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health Insects Science

Why do mosquitoes bite some people more than others?




I have always been one of those lucky people (she said sarcastically) favored by mosquitoes. Of course it didn’t help that we had a persistent mosquito problem in the house I grew up in. It’s hard getting those bites as a kid and hearing your parents say “Don’t scratch!” when that’s ALL you want to do. But I think I grew to hate even more the experience of lying in bed, almost asleep, and then being distressingly woken up by the nasal buzzing of someone looking for an evening snack. My mother’s sweet, if cutesy, explanation to Little Girl Kismet was that I got bitten so much cause I was so delicious. So it’s crazy to learn now that she was actually in the ballpark of the real science! Blood type is a leading factor in who mosquitoes choose to torment feast from, among some others.

On the prowl for the big O: Blood type is determined by genetics, and each blood type is based on the different sets of specific proteins, called antigens, on the surface of red blood cells. There are four main blood types: A, B, AB, and O. While there are no firm conclusions as to which blood type is more attractive to mosquitoes, several studies have suggested people with type O are most appetizing to mosquitoes. A 2019 study observed mosquito feeding behavior when presented with different blood type samples, and found mosquitoes fed from the type O feeder more than any other. A 2004 study also found that mosquitoes land on blood group O secretors (83.3%) significantly more than group A secretors (46.5%).

Clothing color matters: Mosquitoes are highly visual hunters when it comes to finding a human to bite. This means movement and dark clothing colors like black, navy and red can stand out to a mosquito. Research has shown that mosquitoes are more attracted to the color black, but there has been little additional research into why this is the case.

The little buggers track our breathing: One of the quickest ways mosquitoes can sniff out a person is through the carbon dioxide emitted when we breathe. According to research published in the journal Chemical Senses, mosquitoes use an organ called a maxillary palp for carbon dioxide detection and can sense it from 164 feet away. Because carbon dioxide is a huge attractor, people who emit more of it — larger individuals and people who are breathing heavily when working out — are more attractive to a mosquito.

Odor & sweat also attracts them: Mosquitoes can find people to bite by smelling substances present on human skin and in sweat, including lactic acid, uric acid and ammonia. A new study found that mosquitoes are attracted to compounds called carboxylic acids that every human produces through sebum, a waxy coating, on their skin. The sebum is eaten by the millions of beneficial microorganisms found on human skin, which produces more carboxylic acid — and will, in turn, produce an odor similar to cheese or smelly feet that appears to attract mosquitoes. Lead researchers on this study said mosquitoes are sensitive to human odor and that even perfumes or colognes can’t mask it. Researchers are still learning why certain body odors are more attractive to mosquitoes, but they do know that genetics, bacteria on the skin and exercise all play a factor.

Hold my beer! In a small study, mosquitoes were observed to land on participants more frequently after consuming a small amount of beer. But before you swear off outdoor brews, know that the study only had 14 participants, and it found that mosquitoes may only be marginally more attracted to people who have been drinking beer.

[From CNET]

Yeah, guess who’s Type O? But actually, I’ve had a surprising yet very much welcome dearth of bites this year, so I’m not complaining! (much) I didn’t even realize it until last Friday when I was walking outside at dusk — dusk and dawn are when mosquitoes are most active, so the worst times of day to be out — and my arm started itching and I realized, “Oh, crap, I got a bite.” But that quickly morphed into, “Wait a minute, I’ve barely had any this summer!” After reading this article, I have a better understanding of what’s working for and against me. Obviously I’m just sh-t outta luck with my blood type. Ditto with the fact that I exhale outdoors, as well as sweat and give off odors from the microorganisms I’m apparently hosting. But I don’t drink beer! Plus (and I’m so proud of this one) my clothing is a veritable kaleidoscope of technicolor! Although the main concern with clothing should be long sleeves/pants for full coverage, and the gold star for blocking bites is insect repellent. And finally, at long last, a win for those of us not exercising! Outside, that is. Not exercising outside.

Photos credit: Flávia Vicentini, Anastasia Lashkevich on Pexels, Holly Mandarich on Unsplash

Categories
Accidents Insects

14 million bees escaped an overturned truck in Washington State




Residents of Washington State’s Whatcom County were issued a most startling and unusual notice by their Sheriff’s Office on Friday morning: “250 million bees are now loose. Stay tuned for more details as they become available.” While I applaud the calm, neutral language of this alert… WTF?! So here’s what happened: a commercial truck was transporting 70,000 pounds of honey beehives when the vehicle overturned at 4am on Friday, May 30. By 9am, the beehives had fallen off the truck, hence the mass jailbreak, necessitating a road closure. Luckily, local Master Beekeepers came to the rescue to assist authorities. It was an arduous task, given the beehives had to be rebuilt at the scene, but all clean up efforts were declared complete by Saturday. The Whatcom County Sheriff’s Office (WCSO) also eventually confirmed that their original estimates were grossly exaggerated; instead of 250 million escabees, it was more like 14 million. (“Oh, that’s much better,” she said sarcastically.) People Mag has all the buzz:

“Master beekeepers are on scene, and others are on the way, to assist in re-setting the box hives,” WCSO said, per the news release. “The plan is to allow the bees to re-hive and find their queen bee. That should occur within the next 24-48 hours. The goal is to save as many of the bees as possible.”

WCSO deputies and Whatcom County Public Works responded to the scene, along with the WCSO Division of Emergency Management (DEM), who were assisted by several Master Beekeepers.

Authorities have advised locals to avoid Weidkamp between Loomis Trail Road and West Badger, Berthusen Park, for at least 200 yards, as the area remains closed for the next 24 to 48 hours.

Derek Condit, author of The Natural Beekeeper’s Path: Treatment-Free Practices for a Living World, volunteered to help collect the bees. He explained to Komo News that the beehives “crushed” into each other when the truck fell over, so they’re having to “rebuild” them, which has been a delicate and difficult process.

“It’s not necessarily something we can go up with the keepers and just grab the beehives that are collapsing and falling apart,” Condit told the outlet. “So we’re basically one by one rebuilding the beehives, putting the frames back in and have to stack them.”

“These bees are going to swarm in the local areas and start new hives, luckily, so there will be re-pollination in this area, but there will be great losses as well,” he added.

Condit posted a video on Facebook, showing millions of honey bees buzzing in the air during the recollection process. He sported a white beekeeper suit while joined by other rescuers in protective gear.

[From People]

As of this writing, People still hasn’t updated their article to reflect that it was 14 million bees instead of 250 million. WCSO issued a correction to their Facebook page, with the following last line: “Thank you to those who challenged the math and helped us get closer to the true number.” As per usual, I have questions. Who is doing said math, and what even had their honeybee senses tingling to think, “Nah, 250 million is ridiculous. 14 million bees sounds much more appropriate.” The area was closed off for the clean up, so it’s not like this was a visual guestimation. And even if it was all visual — is it possible to gauge the difference between 14 and 250 million bees in a swarm? Not for this rookie! No joke, you could show me an image of 100 bees and I’d cosign on it being 250 million. But getting back to these bee math truthers, was it some equation to do with how many bees per hive multiplied by hives on the truck? (I’m not completely math illiterate, just mostly!) However these people arrived at their conclusions, I’m amazed. Amazed that they were smart enough to know something was off, to know how to make a more accurate guess, and that they cared enough to contact their Sheriff’s Office to correct the number. By contrast, when I hear “loose bees,” I make immediate arrangements to stay the f–k away.

Finally, I must salute all the citizens of Whatcom County for turning out in a crisis… to deliver some truly bee-utiful bee puns on the WCSO Facebook page. Top Three:

1. “Didn’t have this on my bee-ngo card.”


2. “I cannot Bee-lieve this happened. Beee to the one doing the math. Not that it is any of my Bees Wax.”


3. “I wonder if the driver was drinking… like seriously buzz driving is drunk driving.”

Categories
Ella Purnell Insects

Ella Purnell has been battling a caterpillar infestation at her home

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British actress Ella Purnell has been working since she was a kid, and in the last few years she’s been really booked and busy. I feel like she’s one mega hit away from entering a whole new level of fame. (I also feel like there must be casting directors just waiting for the opportunity to cast Ella as Emma Stone’s sister, but that’s another story.) It seems Ella had some downtime amid her very healthy career momentum, as she recently took to Instagram to share videos of work she was doing on her home. Renovations? No. Instead, Ella was chronicling the spiny elm caterpillar infestation that befell her elm tree-adjacent abode, along with the (gentle) efforts she was undertaking to remove the unwanted guests from her premises, so they could be on their merry way to becoming mourning cloak butterflies… elsewhere.

Ella shared that her yard was infested with caterpillars and documented the entire experience, and I can feel them crawling on my skin.

…In her Instagram stories, she teased the ordeal, writing, “I don’t think any of yall will be able to guess what I spent my day doing today.”

After showing a salad bowl and some tongs, it became clear that she wasn’t making a salad when she videoed black caterpillars crawling on the outside wall of her house, in the flowerbed, on her fence, and everywhere.

She collected as many as she could in the salad bowl to relocate and then provided an update on the soon-to-be butterflies the next day.

Ella learned that the caterpillars eat the leaves of elm trees, revealing that she has a large elm tree in her yard. “So, it turns out the spiny elm caterpillars love elm trees. Who would’ve thunk it?” she joked.

Sure enough, the caterpillars were crawling all over the tree’s bark, but how and why they went over to the house is a mystery I’m not sure I want to solve.

What most likely is a response to people flooding her DMs with unsolicited factoids, Ella addressed that she is “not killing the caterpillars, and “they are not poisonous as in they could kill you, but their spikes are stingers and hurt like ass,” based on her experience with them.

She added, “They make really pretty butterflies. I wanted my garden to be a peaceful spring time oasis but instead I have hundreds of stinging caterpillars falling from the sky.”

According to this North Carolina State University entomology factsheet, a spiny elm caterpillar can grow to two inches long and transform into the mourning cloak butterfly after being a chrysalis for three weeks.

[From BuzzFeed]

Ella handled the whole scene with pretty darn good humor, if you ask me! Redditors put all her Instagram Stories together and she seems super chill for a home invasion. (Then again, these weren’t squirrels. IYKYK.) Who knows, though, maybe she hired a professional caterpillar relocator to round up the critters.

In the house I grew up in, there was a small pantry off the kitchen that my mother used as an office. The room had no door, and the kitchen didn’t have one either. After feeling like she’d heard faint, strange sounds in there for months, the day came when my mother noticed a bee in the room. And then another one. And on and on and on. Yellow jackets had chewed through the wall of the house and set up a nest!!! And, I repeat: in a room with no doors! I promptly made arrangements to stay with a friend until our home was certified as yellow jacket-free. When the specialist came, he told my parents I was the smartest one in the family. Granted, caterpillars aren’t as aggressive as yellow jackets (except for whichever kind went after Jamie Dornan). So I guess the lesson is, make sure you cater your removal efforts to the risk level associated with the intruder. And record the whole thing on social media, naturally.

Ella Purnell documents a poisonous caterpillar infestation pic.twitter.com/KojB9xQjTq

— lindy (@manifestAang) March 16, 2025

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Embed from Getty Images

Photos credit: Laurent V /Avalon, Olivier Huitel/Avalon, Norbert Scanella/Panoramic/Avalon, Getty