Use of Novel Compounds for Pest Control: Insecticidal and Acaricidal Activity of Essential Oil Components from Heartwood of Alaska Yellow Cedar

Journal of Medical Entomology
2005.0

Abstract

Laboratory bioassays were conducted to determine the activity of 15 natural products isolated from essential oil components extracted from the heartwood of Alaska yellow cedar, Chamaecyparis nootkatensis (D. Don) Spach., against Ixodes scapularis Say nymphs, Xenopsylla cheopis (Rothchild), and Aedes aegypti (L.) adults. Four of the compounds from the essential oil have been identified as monoterpenes, five as eremophilane sesquiterpenes, five as eremophilane sesquiterpene derivatives from valencene and nootkatone, and one as a sesquiterpene outside the eremophilane parent group. Carvacrol was the only monoterpene that demonstrated biocidal activity against ticks, fleas, and mosquitoes with LC50 values after 24 h of 0.0068, 0.0059, and 0.0051% (wt:vol), respectively. Nootkatone from Alaska yellow cedar was the most effective of the eremophilane sesquiterpenes against ticks (LC50 = 0.0029%), whereas the nootkatone grapefruit extract exhibited the greatest biocidal activity against fleas (LC50 = 0.0029%). Mosquitoes were most susceptible to one of the derivatives of valencene, valencene-13-aldehyde (LC50 = 0.0024%), after 24 h. Bioassays to determine residual activity of the most effective products were conducted at 1, 2, 4, and 6 wk after initial treatment. Residual LC50 values for nootkatone did not differ significantly at 4 wk posttreatment from the observations made at the initial 24-h treatment. The ability of these natural products to kill arthropods at relatively low concentrations represents an alternative to the use of synthetic pesticides for control of disease vectors.

Knowledge Graph

Similar Paper

Use of Novel Compounds for Pest Control: Insecticidal and Acaricidal Activity of Essential Oil Components from Heartwood of Alaska Yellow Cedar
Journal of Medical Entomology 2005.0
Termite repellent sesquiterpenoids from Callitris glaucophylla heartwood
Journal of Wood Science 2005.0
Acaricidal activity of compounds from <i>Cinnamomum camphora</i> (L.) Presl against the carmine spider mite, <i>Tetranychus cinnabarinus</i>
Pest Management Science 2015.0
Gynandropsis gynandra essential oil and its constituents as tick (Rhipicephalus appendiculatus) repellents
Phytochemistry 1999.0
Antineoplastic Agents. 529. Isolation and Structure of Nootkastatins 1 and 2 from the Alaskan Yellow Cedar<i>Chamaecyparis</i><i>n</i><i>ootkatensis</i>
Journal of Natural Products 2004.0
Antifungal activity of essential oil and its constituents from Calocedrus macrolepis var. formosana Florin leaf against plant pathogenic fungi
Bioresource Technology 2008.0
Bioactive compounds from the bark of Eucalyptus exserta F. Muell.
Industrial Crops and Products 2012.0
Mosquito larvicidal activity of linear alkane hydrocarbons from<i>Excoecaria agallocha</i>L. against<i>Culex quinquefasciatus</i>Say.
Natural Product Research 2012.0
Composition of the essential oil of Lepidium meyenii (Walp.)
Phytochemistry 2002.0
Insecticidal Activity of <i>Maytenus</i> Species (Celastraceae) Nortriterpene Quinone Methides against Codling Moth, <i>Cydia pomonella</i> (L.) (Lepidoptera:  Tortricidae)
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry 2000.0