Back from a picnic covered in mosquito bites while your friend has none? You're not imagining it. Mosquitoes have "favorites," partly because of body odor set by genes. Discover the fun science behind it.
You go on a picnic with friends and come back with a dozen mosquito bites, while the friend next to you barely has any? You're not imagining it. Mosquitoes really do have "favorites," and part of the reason is our genes. Let's see why.
Female mosquitoes (the ones that bite) use several cues to find prey — the carbon dioxide we exhale, body heat, and very importantly the "body odor" our skin releases. Mosquitoes have highly sensitive smell receptors, and certain odors attract them more. In fact, research testing volunteers' skin odor identified some people who are clear "mosquito magnets," and these differences stayed stable over several years (De Obaldia et al., Cell, 2022).
What's interesting is that our body odor is partly determined by genetics. Twin studies found identical twins (same genes) have more similar levels of mosquito attractiveness than fraternal twins, estimating the heritability of attractiveness to mosquitoes at around 0.62 (Fernández-Grandon et al., PLoS ONE, 2015). This suggests genes play a real role in how "tasty" we are to mosquitoes. And when researchers analyzed skin chemicals, they found that highly attractive people produce more carboxylic acids on their skin than people mosquitoes tend to ignore (De Obaldia et al., Cell, 2022).
Besides genes, research mentions other factors — people who exhale more CO2 (larger individuals or pregnant women), those with higher body temperature, and those who just exercised (lactic acid and sweat). Interestingly, most of our body odor doesn't come from fresh sweat but from skin bacteria breaking it down — and research found that people with a higher abundance but lower diversity of skin bacteria tend to be more attractive to mosquitoes (Verhulst et al., PLoS ONE, 2011). Some studies even found a link with blood type, though that evidence is weaker. This connects with genes and taste/smell perception.
Even though we can't change our genes, we can reduce the odds of getting bitten — use effective mosquito repellent, wear light-colored long sleeves, eliminate standing water around the house, and shower after exercise to reduce sweat odor and skin bacteria. Understanding why we're a "target" helps us protect ourselves more precisely.
Mosquitoes' biting preferences are a fun example of how much genes weave into our daily lives — even something small like body odor has genetics behind it. If you want to know yourself at the DNA level more deeply, check out a DNA test.
1. Do mosquitoes really bite based on genes?
Partly yes. The body odor that attracts mosquitoes is determined in part by genes; twin studies estimate the heritability of attractiveness to mosquitoes at around 0.62.
2. If genes make mosquitoes like me, can't I do anything?
Not directly, but you can reduce the odds with repellent, long sleeves, removing standing water, and showering off sweat and skin bacteria.
3. Does blood type affect getting bitten?
Some studies found a link with blood type, but the evidence is weaker than for body odor and CO2.