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Development and laboratory validation of a plant-derived repellent blend, effective against Aedes aegypti [Diptera: Culicidae], Anopheles gambiae [Diptera: Culicidae] and Culex quinquefasciatus [Diptera: Culicidae]. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Mosquitoes like Aedes, Anopheles, and Culex spread diseases impacting both humans and livestock, leading to research on natural alternatives to current insecticides and repellents.
  • Steam distilled extracts from four plants showed strong repellency against Aedes aegypti, with Picea sitchensis being the most effective, comparable to top commercial products at full concentration.
  • The study developed a new natural blend to repel multiple mosquito species, finding it effective particularly against Aedes aegypti, suggesting plant compounds can enhance repellent options while minimizing reliance on harmful chemicals.

Article Abstract

Mosquitoes of the genera Aedes, Anopheles and Culex vector a wide range of pathogens seriously affecting humans and livestock on a global scale. Over-reliance on insecticides and repellents has driven research into alternative, naturally-derived compounds to fulfil the same objectives. Steam distilled extracts of four plants with strong, yet attractive, volatile profiles were initially assessed for repellency in a dual-port olfactometer using Aedes aegypti as the model species. Picea sitchensis was found to be the most repellent, proving comparable to leading products when applied at 100% (p = 1.000). Key components of conifer-derived volatile profiles were then screened via electroantennography before those components eliciting an electrophysiological response were assayed individually in the olfactometer; according to WHO protocol. The most promising 5 were selected for reductive analyses to produce an optimised semiochemical blend. This combination, and a further two variations of the blend, were then progressed to a multi-species analysis using the BG-test whereby bite-attempt frequency on hands was assessed under different repellent treatments; assays were compared between Aedes aegypti, Anopheles gambiae and Culex quinquefasciatus. Efficacy was found against all three species, although it was found that Ae. aegypti was the most susceptible to the repellent, with An. gambiae being the least. Here, a novel, naturally-derived blend is presented with weak spatial repellency, as confirmed in laboratory assays. Further work will be required to assess the full extent of the potential of the products, both in terms of field application and species screening; however, the success of the products developed demonstrate that plant metabolites have great capacity for use in the repellent sector; both to improve upon known compounds and to reduce the usage of toxic products currently on the market.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10956804PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0299144PLOS

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