Monday, April 6, 2026
ADVT 
Life

Decoded: Why Mosquitoes Bite You

Darpan News Desk, 29 Jan, 2018 11:48 AM
    Wonder why you receive more bug bites than others around you? It is because, mosquitoes can rapidly learn and remember the smells, researchers have found.
     
    The study dopamine -- a brain chemical involved in reward learning -- is a key mediator of aversive learning in mosquitoes.
     
    However, people who swat at mosquitoes or perform other defensive behaviour may be abandoned, no matter how sweet.
     
    Dopamine modulates the neural activity in the brain region where the information on smell in such a way that odours were easier to discriminate, and potentially learn, by the mosquitoes, the researchers said.
     
    Mosquitoes exhibit a trait known as aversive learning by training female Aedes aegypti mosquitoes to associate odours (including human body odors) with unpleasant shocks and vibrations, said Clement Vinauger, Assistant Professor in Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University or Virginia Tech.
     
    For the study, published in the journal Current Biology, the team placed mosquitoes in an insect flight simulator and exposing the mosquitoes to various smells, including human body odours, and observed how the insects, trained or not, reacted. 
     
    "Unfortunately, there is no way of knowing exactly what attracts a mosquito to a particular human -- individuals are made up of unique molecular cocktails that include combinations of more than 400 chemicals," said Chloe Lahondere, Assistant Professor at the varsity.
     
    "However, we now know that mosquitoes are able to learn odours emitted by their host and avoid those that were more defensive," Lahondere added.
     
    Aedes aegypti mosquitoes are vectors for Zika fever, dengue fever, chikungunya, and yellow fever viruses, and can be found in tropical and subtropical regions throughout the world. 
     
    "Understanding these mechanisms of mosquito learning and preferences may provide new tools for mosquito control," Vinauger said. 
     
    "For example, we could target mosquitoes' ability to learn and either impair it or exploit it to our advantage," he noted.

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    No Trick-or-treaters? Buy Halloween Candy Anyway!

    No Trick-or-treaters? Buy Halloween Candy Anyway!
    NEW YORK - Don Stewart and his wife will be home with the lights on Halloween night, waiting for trick-or-treaters. But like a lot of folks who stock up on candy, they'll probably end up eating it themselves.

    No Trick-or-treaters? Buy Halloween Candy Anyway!

    Hosting Thanksgiving For The First Time? Some Tips

    Hosting Thanksgiving For The First Time? Some Tips
    NEW YORK - The potatoes are wrong. The football game's too loud. The kids aren't dressed right. Thanksgiving can, of course, be a great joy, but with so many beloved traditions on the line it can also be prime ground for sniping and griping the first time the torch has been passed.

    Hosting Thanksgiving For The First Time? Some Tips

    How women can get the first date right

    How women can get the first date right
    If you have only talked over the phone, looked at a profile picture or texted each other - he really doesn’t know exactly how you look until you...

    How women can get the first date right

    Strict social hosts help curb underage drinking

    Strict social hosts help curb underage drinking
    Teenagers are less likely to drink at parties when they live in communities with particularly strong social host laws, finds a US-based study....

    Strict social hosts help curb underage drinking

    Infants know what your eyes tell

    Infants know what your eyes tell
    "Our study provides developmental evidence for the notion that humans possess specific brain processes that allow them to automatically...

    Infants know what your eyes tell

    Lab cells reveal how brain responds to memory and reward

    Lab cells reveal how brain responds to memory and reward
    Scientists have created cells that can detect changes in the brain associated with learning, memory and reward....

    Lab cells reveal how brain responds to memory and reward