New method to study the repellent, irritant and toxic effects on Anopheles gambiae. Application on 20 essential oils

Laboratory and field studies showed that repellent and irritant actions of common public health insecticides reduce the man-vector contact and so interrupt the disease transmission particularly when use with long lasting treated bednets. However resistance in mosquitoe populations bring up the issue of finding alternative to these insecticides. The objective of this study was to evaluate the repellent, irritant and toxic effects of 20 essential oils on Anopheles gambiae adults in laboratory. A high-troughput screening system was previously described to characterize repellent, irritant and toxicant chemical actions on Aedes spp. This system was adapted to test essential oils on An. gambiae. Twenty essentials oils were tested on An. gambiae at three concentrations (0.01%, 0.1% and 1%) with 3 replications of 20 adult mosquitoes. Results showed essential oils could have irritant, repellent, or toxic effects on An. gambiae. But data also indicated that behavioral responses to the three effects appeared independent so we could expect that the repellent mechanism may be different than the irritant and than the toxic ones. However the behavioral response of An. gambiae was dose-dependent. (Texte intégral)

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Deletre, Emilie, Chandre, Fabrice, Menut, Chantal, Bonafos, Romain, Cadin, Andy, Martin, Thibaud
Format: conference_item biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: European Society for Vector Ecology
Subjects:L72 - Organismes nuisibles des animaux, Q60 - Traitement des produits agricoles non alimentaires,
Online Access:http://agritrop.cirad.fr/566193/
http://agritrop.cirad.fr/566193/1/document_566193.pdf
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Laboratory and field studies showed that repellent and irritant actions of common public health insecticides reduce the man-vector contact and so interrupt the disease transmission particularly when use with long lasting treated bednets. However resistance in mosquitoe populations bring up the issue of finding alternative to these insecticides. The objective of this study was to evaluate the repellent, irritant and toxic effects of 20 essential oils on Anopheles gambiae adults in laboratory. A high-troughput screening system was previously described to characterize repellent, irritant and toxicant chemical actions on Aedes spp. This system was adapted to test essential oils on An. gambiae. Twenty essentials oils were tested on An. gambiae at three concentrations (0.01%, 0.1% and 1%) with 3 replications of 20 adult mosquitoes. Results showed essential oils could have irritant, repellent, or toxic effects on An. gambiae. But data also indicated that behavioral responses to the three effects appeared independent so we could expect that the repellent mechanism may be different than the irritant and than the toxic ones. However the behavioral response of An. gambiae was dose-dependent. (Texte intégral)