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Cinnamon oil
shows promise as a great-smelling, environmentally friendly pesticide, with
the ability to kill mosquito larvae, according to a new study published in the
July 14 issue of the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, a
peer-reviewed journal of the American Chemical Society, the world's largest
scientific society.
The
researchers also expect that cinnamon oil could be a good mosquito repellant,
though they have not yet tested it against adult mosquitoes.
Besides
being a summer nuisance, mosquitoes pose some major public health problems,
carrying such deadly agents as malaria, yellow fever and West Nile virus. While
conventional pesticide application is often effective in controlling mosquito
larvae before they hatch, repeated use of these agents has raised serious
environmental and health concerns.
"These
problems have highlighted the need for new strategies for mosquito larval
control," says Peter Shang-Tzen Chang, a professor in the School of Forestry
and Resource Conservation at National Taiwan University and lead author of the
paper. Scientists are increasingly turning to more benign natural chemicals to
ward off mosquitoes and other pests.
Chang
and his coworkers tested eleven compounds in cinnamon leaf oil for their ability
to kill emerging larvae of the yellow fever mosquito, Aedes aegypti.
"Four compounds - cinnamaldehyde, cinnamyl acetate, eugenol and anethole - exhibited the strongest activity against A. aegypti in 24 hours of
testing," Chang says.
Other
common essential oils, such as catnip, have shown similar promise in fighting
off mosquitoes, but this is the first time researchers have demonstrated
cinnamon's potential as a safe and effective pesticide, according to Chang.
Cinnamaldehyde
is the main constituent in cinnamon leaf oil and is used worldwide as a food
additive and flavoring agent. A formulation using the compound could be sprayed
just like a pesticide, but without the potential for adverse health effects - plus the added bonus of a pleasant smell.
Bark
oil from the Cinnamomum cassia tree is the most common source of
cinnamaldehyde, but the tree used in this study - indigenous cinnamon, or Cinnamomum
osmophloeum - has been of interest to researchers because the constituents
of its leaf oil are similar to those of C. cassia bark oil. The leaves of C. osmophloeum,
which grows in Taiwan's natural hardwood forests, could be a more economical
and sustainable source of cinnamon oil than isolating it from bark, Chang says.
Though
the team only tested the oil against the yellow fever mosquito, cinnamon oil
should prove similarly lethal to the larvae of other mosquito species, the
researchers say. In further studies they plan to test cinnamon oil against other
types of mosquitoes as well as different commercial pesticides.
"We think that cinnamon oil might also affect adult mosquitoes by acting as a
repellant," Chang says. The researchers haven't yet tested this theory, but
they plan to find out in the near future.
The
Council of Agriculture of the Executive Yuan, a government agency in Taiwan,
provided support for this research.
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