| Literature DB >> 32725319 |
Fang Fang1, Meilin Li1, Zitao Jiang1, Xiaodan Lu1, Jacques Guillot2, Hongbin Si3.
Abstract
Essential oils and their components represent an appealing alternative strategy against parasitic mites. The chemical complexity and variability of essential oils limit their use and additional work is required to analyze the efficacy and application rate of essential oils' individual components. In the present study, the activity of five terpenes (terpinen-4-ol, citral, linalool, eugenol, and geraniol) was evaluated against Psoroptes cuniculi motile stages and eggs collected from naturally infected rabbits. Eugenol presented the best acaricidal efficacy with a median lethal concentration (LC50) value of less than 0.1% at 24 h, followed by geraniol (0.33%), linalool (0.38%), citral (0.46%), and terpinen-4-ol (0.66%). Geraniol and eugenol were able to kill all mites within 5 min at 1% concentration. The effective concentration to inhibit 50% (EC50) of egg hatching was 0.65%, 0.66%, 0.85%, 1.47%, and 2.87% for eugenol, geraniol, citral, terpinen-4-ol, and linalool, respectively. In conclusion, eugenol, geraniol, citral, terpinen-4-ol, and linalool should be considered as promising agents for the development of botanical acaricides against Psoroptes cuniculi.Entities:
Keywords: Acaricidal activity; Essential oils; Ovicidal activity; Psoroptes cuniculi; Terpenes
Year: 2020 PMID: 32725319 DOI: 10.1007/s00436-020-06823-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasitol Res ISSN: 0932-0113 Impact factor: 2.289