| Literature DB >> 28394284 |
Jodi M Fiorenzano1,2, Philip G Koehler3, Rui-De Xue4.
Abstract
Mosquito abatement programs contend with mosquito-borne diseases, insecticidal resistance, and environmental impacts to non-target organisms. However, chemical resources are limited to a few chemical classes with similar modes of action, which has led to insecticide resistance in mosquito populations. To develop a new tool for mosquito abatement programs that control mosquitoes while combating the issues of insecticidal resistance, and has low impacts of non-target organisms, novel methods of mosquito control, such as attractive toxic sugar baits (ATSBs), are being developed. Whereas insect baiting to dissuade a behavior, or induce mortality, is not a novel concept, as it was first introduced in writings from 77 AD, mosquito baiting through toxic sugar baits (TSBs) had been quickly developing over the last 60 years. This review addresses the current body of research of ATSB by providing an overview of active ingredients (toxins) include in TSBs, attractants combined in ATSB, lethal effects on mosquito adults and larvae, impact on non-target insects, and prospects for the use of ATSB.Entities:
Keywords: attractive toxic sugar baits; mosquito control; sugar feeding
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28394284 PMCID: PMC5409599 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph14040398
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Active ingredients (AI) and percent AI incorporated into toxic sugar baits and attractive toxic sugar baits for adult mosquito control, by group, subgroup, class, common names, and mode of action (MOA) as indicated by the Insecticide Resistance Action Committee (IRAC) [20].
| Group # | Subgroup | Class | Common Name | Mode of Action | % Active Ingredient |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1A | Carbamates | Bendiocarb | Acetylcholinesterase (AChE) inhibitors | 10 g/L |
| 1B | Organophosphates | Pirimiphos-methyl | |||
| Malathion | 0.10, 0.25, 0.50, 1.0 mg | ||||
| 2 | 2B | Phenylprazoles (Fiproles) | Fipronil | GABA-gated chloride channel blockers | 0.10% |
| 9.10% | |||||
| 3 | 3A | Pyrethroids | λ-Cyhalothrin | Sodium channel modulators | 10 g/L |
| Bifenthrin | |||||
| Cyfluthrin | |||||
| Deltamethrin | |||||
| Etofenprox | |||||
| Permethrin | |||||
| D-Phenothrin (sumithrin) | |||||
| α-Cypermethrin | |||||
| Bifenthrin | 7.90% | ||||
| Cyfluthrin | 11.80% | ||||
| Deltamethrin | 4.75% | ||||
| Permethrin | 36.80% | ||||
| 4 | 4A | Neonicotinoids | dinotefuran | Nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) competitive modulators | 0.01% |
| Imidacloprid | 0.50% | ||||
| Thiamethoxam | 21.60% | ||||
| 5 | 5 | Spinosyns | Spinosad | Nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) allosteric modulators | 0.04% |
| 2.46% | |||||
| 6 | 6 | Avermectins, Milbemycins | Ivermectin | Glutamate-gated chlorida channel (GluCl) allosteric modulators | 0.10% |
| 7 | 7C | Pyriproxyfen | Pyriproxyfen | Juvenile hormone mimics | 1 mg/L |
| 8 | 8D | Borates | Boric acid | Miscellaneous non-specific (multi-site) inhibitors | 0.0001%, 0.001%, 0.01%, 0.1%, 1% |
| 0.10% | |||||
| 0.25%, 0.50%, 0.75%, 1% | |||||
| 1.50% | |||||
| 2% | |||||
| 11 | 11A | Biopesticide | Microbial gut disruptors | N/A | |
| 11B | Biopesticide | Microbial gut disruptors | N/A | ||
| 13 | 13 | Pyrroles | Chlorfenapyr | Uncouplers of oxidative phosporylation via disruption of proton gradient | 0.50% |
| 21.45% | |||||
| 21 | 21A | METI acaricides and insecticides | Tolfenpyrad | Mitochondrial complex I electron transport inhibitors | 1% |
| N/A | N/A | Double stranded RNA (dsRNA) | Remebee® | Endogenous insect gene slicer | 0, 100, 500, 1000, 5000 ng/µL |
| Botanical | Eugenol | Unknown | 0.80% | ||
| 1% | |||||
| beta-cyclodextrin encapsulated garlic-oil | 0.40% | ||||
| Biopesticide | 1000 bacteria/mL | ||||
Attractive sugar bait studies (ATSB) by attractant and active ingredient. Data represents attractant sources, percentage of attractants and phagostimulants, references for studies with dates, and results of studies.
| Attractant/Phagostimulant | Active Ingredient | Reference # and Year of Study | Mosquito Species | Results/Control |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ~85% overripe/rotting nectarines and 15% brown sugar | Spinosad | [ | ~90% | |
| 75% overripe/rotting nectarines and 10% brown sugar | Spinosad | [ | 91% | |
| 80% overripe/rotting nectarines and 10% brown sugar | Spinosad | [ | 94% | |
| 75% overripe/rotting Prickly pear and 20% brown sugar | Boric acid | [ | ~97% | |
| 29% Goya Mango juice and 29% Goya Guava juice and 21% brown sugar | [ | ~52% | ||
| 30% overripe/rotting Guava and 30% Honey melon and 12% brown sugar | [ | ~92% | ||
| 30% overripe/rotting Guava and 30% Honey melon and 12% brown sugar | Boric acid | [ | 90% | |
| 95% overripe/rotting Plums and 10% brown sugar | Boric acid | [ | ~85% | |
| 95% overripe/rotting Plums and 10% brown sugar | N/A | [ | >90% Stained | |
| 35% Guava juice and 10% brown sugar | Boric acid | [ | 41% | |
| 85% | ||||
| 40% | ||||
| Tolfenpyrad | 86% | |||
| 45% | ||||
| 36% | ||||
| Chlorfenapyr | 100% | |||
| 48% | ||||
| 43% |
Attractive sugar bait studies (ATSB) with commercial-attractant formulation. Data represents attractant sources and phagostimulants, references for studies with dates, and results of studies.
| Attractant/Phagostimulant | Active Ingredient | Reference # and Year of Study | Mosquito Species | Results/Control |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Commercial-Attractant Formulation | dinotefuran | [ | >70% | |
| Eugenol | [ | 94% | ||
| 62% | ||||
| 70% | ||||
| 55% | ||||
| 69% | ||||
| 89% | ||||
| 57% | ||||
| [ | 62% | |||
| beta-cyclodextrin encapsulated garlic-oil | [ | 70% | ||
| [ | 81% four days post application, 97.5% overall decline |
Non-target studies conducted with commercially available attractive sugar bait (ASB) with insect orders and families evaluated for consumption effects of bait and secondary effects though consumption-affected mosquitoes.
| Reference # and Year of Study | Evaluation Method of ASB | Non-Targets Insect Orders | Percentage of Insects Stained |
|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Consumption effects-Barrier | Hymenoptera | 1.30% |
| Lepidoptera | 0.60% | ||
| Coleoptera | 0.60% | ||
| Diptera | 15.00% | ||
| Hemiptera | 0.80% | ||
| Orthoptera | 1.00% | ||
| Neuroptera | 0.30% | ||
| [ | Consumption effects-Barrier | Hymenoptera | 15% Flowering, 0.85% Non-flowering |
| Lepidoptera | 6.71% Flowering, 0.75% Non-flowering | ||
| Coleoptera | 5.18% Flowering, 0.69% Non-flowering | ||
| Diptera | 17.85% Flowering, 1.45% Non-flowering | ||
| Hemiptera | 3.21% Flowering, 0.27% Non-flowering | ||
| Orthoptera | 1.25% Flowering, 0.50 Non-flowering | ||
| [ | Consumption effects-Barrier | Hymenoptera | 9.2% Flowering, 0.4% Non-flowering |
| Lepidoptera | 2.5% Flowering, 0.6% Non-flowering | ||
| Coleoptera | 3.5% Flowering, 0.5% Non-flowering | ||
| Diptera | 11.0% Flowering, 2.1% Non-flowering | ||
| Hemiptera | 7.6% Flowering, 0.0% Non-flowering | ||
| Orthoptera | Insect order not evaluated | ||
| Consumption effects-Bait Stations | Hymenoptera | 0.003 | |
| Lepidoptera | 0.30% | ||
| Coleoptera | 0.10% | ||
| Diptera | 4.30% | ||
| Hemiptera | Insect order not evaluated | ||
| Orthoptera | 0.30% | ||
| [ | Consumption effects | Does not specify | 9.2%: 93% of the 9.2% from flowering |