People with large lung capacity, fat people, and people with heavy breathing: people will breathe faster after engaging in sports or physical labor, so they exhale relatively more carbon dioxide. Carbon dioxide gas will form a moist and warm airflow around their heads, and mosquitoes are more sensitive to this.
People with well-developed sweat glands: Sweating people lose heat quickly, and the acidity in the blood increases, which will attract mosquitoes. Sweat from the human body volatilizes in the air, which will attract mosquitoes. Therefore, you should always take a bath in summer to lower your body temperature and reduce the sweat on the skin surface.
People with rough skin and large pores: Mosquitoes like to bite people with rough skin and large pores, usually because these people tend to have developed sweat glands or excrete more sweat and other secretions. Therefore, sometimes men are more attracted to mosquitoes than women and young people than old people.
Pregnancy: This is actually because when women's endocrine changes, their metabolism speeds up, their sweat output is often more, and their stimulation and guidance to mosquitoes are stronger. Before delivery, the wet gas and carbon dioxide exhaled by pregnant women are quite attractive to mosquitoes.
Children: Children's metabolism is particularly fast, their body temperature is also high, and they emit more infrared rays than adults, so they are easy to be captured by mosquitoes.
A drinker.
Makeup lover: If you use perfume, hair gel, face cream and other cosmetics with floral flavor, you will be more likely to be bitten by mosquitoes.
People wearing dark clothes: This may seem absurd, but mosquitoes will use vision (together with smell) to find people, so they wear conspicuous colors.