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Aqueous and Ethanolic Plant Extracts as Bio-Insecticides-Establishing a Bridge between Raw Scientific Data and Practical Reality

Journal

PLANTS-BASEL
Volume 10, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/plants10050920

Keywords

bio-insecticides; aqueous extracts; ethanolic extracts; plant extracts; crop pest management; Azadirachta indica; Capsicum annuum; Nicotiana tabacum; Tagetes erecta

Categories

Funding

  1. project MACBIOPEST [MAC2/1.1a/289]
  2. program Interreg MAC 2014-2020 - DRCT (Azores Regional Government)
  3. FCT-Fundacao para a Ciencia e Tecnologia
  4. European Union
  5. QREN
  6. FEDER
  7. COMPETE, through funding the cE3c center [UIDB/00329/2020]
  8. LAQV-REQUIMTE [UIDB/50006/2020]
  9. W.R. Tavares's grant

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The global demand for food production has led to increased pressure to produce faster and larger crop yields, resulting in the widespread use of synthetic pesticides. In response, a search for effective alternatives from nature, such as plant extracts, is ongoing. Research has identified various plants, including neem, chili, tobacco, and marigold, whose extracts show promising insecticidal activity and potential for use in sustainable agriculture.
Global demand for food production is causing pressure to produce faster and bigger crop yields, leading to a rampant use of synthetical pesticides. To combat the nefarious consequences of its uses, a search for effective alternatives began in the last decades and is currently ongoing. Nature is seen as the main source of answers to crop protection problems, supported by several examples of plants/extracts used for this purpose in traditional agriculture. The literature reviewed allowed the identification of 95 plants whose extracts exhibit insecticide activity and can be used as bio-pesticides contributing to sustainable agriculture. The option for ethanol and/or water extracts is more environmentally friendly and resorts to easily accessible solvents, which can be reproduced by farmers themselves. This enables a bridge to be established between raw scientific data and a more practical reality. Azadirachta indica, Capsicum annuum, Nicotiana tabacum and Tagetes erecta are the most researched plants and have the potential to be viable options in the pest management approach. Azadirachta indica showed the most promising results and Brevicoryne brassicae was the most targeted pest species, being tested against the aqueous and/or ethanolic extracts of 23 different plants. Maceration using dried material (usually leaves) is the extraction method preferred by the majority of authors.

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