Plant-based insect repellents: a review of their
efficacy, development and testing
From http://www.malariajournal.com/content/10/S1/S11;
Malaria Journal 2011, 10(Suppl 1):S11 doi:10.1186/1475-2875-10-S1-S11.
By MF Maia &
SJ Moore
Abstract
Plant-based
repellents have been used for generations in traditional practice as a personal
protection measure against host-seeking mosquitoes. Knowledge on traditional
repellent plants obtained through ethnobotanical studies is a valuable resource
for the development of new natural products. Recently, commercial repellent
products containing plant-based ingredients have gained increasing popularity
among consumers, as these are commonly perceived as “safe” in comparison to
long-established synthetic repellents although this is sometimes a
misconception. To date insufficient studies have followed standard WHO
Pesticide Evaluation Scheme guidelines for repellent testing. There is a need
for further standardized studies in order to better evaluate repellent
compounds and develop new products that offer high repellency as well as good
consumer safety. This paper presents a summary of recent information on
testing, efficacy and safety of plant-based repellents as well as promising new
developments in the field.
Background
Most
plants contain compounds that they use in preventing attack from phytophagous
(plant eating) insects. These chemicals fall into several categories, including
repellents, feeding deterrents, toxins, and growth regulators. Most can be
grouped into five major chemical categories: (1) nitrogen compounds (primarily
alkaloids), (2) terpenoids, (3) phenolics, (4) proteinase inhibitors, and (5)
growth regulators. Although the primary functions of these compounds is defence
against phytophagous insects, many are also effective against mosquitoes and
other biting Diptera, especially those volatile components released as a
consequence of herbivory [1]. The fact that
several of these compounds are repellent to haematophagous insects could be an
evolutionary relict from a plant-feeding ancestor, as many of these compounds
evolved as repellents to phytophagous insects [2], and this
repellent response to potentially toxic compounds is well conserved in the
lineage of Diptera (True Flies). Insects detect odours when that volatile odour
binds to odorant receptor (OR) proteins displayed on ciliated dendrites of
specialized odour receptor neurons (ORNs) that are exposed to the external
environment, often on the antennae and maxillary palps of the insect, and some
ORNs, such as OR83b that is important in olfaction and blocked by the
gold-standard synthetic repellent DEET (N, N-diethyl-3-methylbenzamide) [3], are highly
conserved across insect species [4,5]. Plants
commonly produce volatile “green leaf volatiles” when leaves are damaged in
order to deter herbivores [6], and several
authors have shown strong responses of mosquito odour receptors to this class
of volatiles including geranyl acetate and citronellal [7], 6-methyl-5-
hepten-2-one and geranylacetone [8].
Interestingly, the same odour receptors that respond to DEET also respond to thujone
eucalyptol and linalool in Culex quinquefasciatus[9]. In Anopheles
gambiae, the DEET receptor OR83b is stimulated by citronellal, but is
also modulated by the TRPA1 cation channel [10]. However, it
is most likely that many plant volatiles are deterrent or repellent because
they have high vapour toxicity to insects [11,12].
This
repellency of plant material has been exploited for thousands of years by man,
most simply by hanging bruised plants in houses, a practice that is still in
wide use throughout the developing countries [13]. Plants have
also been used for centuries in the form of crude fumigants where plants were
burnt to drive away nuisance mosquitoes and later as oil formulations applied
to the skin or clothes which was first recorded in writings by ancient Greek [14], Roman [15] and Indian
scholars [16] (Figure 1).
Plant-based repellents are still extensively used in this traditional way
throughout rural communities in the tropics because for many of the poorest
communities the only means of protection from mosquito bites that are available
[13], and indeed
for some of these communities [17], as in the
Europe and North America [18] “natural”
smelling repellents are preferred because plants are perceived as a safe and
trusted means of mosquito bite prevention.
Figure 1. Moghul painting
illustrating a man burning neem leaves near a river where biting insects would
be present (© Dr Sarah Moore)
The
discovery of new plant-based repellents is heavily reliant on ethnobotany. This
is the targeted search for medicinal plants through in-depth interviews with
key informants knowledgeable in folk-lore and traditional medicine. It is
common practice to conduct ethnobotanical surveys using structured interviews,
combined with the collection of plant voucher Specimens (Figure 2), to
evaluate plant use by indigenous ethnic groups [19]. Questions
are asked about plant usage, abundance and source. This is a more direct method
of identifying plants with a potential use than general screening of all plants
in an area. A second means is bio-prospecting, where plants are systematically
screened for a particular mode of action, which is a costly and labour
intensive means of identifying new repellents. However, mass screening of
plants for repellent activity was the way by which PMD (para-methane 3-8,
diol), an effective and commercially available repellent was discovered in the
1960s [20].
Figure 2. A village herbalist in
rural Yunnan, Southern
China. This lady was a key informant for an ethnobotanical study into
plants used to repel mosquitoes (© Dr Sarah Moore)
PMD from lemon eucalyptus (Corymbia citriodora)
extract
Corymbia citriodora (Myrtaceae), also known as lemon
eucalyptus, is a potent natural repellent extracted from the leaves of
lemon eucalyptus trees (Table 1). It was
discovered in the 1960s during mass screenings of plants used in Chinese
traditional medicine. Lemon eucalyptus essential oil, comprising 85%
citronellal, is used by cosmetic industries due to its fresh smell [21]. However, it
was discovered that the waste distillate remaining after hydro-distillation of
the essential oil was far more effective at repelling mosquitoes than the
essential oil itself. Many plant extracts and oils repel mosquitoes, with their
effect lasting from several minutes to several hours (Table 1). Their
active ingredients tend to be highly volatile, so although they are effective
repellents for a short period after application, they rapidly evaporate leaving
the user unprotected. The exception to this is para-menthane 3, 8 diol, which
has a lower vapour pressure than volatile monoterpines found in most plant oils
[22] and provides
very high protection from a broad range of insect vectors over several hours [23], whereas the
essential oil is repellent for around one hour [24]. PMD is the
only plant-based repellent that has been advocated for use in disease endemic
areas by the CDC (Centres for Disease Control) [25], due to its
proven clinical efficacy to prevent malaria [26] and is
considered to pose no risk to human health [27]. It should
be noted that the essential oil of lemon eucalyptus does not have EPA
(Environmental Protection Agency) registration for use as an insect
repellent.
Table 1. An overview of repellent
plant efficacy from literature review
Citronella
Essential oils
and extracts belonging to plants in the citronella genus (Poaceae) are commonly
used as ingredients of plant-based mosquito repellents (Table 1), mainly Cymbopogon
nardus that is sold in Europe and North America
in commercial preparations. Citronella has found its way into many commercial
preparations through its familiarity, rather than its efficacy. Citronella was
originally extracted for use in perfumery, and its name derives from the French
citronelle around 1858 [28]. It was used
by the Indian Army to repel mosquitoes at the beginning of the 20th
century [29] and was then
registered for commercial use in the USA in 1948 [30]. Today,
citronella is one of the most widely used natural repellents on the market,
used at concentrations of 5-10%. This is lower than most other commercial
repellents but higher concentrations can cause skin sensitivity. However, there
are relatively few studies that have been carried out to determine the efficacy
of essential oils from citronella as arthropod repellents. Citronella-based
repellents only protect from host-seeking mosquitoes for about two hours
although formulation of the repellent is very important [31,32]. Initially,
citronella, which contains citronellal, citronellol, geraniol, citral, α pinene, and limonene, is as effective dose for dose as
DEET [33], but the
oils rapidly evaporate causing loss of efficacy and leaving the user
unprotected. However, by mixing the essential oil of Cymbopogon winterianus
with a large molecule like vanillin (5%) protection time can be considerable
prolonged by reducing the release rate of the volatile oil [34]. Recently,
the use of nanotechnology has allowed slower release rates of oils to be
achieved, thus prolonging protection time [35].
Encapsulated citronella oil nanoemulsion is prepared by high-pressure
homogenization of 2.5% surfactant and 100% glycerol, to create stable droplets
that increase the retention of the oil and slow down release. The release rate
relates well to the protection time so that a decrease in release rate can
prolong mosquito protection time [35]. Another
means of prolonging the effect of natural repellents is microencapsulation
using gelatin-arabic gum microcapsules, which maintained the repellency of
citronella up to 30 days on treated fabric stored at room temperature (22°C) [36]. The use of
these technologies to enhance the performance of natural repellents may
revolutionize the repellent market and make plant oils a more viable option for
use in long-lasting repellents. However, for the time-being travellers to
disease endemic areas should not be recommended citronella-based repellents [32]. In
contrast, for those communities where more efficacious alternatives are not
available, or are prohibitively expensive, the use of citronella to prevent
mosquito bites may provide important protection from disease vectors [17].
The
second way to use volatile plant repellents is to continuously evaporate them.
Citronella and geraniol candles are widely sold as outdoor repellents, however
field studies against mixed populations of nuisance mosquitoes show reductions
in biting around 50%, although they do not provide significant protection
against mosquito bites [37-39].
Neem
Neem
is widely advertised as a natural alternative to DEET [40], and it has
been tested for repellency against range of arthropods of medical importance,
with variable results (Table 1). Several
field studies from India
have shown very high efficacy of Neem-based preparations [41-43], contrasting
with findings of intermediate repellency by other researchers [44,45]. However,
these contrasting results may be due to differing methodologies, and the
solvents used to carry the repellents. The EPA has not approved Neem for use as
a topical insect repellent. It has a low dermal toxicity, but can cause skin
irritation, such as dermatitis when used undiluted [46]. Due to the
paucity of reliable studies, Neem oil is not recommended as an effective repellent for
use by travellers to disease endemic areas [32], although it
may confer some protection against nuisance biting mosquitoes.
Natural oils and emulsions
Several
oils have shown repellency against mosquitoes. It is likely that they work in
several ways 1) by reducing short range attractive cues i.e. kairomones, water
vapour and temperature [47-49]; 2) by
reducing the evaporation and absorption of repellent actives due to the
presence of long-chained fatty molecules [50]; 3) by
containing fatty acids are known to be repellent to mosquitoes at high
concentrations [51]. Bite
Blocker, a commercial preparation containing glycerin, lecithin, vanillin, oils
of coconut, geranium, and 2% soybean oil can achieve similar repellency to DEET,
providing 7.2 hours mean protection time against a dengue vector and nuisance
biting mosquitoes in one study [44], and
protection for 1.5 hours, equivalent to that of low concentration DEET in a
second study [52]. It would
appear that the soybean oil in Bite Blocker helps only contributes to
repellency as it is not repellent when evaluated on its own [53]. Soybean oil
is not EPA registered, but it has low dermal toxicity, although no recommended
maximum exposure or chronic exposure limits have been established [54]. Other
plant-based oils that have shown some repellent efficacy are coconut oil, palm
nut oils [55] and andiroba
oil [56], although
all of these three oils are far less effective than DEET, they may be useful as
carriers for other repellent actives as they are cheap and contain unsaturated
fatty acids and emulsifiers that improve repellent coverage and slow evaporation
of volatile repellent molecules [50,53,57].
Essential oils
Essential
oils distilled from members of the Lamiaceae (mint family that includes most
culinary herbs), Poaceae (aromatic grasses) and Pinaceae (pine and cedar
family) are commonly used as insect repellents throughout the globe (Table 1). Many
members of these families are used in rural communities through burning or
hanging them within homes [58-62]. In Europe
and North America there is a strong history of
use of the oils dating back to Ancient times. Almost all of the plants used as
repellents are also used for food flavouring or in the perfume industry, which
may explain the association with these oils as safer natural alternatives to
DEET despite many oils causing contact dermatitis (Table 2[63]). Many
commercial repellents contain a number of plant essential oils either for
fragrance or as repellents including peppermint, lemongrass, geraniol, pine
oil, pennyroyal, cedar
oil, thyme oil and patchouli. The most effective of these include thyme oil,
geraniol, peppermint oil, cedar oil, patchouli and clove that have been found to repel malaria,
filarial and yellow fever vectors for a period of 60-180 mins [64-66]. Most of
these essential oils are highly volatile and this contributes to their poor
longevity as mosquito repellents. However, this problem can be addressed by
using fixatives or careful formulation to improve their longevity. For example,
oils from turmeric and hairy basil with addition of 5% vanillin repelled 3 species
of mosquitoes under cage conditions for a period of 6-8 hours depending on the
mosquito species [34]. Although
essential oils are exempt from registration through the EPA, they can be
irritating to the skin and their repellent effect is variable, dependent on
formulation and concentration. Repellents containing only essential oils in the
absence of an active ingredient such as DEET should not be recommended as
repellents for use in disease endemic areas, and those containing high levels
of essential oils could cause skin irritation, especially in the presence of
sunlight.
Table 2. Some common ingredients
in natural repellents that may be hazardous. Reproduced with permission from [63]
Considerations for repellent testing methodology
In
a Pubmed
search using the terms “plant” and “repellent” and “mosquito” in the past 5
years, 87 results were shown. These studies can be broken down into a series of
categories: 1) standard ethnobotanical studies and evaluations of plants that
are traditionally used to repel mosquitoes [17,67-70]; 2) standard
dose response [33] laboratory
evaluations of solvent extractions of plants without DEET positive
controls [71]; 3) standard
dose response [33] laboratory
evaluations of solvent or extractions or essential oils of plants with
DEET positive controls [72] coupled with
GC-MS (coupled gas chromatography-mass spectrometry) [73]; 4)
laboratory evaluations using time to first bite method [74] comparing
the plant repellents to DEET [75] and in
addition several of those studies also analysed the constituents of the oil
through GC-MS [76,77]. In addition
there were a large number of studies that did not use the accepted standard
methodology [78] (Table 3), and
should be interpreted with caution. Only two studies considered safety [79] or adverse
effects [80] and only one
study considered randomization and blinding [52], and almost
all repellent studies did not consider the number of human participants needed
to minimize sampling error [81]. It is
important for the future development of plant based repellents that the
standard WHO methodology is followed [78], including a
DEET control to allow simple comparison of multiple studies, and reporting of
standard errors to understand the reliability of that repellent compound to
provide the observed protection.
Table 3. Guidelines on repellent
testing adapted from [78]
Some fallacies about plant based or natural repellents
It
is commonly assumed that plant-based repellents are safer than DEET because
they are natural. However, some natural repellents are safer than others, and
it cannot be assumed that natural equates to safe [18]. DEET has
undergone stringent testing and has a good safety profile. An estimated 15
million people in the U.K.,
78 million people in the U.S.A.
[82], and 200
million people globally use DEET each year [83]. Provided
that DEET is used safely, i.e. it is applied to the skin at the correct dose
(such as that in a commercial preparation) and it is not swallowed or rubbed
into the mucous membranes then it does not cause adverse effects [84]. DEET has
been used since 1946 with a tiny number of reported adverse effects, many of
which had a history of excessive or inappropriate use of repellent [85,86]. Its
toxicology has been more closely scrutinized than any other repellent, and it
has been deemed safe for human use [82,87], including
use on children [88], pregnant
women [89], and
lactating women [84]. In
contrast, plant-based repellents do not have this rigorously tested safety
record, with most being deemed safe because they have simply been used for a
long time [90]. However,
many plant-based repellents contain compounds that should be used with caution
(Table 1).
It
is also commonly stated that plant based repellents are better for the
environment than synthetic molecules. While plant volatiles are naturally
derived, distillation requires biomass energy, extraction commonly uses organic
solvents that must be disposed of carefully, growing the plants uses
agrichemicals, such as fertilizers and pesticides (unless sourced from a
sustainable and organic source). However, if carefully practiced, cash cropping
of plants used for repellents provides a vital source of income for small scale
farmers in developing countries [91] and can have
beneficial environmental impact when planted in intercropping systems to
prevent soil erosions [92]. Therefore,
it is important to carefully source of repellent plants to avoid pitfalls
associated with unsustainable cropping practices. Another common misconception
is that garlic is an effective repellent. It does have a moderate repellent
effect when rubbed on the skin [93], although
there are far more effective repellents available that also have a more
pleasing odour. The consumption of garlic however, has not been shown to be
effective at repelling mosquitoes.
Promising developments in plant based repellents
The
field of plant-based repellents is moving forward as consumers demand means of
protection from arthropod bites that are safe, pleasant to use and
environmentally sustainable. Perhaps the most important consideration is
improving the longevity of those repellents that are effective but volatile
such as citronella. Several studies looked at improving formulations of plant
oils to increase their longevity through development of nanoemulsions [35,94], improved
formulations and fixatives [95-97]; while
alternate uses such as spatial activity [98-102] and
excitorepellency [103,104] have also
been investigated. There has been a single clinical study of PMD to lower
malaria incidence [26]. This is an
exciting discovery since PMD may be recovered from distillation of leaves of E.
citroidora or chemical modification of citronellal [105]– available
from plants of the genus Cymbopogon. These plants are already
commercially cropped in malaria endemic countries including South America,
especially Brazil (6 million
trees), southern China, India, Sri Lanka,
Congo (Zaire), Kenya
and most countries in southern Africa, where
it is grown for essential oil production and timber [106]. Local
production of insect repellent would remove the high cost of importation in
developing countries.
New
developments have also been seen in understanding the function of plant-based
repellents in insects. Several studies have investigated the behavioural mode
of action of repellents through structure-activity studies of contact versus
spatial repellency [107], or
olfactometry that demonstrated that DEET inhibited mosquito response to human
odour whereas Ocimum forskolei repels but does not inhibit response to
human odour [108]. A further
study demonstrates that citronellal directly activates cation channels [10], which is
similar to the excitorepellent effect of pyrethrin – another plant based
terpine [109], but
contrasts with the inhibition effect of DEET [3].
The
field of repellent development from plants is extremely fertile due to wealth
of insecticidal compounds found in plants as defences against insects [2]. The modern
pyrethroids that are the mainstay of the current malaria elimination program
that is making excellent progress [110], are
synthetic analogues based on the chemical structure of pyrethrins, discovered
in the pyrethrum daisy, Tanacetum cinerariifolium from the Dalmation
region and Tanacetum coccineum of Persian origin. The insecticidal
component comprising six esters (pyrethrins) is found in tiny oil-containing
glands on the surface of the seed case in the flower head to protect the seed
from insect attack. Pyrethrins are highly effective insecticides, that are
relatively harmless to mammals [111], although
it must be emphasised that many other plant produce compounds that are highly
toxic to mammals and / or irritating to the skin, and natural does not equate
to safe. In the past few years, a plant derived repellent, PMD has been proven
to be suitably efficacious and safe to compete with DEET in the field of
disease prevention, and repellents have been recognised by WHO as a useful
disease prevention tool to complement insecticide-based means of vector
control. The field of plant-based repellent evaluation and development had
become far more rigorous in recent years and developments in methods of
dispensing plant-based volatiles means that extension in the duration of
repellency and consequent efficacy of plant-based repellents will be possible
in future.
Author’s contributions
Manuscript
drafted by MFM and SJM.
Competing interests
The
authors declare that they have no competing interests
Acknowledgements and funding
Authors
receive salary support from Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation 51431. We would
like to thank Coronel Mustapha Debboun for permission to reproduce Table 2 and the
two anonymous reviewers who greatly improved the manuscript through their
comments and suggestions.
This
article has been published as part of Malaria Journal Volume 10
Supplement 1, 2011: Natural products for the control of malaria. The full
contents of the supplement are available online at http://www.malariajournal.com/supplements/10/S1.
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