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Repellent and acaricidal activity of coconut oil fatty acids and their derivative compounds and catnip oil against Amblyomma sculptum.

Authors :
Barrozo, Mayara Macêdo
Zeringóta, Viviane
Borges, Lígia Miranda Ferreira
Moraes, Nélio
Benz, Kim
Farr, Amy
Zhu, Junwei Jerry
Source :
Veterinary Parasitology. Dec2021, Vol. 300, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

• Coconut oil FA and their Me derivatives repelled A. sculptum nymphs for up to 72h. • Catnip oil have shown 96 h-repellence against A. sculptum nymphs. • A formulation of coconut FFA in lavender has reached up to 7d of repellence. • C 10 Me and C 12 Me showed high acaricidal activity against A. sculptum larvae. This study was carried out aiming to evaluate the repellent and acaricidal activity of major ingredient compounds from coconut oil including their methyl ester derivatives and catnip oil against nymphs and larvae of Amblyomma sculptum. Repellent candidates, coconut oil free fatty acids (coconut FFA mainly C 12 , C 10 and C 8 acid); lauric acid (C 12 acid); capric acid (C 10 acid); methyl laurate; methyl caprate and 10 % each of C 12 , C 10 and C 8 acid (1:1:1) in lavender oil formulation (CFA in lavender formula) and catnip oil (Nepeta cataria), were screened using a Petri dish bioassay to assess repellency. Catnip oil, methyl caprate, methyl laurate, and CFA in lavender formulation repelled ticks strongly (P < 0.05) at almost all times evaluated, with an average of 77.8–100% repellency. Some candidate repellents with consistent strong repellence observed were selected for further evaluation, with coconut CFA in lavender formula showing a repellency lasted up to 7 days, while those of catnip oil and methyl caprate were active for 4 and 3 days, respectively. For the acaricide test, five concentrations (2.5; 5; 10; 15 and 20 mg/mL) were evaluated using the larval packet test. Only CFA in lavender formula and two methyl esters showed acaricidal activity, with methyl laurate presenting the strongest toxicity at 15 mg/mL concentration, which was effective against more than 93 % of the tested larvae. Catnip oil caused no mortality of A. scultptum larvae in all concentrations tested. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03044017
Volume :
300
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Veterinary Parasitology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
154011683
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.vetpar.2021.109591