4.7 Article

Repellency of aerosol and cream products containing fennel oil to mosquitoes under laboratory and field conditions

Journal

PEST MANAGEMENT SCIENCE
Volume 60, Issue 11, Pages 1125-1130

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ps.921

Keywords

natural repellent; mosquitos; fennel oil; citronella oil; geranium oil; release-in-cage test; skin test; patch test; IR3535; deet

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The repellency of fennel (Foeniculum vulgare Miller)-containing products (5% aerosol and 8% cream) against mosquitoes was compared with those of citronella oil, geranium oil and deet, as well as three commercial repellents, Baby Keeper(R) cream containing IR3535, MeiMei(R) cream containing citronella and geranium oils, and Repellan S(R) aerosol containing 19% N,N-diethyl-m-toluamide (deet) under laboratory and field conditions. In a laboratory study with female Aedes aegypti (L), fennel oil exhibited good repellency in a release-in-cage test and repellency in skin and patch tests of the oil was comparable with those of citronella and geranium oils. In paddy field tests with five human volunteers, 5% and 8% fennel oil-containing aerosol and cream produced 84% and 70% repellency, respectively, at 90 min after exposure, whereas Baby Keeper cream and MeiMei cream gave 71% and 57% repellency at 90 min after exposure, respectively, and Repellan S aerosol gave 89% repellency at 210 min. The species and ratio of mosquitoes collected were the genera Culex (44.1%), Anopheles (42.2%), Aedes (7.8%) and Armigeres (5.9%). Fennel oil-containing products could be useful for protection from humans and domestic animals from vector-borne diseases and nuisance caused by mosquitoes. (C) 2004 Society of Chemical Industry.

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