| Literature DB >> 30090021 |
Antoine Sanon1, Ilboudo Zakaria1, Dabire-Binso Clémentine L2, Ba Malick Niango2, Nébié Roger Charles Honora3.
Abstract
Cowpea is an essential food legume in the tropics and particularly for sub-Saharan African populations. Postharvest grain storage, however, is a major constraint for crop expansion and year-round availability due to the cowpea weevil, Callosobruchus maculatus F., the main storage pest of cowpeas in West Africa. The use of chemicals for cowpea storage is a common practice which represents, however, a risk for consumers, environment, and could also exacerbate pest control. In Burkina Faso, since the early 2000s, several scientific investigations have focused on the control of C maculatus using botanicals considered as promising and safe alternatives to chemicals. The aim of this review is to take stock of the research conducted and to identify the potential candidates on which future studies in this field will focus. The set of data analyzed show that several plants materials, including powders, crushed plants and essential oils (EO), were active against eggs, larvae, and adults of C maculatus, through dose-dependent mortality responses. However, EO extracted from native aromatic plants have yielded the most promising results, specifically EO from Ocimum canum appeared as the best candidate control agent. Other potentially interested EO tested included Hyptis suaveolens, Hyptis spicigera, and Lippia multiflora. Based on these results, attempts to optimize the use of EO for cowpea storage were conducted in laboratory and field conditions. Side effects of botanicals toward the main biological control agent, the ectoparasitoid Dinarmus basalis have also been highlighted. The results are discussed in a view of practical use of botanicals and EO as safe alternatives for Integrated Pest Management in stored cowpeas in Africa and developing countries.Entities:
Keywords: Botanicals; Callosobruchus maculatus; IPM; cowpea storage; essential oils; safe control methods
Year: 2018 PMID: 30090021 PMCID: PMC6077890 DOI: 10.1177/1179543318790260
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Insect Sci ISSN: 1179-5433
Plants material used in experiments for C maculatus control from the 2000s to the present in Burkina Faso.
| Plant species tested | Family name | Plant material used | Experiments | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Capparaceae | Crushed fresh leaves, synthetic methyl isothiocyanate | Bioassays, storage trials, side effects on parasitoids | 58-60 | |
| Capparaceae | Crushed fresh plants | Bioassays, storage trials | 52 | |
| Lamiaceae | Plant powder; essential oils | Bioassays, behavioral studies, side effects on parasitoids, storage trials | 51, 53, 54, 57, 61-64 | |
| Lamiaceae | Plant powder; essential oils | Bioassays, side effects on parasitoids, storage trials | 53, 54, 57, 61-64 | |
| Lamiaceae | Plant powder; essential oils | Bioassays, storage trials | 53, 54, 57, 64 | |
| Verbenaceae | Plant powder; essential oils | Bioassays, storage trials | 53, 54, 57, 64 |
Overall biological activity of powders, crushed plant material, and essential oils from plants tested against several stages of Callosobruchus maculatus from the 2000s to the present in Burkina Faso.[51,52,60,61,64]
| Plant material tested | Dose-dependent toxicity | Repellence | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adults | Oviposition | Eggs | Larvae and pupae | Adults | |
| Powders | − | + | ++ | − | ++ |
| Crushed plant material | +++ | ++ | ++ | + | nd |
| Essential oils | +++ | +++ | ++ | Variable | +++ |
“−” no effect; “+” low effect; “++” high effect; “+++” very high effect; “nd” effect not determined.
Major chemical compounds found in different plant materials tested in Burkina Faso.
| Plant species | Plant material tested | Major components | References |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Crushed leaves | Sulfur containing compounds (methyl isothiocyanate) |
|
|
| Crushed leaves | Flavonoid; phenols |
|
|
| Powder | nd | |
| Essential oils | 1-8 cineole; camphor; |
| |
|
| Powder | nd | |
| Essential oils | β-caryophyllene; sabinene; 1,8-cineole |
| |
|
| Powder | nd | |
| Essential oils | α-pinene; β-caryophyllene |
| |
|
| Powder | nd | |
| Essential oils | Thymol; |
|
Diversity of side effects of different plant materials on Dinarmus basalis, an ectoparasitoid or bruchid larvae/pupae.[53,58,62,63]
| Type of experiments | Plant materials | Side effects | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Toxicity | Parasitism ability | Postembryonic development | Behavior | ||
| LC50 determination | Methyl isothiocyanate | Adults and larvae | |||
| Essential oils of | Adults and larvae | ||||
| Sublethal doses applied | Powders and essential oils of | Reduction | Inhibition | Repellence and habituation process | |
Gray boxes = no data available.