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Scientists
Confirm Folk
Remedy Repels Mosquitoes
Swatting mosquitoes and dodging other biting bugs
is nearly a year-round chore in the Southeast, but such pests
are swarming across the country with the advent of summer weather.
And with warnings about West Nile virus and other insect-borne
diseases out, keeping the pests away has taken on new urgency.
A traditional folk remedy, known among people in Mississippi’s
hill country for at least a century, may provide some relief without
all the worries of DEET and other harsh chemicals. Scientists
at the United States Department of Agriculture-Agriculture Research
Service housed at the National Center for Natural Products Research
at the University of Mississippi have isolated compounds in the
American beautyberry plant, Callicarpa americana, that may keep
chomping insects away.
“My grandfather would cut branches
with the leaves still on them and crush the leaves, then
he and his brothers would stick the branches between the
harness and the horse to keep deerflies, horseflies and
mosquitoes away,” said Charles T. Bryson, an ARS
botanist in Stoneville, Miss. “I was a small child,
maybe 7 or 8 years old, when he told me about the plant
the first time. For almost 40 years, I’ve grabbed
a handful of leaves, crushed them and rubbed them on my
skin with the same results.”
Bryson told his supervisor about
the folklore repellent, and in 2004 the USDA-ARS at the
UM natural products research center began investigating
the beautyberry plant as a potential natural insect repellent.
Charles Cantrell, an ARS chemist
in Oxford, and Jerry Klun, an ARS entomologist in Beltsville,
Md., confirmed that the natural remedy wards off biting
insects, such as ticks, ants and mosquitoes: “I’ve
rubbed the leaves on my arms, and it works,” Cantrell
said.
“Traditional folklore remedies
many times are found to lead nowhere following scientific
research,” he continued. “The beautyberry
plant and its ability to repel mosquitoes is an exception.
We actually identified naturally occurring chemicals in
the plant responsible for this activity."
Three repellent chemicals were extracted
during the 12-month study: callicarpenal, intermedeol
and spathulenol. The research concluded that all three
chemicals repulse mosquitoes known to transmit yellow
fever and malaria. Mosquitoes carrying the West Nile virus
were not tested as part of the study, but the USDA-ARS
has since filed a patent application to use callicarpenal
as an anthropod repellent.
There are barriers, however, to producing
the repellent for mass consumption. The product must be
registered with the Environmental Protection Agency, which
may cost millions of dollars, and a cost-effective manufacturing
procedure must be determined.
“It’s difficult to bring
a repellent onto the market,” Cantrell said. “We
still have many unanswered questions: both the toxicity
levels and evaporation rates are unknown. We’re
still in the early stages.
Cantrell also said, “It’s
quite unusual to find a plant producing this type of compound,
but it’s synthesizing it for some reason. Perhaps,
it’s naturally defending itself against insect attack.”
The National Center for Natural Products
Research is the nation’s only university research
center devoted to improving human health and agricultural
productivity through the discovery, development and commercialization
of pharmaceuticals and agrochemicals derived from plants,
marine organisms and other natural products. University
of Mississippi researchers at the center are studying
hundreds of natural products that show promise to help
treat a broad range of human illnesses, including cancer,
AIDS, malaria, fungal infections, tuberculosis and emerging
tropical diseases.
Other studies by both university
and USDA scientists at the center may yield better products
to control weeds, insects, fungal diseases in food crops
and algae growth in commercial catfish ponds.
Reference
Source 128
July
3, 2006
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