At the American Chemical Society's meeting in Indianapolis, researchers described a group of compounds that could block mosquitoes' ability to smell potential targets.
"Repellents have been the mainstay for preventing mosquito bites. The most widely used repellent, DEET, is quite effective and has been in use for a long time. However, some people don't like the feel or the smell of DEET," said researcher Ulrich Bernier of the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA).
Female mosquitoes, which suck blood to obtain a protein needed to produce fertile eggs, can smell people from over 100 feet away.
The Mosquito and Fly Unit at the US Department of Agriculture's Agricultural Research Service-Center for Medical, Agricultural, and Veterinary Entomology in Gainesville, has been doing research on mosquito repellents since the 1940s.
They have accumulated information on substances secreted through the human skin or formed by bacteria on the skin that make some people more attractive to mosquitoes than others.
They sprayed various substances into one side of the cage, and documented the effects in attracting mosquitoes.
Some compounds, like lactic acid - a common component of human sweat - were definite mosquito lures, drawing 90 per cent of the mosquitoes to the screen. With other compounds, however, many of the mosquitoes didn't even take flight or seemed confused.
He said that a group of chemical compounds, including 1-methylpiperzine, block mosquitoes' sense of smell. This may help explain why mosquitoes fly toward some people but not others.
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