For three hot days in August 2023, at one of the biggest music festivals in the Netherlands, a line of people snaked outside the entrance of four welded-together shipping containers. But they weren’t waiting to watch a performance or get Billie Eilish’s autograph.
They were queuing up to meet some mosquitoes.
The shipping containers were a pop-up laboratory, and the people were volunteering for a study that gauged how alluring they were to the blood-sucking insects. Festivalgoers rested their arms against acrylic boxes that let caged mosquitoes smell but not bite. A camera helped track the insects’ landings, and then a computer calculated a score.
“You’d hear loud cheers when a score popped up on the scoreboard,” says Felix Hol, a quantitative biologist at Radboud University Medical Center in Nijmegen, the Netherlands. People tried to prove that they were more appealing to mosquitoes than their partners, says Hol’s colleague, Sara Lynn Blanken. They’d see their score and say, “‘You see, I’m right!’”
The team’s Mosquito Magnet Trial offered an unusual attraction for people attending the 2023 Lowlands festival in Biddinghuizen; it also served up some buzz-worthy science. Certain behaviors seemed to influence people’s attractiveness to mosquitoes, the team reported August 26 at bioRxiv.org. Drinking beer, smoking weed and sleeping close to someone tended to boost people’s magnetism, the team found. Wearing sunscreen did the opposite.