a little and then wash your body. it will cool your body and solve your problem.

(I hope it to be useful)
Uranium_Lopez
2006-08-27 16:28:24 UTC
mostly chemicals in the body, and if you eat a bannana 1/2 hour before going out the'll eat you up more. so stay away from the nanners!
Rhonda
2006-08-26 14:41:40 UTC
Mosquitos love sweet blood, so if you eat sweets or drink alcohol, lucky you: you're dinner.
anonymous
2006-08-26 14:09:52 UTC
Body scent (not nessecsarily bad smell) and color of clothing my attract mosquitoes.
helpme1
2006-08-26 12:38:59 UTC
they think you taste better.. Honest! They told me so! lol!

Try drinking lots of water.. the sugar in sodas, fruit juices ect will attract them..

Wear long sleeve shirts..

And some people (like you) are simpy lucky enough to get bit
Devon
2014-09-20 13:40:31 UTC
P.S. For the bite and sting,

use distilled white vinegar,

it is miraculous - I even put vinegar

on my exposed body parts before

going out and it truly helps.

Good question!
Bathroom Graffiti
2006-08-29 11:47:40 UTC
You must be extremely sweaty or have a high dosage of glucose (sugar) in your blood. Maybe you need a diabetes screening. Sorry dude!
caramelcutie
2006-08-27 14:32:23 UTC
Maybe because of your body scent or the soaps and fragrances you are wearing they love sweet smells especially fruity ones.





1love
Boliver Bumgut
2006-08-26 19:52:50 UTC
the problem may be as simple as the way you breathe. If you breathe deep and through your mouth, the CO2 concentration around your area will be greater than someone who breathes through thier nose, hence they flock to you, You may also like to wear dark clothng, they like that too.
scrawndogg25
2006-08-26 10:45:27 UTC
It's probably because you have an "aromatic" scent, like lotion, aftershave, cologne etc. Mosquitoes are JUST as drawn to this and they are to warmth and darkness.
Bama
2006-08-27 22:49:40 UTC
there are a mutilitude of reasons, they love my brother but avoid my sister... wierd isn't it.... the only way I can keep them from also loving me is to eat garlic and take small amounts of sulpher flower & wash my hair/body with Queen Helene unscented garlic shampoo during the spring, summer & fall....
anonymous
2006-08-27 16:11:08 UTC
mosquitos are atracted to sweet sents they hate the natural smell humans produce.(but they still bite me anyway i dont know why)
anonymous
2006-08-27 07:14:12 UTC
well the misqitos could just be attracted to you by somthing you wear or have on... also that happens if you eat anything with fiber in it the misquitos smell that and come rushing for you instead of aNY OTHER PEOPLE (srry bout the caps lock thing i preassed it by accident lol) so well just stick with that and tell me if it works for ya k bye!



-scicilianqueen
alfcarco
2006-08-26 14:53:56 UTC
Costarrican mosquitoes can tell who has a sweeter blood!!!
swarr2001
2006-08-28 08:53:18 UTC
Pheromones.
guesswhoohme
2006-08-27 14:33:58 UTC
that's exactly like me. but my mom doesn't ever get bit by anything. i bet if my mom was necked and i was wrapped up in clothing i bet i would somehow have 30 mosquito bits and she would have zero. she swares it cuz she eats garlic. i don't know why though.
kb
2006-08-27 14:26:25 UTC
people who eat garlic everyday, will not get mosquito bites. Give your dog garlic on their food everyday and they won't have ticks or fleas. You probably do not eat enough garlic.
in ur face
2006-08-26 09:11:02 UTC
the smell of ur sweet sweet blood draws them to u. (really) phermones r what attracts mosqutos (like the attarct the opposite sex) there is nothig u can do except blame ur d na
michaelamanuba
2006-08-28 00:38:34 UTC
It has something to do with the amount of carbon dioxide you release and your body mass. The bigger you are, the more carbon dioxide you release, the more moquitoes would get attracted to you.
Just Ducky
2006-08-28 06:53:07 UTC
It's true. My husband has the same problem. One thing we noticed was his diet. Once he cut out milk entirely from his diet, it didn't happen anymore. Then he went back to his normal eating, which includes tons of glasses of milk, and they went back to munching him again!
GypsyGr-ranny
2006-08-27 06:48:39 UTC
Seems's tho I heard it was insufficient B Complex in the system. If you have enough they don't like the way you smell???



I have, over the years, tried to be sure I have enough B Complex in my system, and since, I began doing that, I haven't been attractive to them; so, maybe there's something to that.
--zEaLoUsMe--
2006-08-27 05:32:39 UTC
don think u r da one wid it...i ve da sam prob too..its just bcoz ppl like us loove 2 eat sweet things and our blood is also sweet enough tat the mosquitos love it!!!
wrsb8486
2006-08-28 16:55:33 UTC
Actually mosqiutos are attracted to the potaaium in your blood.

So whatch those banana's.
Evil Wordmonger, LTD LOL
2006-08-28 08:08:25 UTC
That's a very good question! I know that they used to LOVE me very, very much, but since I started taking strong drugs (yes, doctor prescribed....) they pretty much avoid me like the plague!
anonymous
2006-08-28 01:48:28 UTC
it depends on the blood type, mosquitoes prefer sweet and hot blood
shayna
2006-08-27 22:33:44 UTC
its maybe beacuse you eat sweet stuff and alot of suger and mosquitoes like sweet blood and there is vitamins that help or just stop eating sweet stuff
lisirm
2006-08-28 09:33:46 UTC
That's me!!! LOL.. I hate that.. We all have a different scent. I guess we are sweeter or smell stronger than other human beings. That doesn't mean we smell bad...When I wear perfume, smells totally different in me than my sisters..
brown-eyed cutie
2006-08-27 19:41:11 UTC
i know same here me and my friends will be at the same place and ill be the only one the next day with tons of bites
anonymous
2006-08-26 09:46:50 UTC
Everyone produces pheromones. Maybe you have produce some that attract Mosquitoes. Mine attract hideous fat girls, whattaya gonna do?



TFTP
♥c0c0puffz♥
2006-08-26 15:46:34 UTC
If you sweat alot they tend to come to you more often. Others who don't sweat get bit. It also may be the colors you wear or smell.
mustanglady
2006-08-26 15:18:04 UTC
I recently heard that its what we eat. They like sweet so if you eat a lot of sweet stuff before going outside they will bother you! They do not like garlic. fleas and ticks do not like garlic either!!
cbr_honda_girl
2006-08-25 23:09:09 UTC
my daughter has the same thing happen to her and the doctor told me to let her bath with pure ivory soap and use deet thats all u can do for know.

the soap is to wash away any smells that youa body creates and the deet is to keep them off.
anonymous
2006-08-27 05:20:10 UTC
because of your blood makes mosquito to be hunger
Dr Love
2006-08-27 17:15:16 UTC
Some people have sweeter blood than others. Are you diabetic?
kerangoumar
2006-08-27 12:41:35 UTC
Because you are sweeter. Moreover, you likely perspire more- so you're also sweater (groan).



Question: do you have a coagulation disorder (not necessarily haemophilia but somewhat less drastic)?
Irene L
2006-08-26 20:37:41 UTC
I'm with you bud. It's so frustrating when my husband escapes scot-free, and I've got bites all over me!
anonymous
2006-08-26 12:48:19 UTC
Body and clothes scent wear light color clothing ,they love dark blue and black. Eat bananas the oil in them comes out in your sweat and they wont come near
notsurewhoiam
2006-08-28 08:10:44 UTC
My grandma use to tell me it was because I was sweet... Maybe you are just too sweet also...

anonymous
2006-08-27 12:18:28 UTC
mosquitoes are very attracted to sweat and the color blue

also wearing bug spray would help
Valid
2006-08-28 08:08:50 UTC
maybe your blood smells sweet to the mosquitos or you wear sweet perfume/soap/shampoo etc...
tiger
2006-08-27 19:21:42 UTC
Body heat and sweet blood.
shawnabobonna
2006-08-26 06:32:12 UTC
God, I don't know, but if you find out tell me...I feel your pain. After 5 minutes in our yard, my legs make me look like I'm afflicted with a horrible skin disease! Good luck, fellow bug buffet!
tanvi
2006-08-28 04:19:03 UTC
simply because mosquitoes are interested only in u.
anonymous
2006-08-27 17:56:18 UTC
Taking B-complex vitamins can make you less appealing to mosquitoes.



Aloha
♥ Bekka ♥
2006-08-27 09:18:13 UTC
Blood- it all has to do with the taste of people's bolld, some is more tastier than others.
lydlykarug
2006-08-26 21:12:22 UTC
skin acidity and chemical make-up of our bodies. mosquitos and fleas love my sister, but leave me alone. sorry you have to deal with those useless vermin...lucky you huh!!?!
TANNY P
2006-08-26 03:51:38 UTC
because the other nine other people you were with, weren't humans, they were probably vampires...lol...plus, you were probably the only one that was moving around alot....unless, of course, you didn't apply mosquito repellant as the rest of the nine people did
mari-mar
2006-08-27 01:27:19 UTC
if your w/the people who drink wine &you don't.b-coz if they bite those who drink wine the mosquito die.but if they bite you they they keep flying alive coz your blood is sweet,
jeandan
2006-08-28 09:17:55 UTC
yep i think ur blood taste more sweet then others to mosqitos, and i feel the same when ever i go to native place.!
chemicalimbalance000
2006-08-27 13:17:09 UTC
If you tend to sweat more, mosquitos will be more apt to go after you.
just curious
2006-08-27 17:17:37 UTC
It could be the kind of soap or cologne you use. Or maybe it is because you are sweet!
pine
2006-08-27 00:25:51 UTC
maybe blood group matters 2 them
anonymous
2006-08-26 10:14:03 UTC
I have the same problem. My mom always told me when I was growing up that it's because I'm so sweet.
anonymous
2006-08-27 16:12:45 UTC
You prolly stink like shite...mosquitoes love ****.
ladyj
2006-08-26 23:04:01 UTC
in the summer i really don't get bit. I don't wear any perfume or sented stuff that attracts them and water...
Agent C
2006-08-26 14:15:11 UTC
.







.. diet.





.. it's all about diet.



.. get one of your friends to eat a banana .. then laugh as ALL the mosquitos go to them.





.
anonymous
2006-08-25 10:43:39 UTC
Mosquitos go for light skin, light-colored clothing, perfume, cologne, perfumed soap. They also go for people who drink beer.

They LOVE people who eat bananas. Somebody alraedy mentioned a high potassium level. That ties in with eating bananas. So is it the high potassium level or the smell of bananas that attracts them?



I had hepatitis A one summer. Had lots of mosquitoes flying around me but no bites. They would zoom in on me and stop about an inch away, then take off. I am not recommending hep A as a good method to keep them skeeters away.
chris
2006-08-27 16:38:30 UTC
Take Thiamine and they will leave you alone. Seriously - they don't like whatever it produced in your body.
cokittedelarge
2006-08-26 13:21:13 UTC
Good thing you asked... cause Im always the one bitten and I had no clue why!
nana4dakids
2006-08-25 10:39:37 UTC
Mosquitoes are attracted to certain body chemicals and odors. They will bite someone who has eaten bananas before they will bite someone who hasn't. It's true.



If you have a high potassium count you will be bitten first. Believe it or not I have the same problem, but mine is with horse flies.
Heron By The Sea
2006-08-27 15:00:15 UTC
My mammaw used to say it's because they don't like poop. But I tend to disagree because they don't like me. They do like my mom, and she has sugar, so I always tell her it's because she's so sweet.
Mary W
2006-08-27 02:13:03 UTC
Because you have sweet blood
malibu1
2006-08-27 14:10:42 UTC
I always thought it had to do with your blood type
anonymous
2006-08-27 14:01:35 UTC
well maybe your better tasting (do u get along with the ladies) lol this question i could not resist to answer!!!
darkmatter
2006-08-27 11:50:38 UTC
can you come with me on vacation....ummm man you must be the sweetest person i know! maybe they love you and you have masquito pharamones....or you bought the wrong cologne! Ask for your moeny backl!!!!!
stohark
2006-08-27 00:22:56 UTC
because of how ur skin smells and ur blood. depends how good they sent the blood through ur skin.
luke s
2006-08-26 07:19:22 UTC
they're attracted with ur body heat. they will attracted with someone who get hotter body temper. ussualy fat people got more body heat than other people
chico
2006-08-28 08:31:57 UTC
i think mayb is becoz u have such a sweet blood
Atashi G
2006-08-27 16:29:43 UTC
they go to the people they dont like so u should ask urself what am i doing wrong lol.
anonymous
2006-08-26 14:22:29 UTC
They love your blood
~Tapanga~
2006-08-26 07:06:56 UTC
I don't know why they like to eat me alive either, but I've heard it's because I'm "sweet".
cutepimp2000
2006-08-26 13:20:41 UTC
body order
conipp
2006-08-26 11:18:52 UTC
people with light and untanned sking get bitten more because their skin is more tender
Awesome
2006-08-25 22:48:37 UTC
Your skin's sweat chemical component must be yum-yum than others. They particularly like diabetic individuals. Are you diabetic?
bandaidgirl
2006-08-28 06:03:36 UTC
pheromones.....some people set off "senses" which attract them. I'm the same way.....maybe were just really sweet people. don't you hate it.
Truth B
2006-08-26 05:36:16 UTC
Your skin might be more oily than others
David
2006-08-25 17:44:18 UTC
Put A lot of garlic in your diet, they will slow down useing you for a quik snack.
Valeria
2006-08-25 16:32:55 UTC
I don't know how true this is, but I use to get bitten, but when I would get a base tan... they didn't bother me anymore. I guess I 'cooked' the top layer of skin and my skin didn't taste as sweet anymore to get to the blood.

I don't know, but I do know that this worked for me.
anonymous
2006-08-27 09:39:27 UTC
Cause your blood is rich in stuff that they like
siddarth k
2006-08-28 05:14:40 UTC
may be because of your sweet body smell and because of your sweet blood
joe t
2006-08-27 21:40:50 UTC
we must taste like cherry flavored PEZ
Annie
2006-08-27 02:28:21 UTC
I also keep saying it to my bro but he didn't agree.

I can say it can be becz you &me have sweet blood.
start 6-22-06 summer time Mom
2006-08-27 17:44:06 UTC
yeah, me too

I guess it depends on what you eat, or if you wear certain

perfumes, deodorants that attract them to you , who knows
anonymous
2006-08-27 12:12:41 UTC
the way you smell, and ur blood, the clothes u wear, and stuff, and sometimes they jux pick you Oo
anonymous
2006-08-26 20:15:01 UTC
here is a site that has helped me prevent mosquitoes.

http://blog.jeremysimonson.com/wordpress/?p=22
power ranger
2006-08-25 23:00:54 UTC
i think they love u very much /ur blood tastes good than others
anonymous
2006-08-27 20:21:30 UTC
have you eaten a lot of Bananas recently.
priya
2006-08-26 05:21:32 UTC
sweet blood
Haszakess
2006-08-25 15:05:01 UTC
body heat has a lot to do with it, It also depend on how much of a histamine reaction you have to allergens. ie- two people might get the same bite and one would swell up and itch more and the other might not even notice it.
the_silverfoxx
2006-08-27 21:59:19 UTC
sweat draws them very quickley. use . off. this will take care of that problem . my opion?
anonymous
2006-08-27 20:04:59 UTC
i agree with the first person.
smaddur
2006-08-27 07:26:41 UTC
Those ppl like pain.
Jeremy© ® ™
2006-08-27 15:39:23 UTC
body smell
[Teddy♥Bear]
2006-08-26 13:24:32 UTC
you have sweeter blood than they do♥

lol

j/k

seriously just kidding.
Iamsocool
2006-08-25 17:29:10 UTC
they like sweet blood. So if you eat a lot of sugar, then you'll get bit more than others.I've heard that they like bananas, but I'm not sure that's true. they are also attracted to perfume, cologne, scented candles, and perfumed soap.
dcall2
2006-08-27 16:25:21 UTC
body scent, they can smell your blood in your sweat.
vampgirlgcl27
2006-08-27 14:51:55 UTC
you probably sweat more than the average person
?
2006-08-25 20:40:31 UTC
Must be your charming personality.
Gabrio
2006-08-25 17:33:49 UTC
Because the mosquitoes like sweet smells that appears in the skin.
Chi_Indy
2006-08-28 05:58:20 UTC
You have sweet blood kiddo!!!
Z-Cat
2006-08-26 13:53:11 UTC
Your Sweet !
supermomma
2006-08-28 07:02:48 UTC
I HAVE HEARD IT HAS TO DO WITH YOUR BODY CHEMISTRYOR MAYBE IT IS THE COLONGE YOU ARE WEARING, GOOD LUCK!
Meg S
2006-08-26 07:27:13 UTC
Your blood is sweeter than others..
anonymous
2006-08-26 01:16:59 UTC
i don't know but i've noticed the same thing with fleas.
lainey lain
2006-08-25 15:09:02 UTC
Good question, they bite me whether I,m sweaty after a long hot day or have just taken a bath go figure! Oh I don't generally eat bananas! LOL!
poetic_lala
2006-08-27 15:59:33 UTC
colors..smell...several reasons...have you taken a shower lately....maybe you stink...
chapped lips
2006-08-26 15:09:21 UTC
cause youre cute
jhn_woodson
2006-08-25 19:31:25 UTC
There are lots of reasons besides scent and stuff like that. If you don't want to keep them off with repelent spray you can always use cigarettes or alchohol
the phantom
2006-08-28 09:02:12 UTC
thts a really funny questionnnnnn:)))
anonymous
2006-08-27 19:37:28 UTC
they think u have sweeter blood
Anry
2006-08-25 17:45:00 UTC
I think mosquitoes working on the blood, so your blood suitable for mosquitoes.



Good luck.
dccuttie75
2006-08-27 08:18:04 UTC
I feel you!They do the same to me.
Sarah
2006-08-27 07:37:50 UTC
I'm the same way. I hate it.
ixoyechirho
2006-08-25 15:34:51 UTC
People tell me that I get them more because I'm just so sweet.

It's due to my body odor. Or if I wear a fruity shampoo or perfume...that makes the come to me.

Plus I'm pretty light skinned. and some say that has something to do with it,
gdind
2006-08-28 01:52:50 UTC
may be your blood taste better?
asmi.rani
2006-08-27 17:15:40 UTC
the same thing wid me!
me.
2006-08-27 09:13:52 UTC
its usually what your wearing that attracts them more then other people.
anonymous
2006-08-25 16:00:16 UTC
I remember when I went to Cambodia, me and my mother were bitten alot. Especially my mother because I think she wears perfume and scented lotions. My relatives that live over there don't get bit nearly as much as we do. I remember one of our drivers said that mosquito's love tourist's blood because they're more sweeter and tastes better.
flowerspirit2000
2006-08-27 20:29:05 UTC
PERFUME OR LACK OF ANY FRAGRANCE IT WOULD BE YOUR BODY CHEM.
thrag
2006-08-26 04:49:25 UTC
diet
Kerru
2006-08-25 10:49:39 UTC
I get an outrageous amount of mosquito bites compared to other people.

Although, a lot of the people around me have willpower to not scratch and I don't, so mine stay longer (sometimes pop up a few days later!). I just keep irritating them.
tictak kat
2006-08-26 15:11:33 UTC
i am one of the people, that they don't like, I don't know why, but I'm glad!......:)
Spearfish
2006-08-26 13:13:15 UTC
blood type
?
2016-02-10 08:35:05 UTC
all your friends in skeeter land!!!
?
2006-08-26 06:42:29 UTC
There are many reasons.
anonymous
2006-08-26 03:19:56 UTC
yeah that's correct.i believe that every one can good but they don't want it if they want it they win their life as possible!!!!!
taytay
2006-08-27 12:08:45 UTC
idk.... it does it to my dad too... it never does it too me!!! maybe it is because i'm in the pool a lot and my dad is on the raft all the time... outside.
RN2014
2006-08-27 11:35:20 UTC
maybe its bcuz u sweat a lot???
Small Fry
2006-08-25 18:25:08 UTC
I know how you feel. I have the same problem. Maybe it's blood type...
jroswhatwhat
2006-08-25 16:29:43 UTC
because you are tasty and do not sleep underneath a mosquito net...shame on you. Take that Lariam now!
anonymous
2006-08-25 10:34:53 UTC
body scent,color of clothing,whether you use any scented colognes,aftershaves,shampoos,etc can attract misquitos,try rubbing mint on your body,avoid black or bright colors,and using repellent when neccessary.
Christine B
2006-08-26 20:40:20 UTC
Because you smell dirty.
sunnyboi14
2006-08-25 19:45:45 UTC
I think its because of carbon monoxide, i think they are attracted to it, im guessing you just produce more that other people. hope this helps!
Riss
2006-08-27 00:05:55 UTC
your scent
anonymous
2006-08-26 19:52:18 UTC
because you're so sweet!
oriana_yentov
2006-08-25 16:30:01 UTC
they like some people more because they might have a different blood type, maybe sweeter then others.
mack j
2006-08-26 12:40:54 UTC
because you are so tasty ...mmmmm franklin.
Steven B
2006-08-27 11:35:30 UTC
Racial profiling, man....
gerlooser
2006-08-26 00:04:10 UTC
you are too swetty.
benjamin m
2006-08-25 22:16:36 UTC
well really i don't know
ruthie_msw
2006-08-25 16:40:19 UTC
Wow and I thought I gave the longest answers on here! I think you have gotten many good answers, there is something to be said for the person who said that Hep. A kept them away. I grew up on the Outer Banks, and I have AB rh neg. factor blood. (kinda rare in some cases). The red cross used to LOVE me, but the skeeters just did not like me as much. I have seen them literally swarm some people while I would be standing there covered with the nasty little critters and I would remain unbitten. I used herbal essence (when it first came out, it was a very good smelling shampoo, or one that was called "Gee Your Hair Smells Terrific" Or "Milk Plus 6" and Dove soap (1/4 cleansing cream) very sweet soap...They should have been flying in formation to eat me if good smells and rare blood were their favorite! They would often land but hardly ever bite, now when they did bite it seems that they tasted and left ASAP! Which left a bad (very itchy) bite so like the girl who cannot resist scratching, I would itch and scratch like I could not stop myself often only making the few bites I got that were bad, even worse! I think they did not hang around long enough to withdraw the anti-coagulant which they inject with their initial bite to make their "withdrawal from your blood bank easier"...so my bites (the few I got seemed VERY bad)...



I used to swim a lot in the ocean, I know that they do not like me more when I have been in the ocean. Average banana user, but back then I smoked a LOT of pot (okay I was young and stupid and I do not endorse the use of drugs to try to keep them off of you just like the answerer with Hep A. does not suggest that)...



If I had to pick I would have to read that long answer and do some Internet checking to see if his answer may be based in fact.



Tis the bite of the Mosquito that spreads heart worms in dogs (mycrofilaria) and I don't know if I spelled the clinical name right, just guessing...I have heard that in extreme cases that people can develop a form of this condition. Twas the skeeter who helped spread Yellow Fever (Bronze John) throughout the Southern US. The skeeter can also be a carrier of Malaria in some tropical climates. Now in areas of the US they claim that they are spreading the West Nile Virus. All of these things are fairly serious conditions/diseases. So though I do not know why they think you are so delicious and believe me, I was a beer drinking gal back then, so I can tell you the beer drinking and the perfumed soaps and shampoos may or may not make you seem tastier...but if I were you...I think I would take the time to use some repellant with "Deet"...and try to avoid being their snack. Without blood they cannot feed the developing larvae (wigglers)...when you see stagnant pools and if you are in a place where it rains, you are going to be busy, but even a thin film of oil will keep their hatchlings (wigglers) from being able to live, it smothers them by coating their thorax with oil so they cannot breathe. Do what you can to try to avoid them, use repellent when you must be exposed and know that your body chemistry may be good because you ARE tasty! Ouch that doesn't really make things easier for any of us to understand, but it's the best I can come up with. Maybe if no anwer here helps talk with an entomologist (professional 'bug person') to get insight from them, if the skeeters like you sometimes all you can do is hope that you can kill off some of their hatchling grounds and by using repellant that will make YOU less attractive to them.



Tell me it's not a pain in the posterior for them to like you best! I bet you used to wish you were popular, didn't you?...well now you are! I know you won't pick my answer and that is ok, cause maybe I have said something that will make you less vulnerable. One of their very favorite times to attack is when you have walked through tall grasses or in the evening, and I have seen them circle the tasty folks heads in a solid ring and start flying lower and lower around their heads (ah that buzzzzing is enough to let you know you are about to become their meal!) When you are bitten, you are sometimes better off to let them nearly conclude their withdrawal before smacking them, because they will also suck out a lot of the anticoagulant that they used to loosen up your blood flow, then just before they fly away smash 'em. Take care to clean and care for the bites, secondary infections from scratching can be as bad as the bites, and in tropical (hot moist places) the chances of secondary infection from bacterias breeding and spreading when you use those fingernails (hands are so dirty) to scratch, that you should try to resist the itchy uncomfortable bites. Though it's very little comfort you can get preparations that are made to help clean and deaden the itchy areas.



I feel for you, I have seem people literally swarmed, so I know that some people just DO taste better to those biting little critters. Think about living in a hot dry climate (like Arizona)...(misery loves company...or I could switch places with you!) hehe...



Good luck and remember that they can carry some pretty nasty diseases, so you should try to use repellant and avoid the areas where they tend to swarm (if you can). Honestly Arizona (the desert area do not have as many skeeters as other places, so if you can relocate, you may be able to save yourself some pretty bad bites, but kiss the beach good-bye (except on vacations) :-(...



I wish you luck, and I have heard that Avon used to put out a bath oil called Skin So Soft that worked well as a deterrant for some people, not to bathe in but to put directly on the skin! I think they even marketed it for this purpose at one time. I don't think they like to bite people who are oiled up in this stuff? I never needed it, but some of my friends told me it helped them?



Maybe you really ARE just too darn sweet! I always had problems with fire-ants, and their bites would leave nasty little places on me, that would look like tiny blisters filled with blood and pus, and they hurt pretty bad...so while I did not taste good to the skeeters, the fire-ants thought I was mmm, mmm, good! It just goes to show you, it's always something!

ruthie ;-)
niccinono
2006-08-26 18:41:06 UTC
cause we r sooooo freakin sweet!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
anonymous
2006-08-25 16:55:51 UTC
Do you eat alote of suger?? that might be why...or if you smelt yummy..
i luv penguins =0p
2006-08-25 15:23:46 UTC
do u eat bananas .... mosquitos go after ppl who eat bananas =0)
skp
2006-08-25 19:25:02 UTC
They are selective.
rose_red_91
2006-08-25 16:44:33 UTC
I have no idea but they go after my sister too alot.
YahooGuru2u
2006-08-25 15:35:45 UTC
You stink. That means you smell good to the mosquitoes.
Vidra
2006-08-25 14:55:02 UTC
mosquitoes like people who eat sweet things over people who eat salty things
madbaldscotsman
2006-08-25 10:34:59 UTC
I don't know. I know people get mad at me because they don't bite me. What's the deal with that? (and I am totally being honest not kidding)
john john
2006-08-25 17:03:19 UTC
maybe you are diabetic.
lokeshraomm
2006-08-25 15:22:05 UTC
Are You a Mosquito Magnet?



Experts try to crack the code behind why mosquitoes like some humans more than others. You're flipping burgers for the neighborhood barbecue, and the mosquitoes have already begun their feast -- on you. As you swat madly at the pests, you notice other folks seem completely unfazed. Could it be that mosquitoes prefer dining on some humans over others? This may clear up the mystery.

It's true. Mosquitoes do exhibit blood-sucking preferences, say the experts. "One in 10 people are highly attractive to mosquitoes," reports Jerry Butler, PhD, professor emeritus at the University of Florida. Incidentally, it's not dinner they're sucking out of you. Female mosquitoes -- males do not bite people -- need human blood to develop fertile eggs. And apparently, not just anyone's.

Who Mosquitoes Like Best

While researchers have yet to pinpoint what mosquitoes consider an ideal hunk of human flesh, the hunt is on. "There's a tremendous amount of research being conducted on what compounds and odors people exude that might be attractive to mosquitoes," says Joe Conlon, PhD, technical advisor to the American Mosquito Control Association. With 400 different compounds to examine, it's an extremely laborious process. "Researchers are just beginning to scratch the surface," he says.

Scientists do know that genetics account for a whopping 85% of our susceptibility to mosquito bites. They've also identified certain elements of our body chemistry that, when found in excess on the skin's surface, make mosquitoes swarm closer.

"People with high concentrations of steroids or cholesterol on their skin surface attract mosquitoes," Butler tells WebMD. That doesn't necessarily mean that mosquitoes prey on people with higher overall levels of cholesterol, Butler explains. These people simply may be more efficient at processing cholesterol, the byproducts of which remain on the skin's surface.

Mosquitoes also target people who produce excess amounts of certain acids, such as uric acid, explains entomologist John Edman, PhD, spokesman for the Entomological Society of America. These substances can trigger the mosquitoes' olfactory sensations, or sense of smell, causing them to launch their "landing" onto unsuspecting victims.

But the process of attraction begins long before the landing. Mosquitoes can smell their dinner from an impressive distance of up to 50 meters, explains Edman. This doesn't bode well for people who emit large quantities of carbon dioxide.

"Any type of carbon dioxide is attractive, even over a long distance," Conlon says. Larger people tend to give off more carbon dioxide, which is why mosquitoes typically prefer munching on adults to small children. Pregnant women are also at increased risk, as they produce a greater-than-normal amount of exhaled carbon dioxide. Movement and heat also attract mosquitoes.

So if you want to avoid an onslaught of mosquito bites at your next outdoor gathering, stake out a chaise lounge rather than a spot on the volleyball team. Here's why. As you run around the volleyball court, the mosquitoes sense your movement and head toward you. When you pant from exertion, the smell of carbon dioxide from your heavy breathing draws them closer. So does the lactic acid pouring from your sweat glands. And then -- gotcha.

Where Mosquitoes Lurk

Even if your body chemistry doesn't attract mosquitoes, where you're located might.

Some of the worst mosquito populations exist along coastal areas, Conlon tells WebMD. And being several miles inland does not guarantee your safety from the pests. "They'll fly 40 miles for a meal," Conlon says.

Are You a Mosquito Magnet?

While any water source is potential breeding grounds for mosquitoes, they much prefer stagnant water. So if you crave a mosquito-free water oasis on your property, forego the backyard pond and seek out a babbling brook instead.

"Even in a desert area, mosquito biting tends to be intense around a water source," Conlon says.

Can you find respite high in the mountains? Don't count on it. Although they're generally not active below 55 degrees Fahrenheit, mosquitoes have been sighted in the Himalayan Mountains, Conlon tells WebMD.

How about cold climates in places such as Alaska? You're safe for most of the year. But, says Conlon, mosquitoes flock there for a brief, three-week period between July and August. "The Arctic National Refuge is one big bog," Conlon explains, making the mosquito population there second only to that in the Florida Everglades.

With a long track record -- mosquitoes have been around for 170 million years -- and more than 175 known species in the U.S., these shrewd summertime pests clearly aren't going to disappear any time soon. But you can minimize their impact.

Keeping the Bite at Bay -- Chemical-Based Repellents

Plenty of mosquito repellents line the shelves of drug stores and supermarkets each summer, but they're not all created equally.

The majority of available mosquito repellents derive their effectiveness from chemicals. Protecting the public from mosquitoes since 1957, DEET continues to be the chemical of choice used in repellents. In repeated studies, it's been proven the most effective chemical repellent on the market. Repellents with 23.8% DEET (most formulas contain between 10% and 30%) protect wearers for about five hours, according to a recent study led by Mark Fradin, PhD, researcher with Chapel Hill Dermatology. The American Academy of Pediatrics and other experts suggest that it is safe to apply repellent with low concentrations of DEET (10% or less) to infants over 2 months old.

In 2005, the CDC began recommending alternatives to DEET for repelling mosquitoes. Picaridin, which is new to the U.S., has been used worldwide since 1998. It has proven to be as effective as DEET but is more pleasant to use because it has a light, clean feel and is virtually odorless. Picaridin is safe for children older than 2 months. This substance is marketed as Cutter Advanced.

The other new CDC recommendation is oil of lemon eucalyptus, which is available under the Repel brand name. This product offers protection similar to low concentrations of DEET. Lemon eucalyptus is safe for children older than 3 years.

The chemical IR3535, better known as Avon's Skin-So-Soft, has also been marketed as a repellent in the U.S. in recent years. To date, research shows it's much less effective than DEET.

Safety of DEET Repellents

Just how safe is it to coat yourself in a chemical-based product like DEET just to keep from getting bit by mosquitoes?

"[DEET] has been in use for over 40 years and has a remarkable safety record. Only few hospitalizations have been reported, mainly due to gross overuse," Conlon tells WebMD.

The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), after extensively assessing the safety of DEET, concluded that "as long as consumers follow label directions and take proper precautions, insect repellents containing DEET do not present a health concern." The agency does, however, offer the following safety strategies for DEET use:

•Follow label directions and precautions.

•Use sparingly.

•Avoid spraying on or near open skin, eyes, mouth, and nose, under clothing, or near food.

•Wash treated skin with soap and water.

The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) provides these additional recommendations for DEET use on children:

•Select the lowest concentration effective for the amount of time spent outdoors.

•Avoid use on infants under 2 months of age.

•Avoid repeated applications, which may increase the potential toxic effects of DEET.

Alternative Repellents

Want to avoid chemical-based repellents altogether? Alternatives do exist, with one or two showing promise.

"Of the products we tested, the soybean oil-based repellent was able to protect from mosquito bites for about 1.5 hours," Fradin reports. He and fellow researchers found other oils -- citronella, cedar, peppermint, lemongrass, and geranium -- provide short-lived protection at best. Oil-of-eucalyptus products, however, may offer longer-lasting protection, preliminary studies show.

Hate to spray or slather yourself with any product, either chemical- or plant-based? Mosquito traps, a relatively new product, may be the answer. They work by emitting substances that biting mosquitoes find attractive -- such as carbon dioxide, heat, moisture, and other mosquito-friendly byproducts. They attract, then trap or kill female mosquitoes. When placed strategically near breeding spots "they have knocked [mosquito] populations down," Conlon tells WebMD.

So, is it worth the effort it takes to prevent mosquitoes from nipping at your ankles? Yes, if you don't want to be bothered by bouts of mosquito-induced itching all summer long. Certainly, if you are one of the few unfortunate souls in whom mosquito bites result in severe allergic reactions. And most definitely if you believe you're likely to be exposed to potentially fatal mosquito-borne diseases, some of which are becoming increasingly common. Take the mosquito-transmitted West Nile virus, for instance which Conlon says "is probably here to stay." And with it, the age-old, ever-adaptable mosquito.

Published July 12, 2004.

Medically updated May 25, 2006.



SOURCES: Jerry Butler, PhD, Professor Emeritus, University of Florida. Joe Conlon, PhD, technical advisor, American Mosquito Control Association. John Edman, PhD, Entomological Society of America; and Center for Vector-Borne Disease Research, University of California-Davis. Mark Fradin, PhD, Chapel Hill Dermatology, North Carolina. Environmental Protection Agency web site. The American Academy of Pediatrics Committee on Environmental Health web site.
Peachz
2006-08-25 10:39:52 UTC
Has something to do with your. That's what I have heard.
Angel
2006-08-25 10:36:26 UTC
beacuse your just soo sweet!


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
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