Catnip Repels
Mosquitoes More Effectively Than DEET
CHICAGO, August 27 --
Researchers report that nepetalactone, the essential oil
in catnip that gives the plant its characteristic odor, is
about ten times more effective at repelling mosquitoes
than DEET -- the compound used in most commercial insect
repellents. The finding was reported today at the 222nd
national meeting of the American Chemical Society, the
world's largest scientific society, by the same Iowa State
University research group that two years ago discovered
that catnip also repels cockroaches.
Entomologist Chris Peterson,
Ph.D., with Joel Coats, Ph.D., chair of the university's
entomology department, led the effort to test catnip's
ability to repel mosquitoes. Peterson, a former
post-doctoral research associate at the school, is now
with the U.S. Department of Agriculture Forest Service,
Wood Products Insects Research Unit, in Starkville, Miss.
While they used so-called yellow
fever mosquitoes (Aedes aegypti) -- one of several species
of mosquitoes found in the United States -- Peterson says
catnip should work against all types of mosquitoes.
Aedes aegypti, which can carry
the yellow fever virus from one host to another, is found
in most parts of the United States. Yellow fever itself,
however, only occurs in Africa and South America,
according to the Centers for Disease Control. Vaccines and
mosquito control programs have essentially wiped out the
disease in the United States, although there have been
isolated reports of unvaccinated travelers returning with
the disease. The last reported outbreak in this country
was in 1905.
Peterson put groups of 20
mosquitoes in a two-foot glass tube, half of which was
treated with nepetalactone. After 10 minutes, only an
average of 20 percent -- about four mosquitoes -- remained
on the side of the tube treated with a high dose (1.0
percent) of the oil. In the low-dose test (0.1 percent)
with nepetalactone, an average of 25 percent -- five
mosquitoes -- stayed on the treated side. The same tests
with DEET (diethyl-m-toluamide) resulted in approximately
40 percent to 45 percent -- eight-nine mosquitoes --
remaining on the treated side.
In the laboratory, repellency
is measured on a scale ranging from +100 percent,
considered highly repellent, to --100 percent, considered
a strong attractant. A compound with a +100 percent
repellency rating would repel all mosquitoes, while --100
percent would attract them all. A rating of zero means
half of the insects would stay on the treated side and
half on the untreated side. In Peterson's tests, catnip
ranged from +49 percent to +59 percent at high doses, and
+39 percent to +53 percent at low doses. By comparison, at
the same doses, DEET's repellency was only about +10
percent in this bioassay, he notes.
Peterson says nepetalactone
is about 10 times more effective than DEET because it
takes about one-tenth as much nepetalactone as DEET to
have the same effect. Most commercial insect repellents
contain about 5 percent to 25 percent DEET. Presumably,
much less catnip oil would be needed in a formulation to
have the same level of repellency as a DEET-based
repellent.
Why catnip repels mosquitoes
is still a mystery, says Peterson. "It might simply be
acting as an irritant or they don't like the smell. But
nobody really knows why insect repellents work."
No animal or human tests are
yet scheduled for nepetalactone, although Peterson is
hopeful that will take place in the future.
If subsequent testing shows
nepetalactone is safe for people, Peterson thinks it would
not be too difficult to commercialize it as an insect
repellent. Extracting nepetalactone oil from catnip is
fairly easily, he says. "Any high school science lab would
have the equipment to distill this, and on the industrial
scale it's quite easy."
Catnip is a perennial herb
belonging to the mint family and grows wild in most parts
of the United States, although it also is cultivated for
commercial use. Catnip is native to Europe and was
introduced to this country in the late 18th century. It is
primarily known for the stimulating effect it has on cats,
although some people use the leaves in tea, as a meat
tenderizer and even as a folk treatment for fevers, colds,
cramps and migraines.
A patent application for the
use of catnip compounds as insect repellents was submitted
last year by the Iowa State University Research
Foundation. Funding for the research was from the Iowa
Agriculture Experiment Station.
Chris Peterson, Ph.D., is a
former post-doctoral research associate at Iowa State
University in Ames, Iowa, and is now a Research
Entomologist with the U.S. Department of Agriculture
Forest Service, Wood Products Insect Research Service, in
Starkville, Miss.
Joel R. Coats, Ph.D., is
professor of entomology and toxicology and Chair of the
Department of Entomology at Iowa State University in Ames,
Iowa.
Source:
American
Chemical Society