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Towards the optimization of botanical insecticides research: Aedes aegypti larvicidal natural products in French Guiana

Authors :
Falkowski, Michaël
Jahn-oyac, Arnaud
Odonne, Guillaume
Flora, Claudiane
Estevez, Yannick
Touré, Seindé
Boulogne, Isabelle
Robinson, Jean-charles
Béreau, Didier
Petit, Philippe
Azam, Didier
Coke, Maïra
Issaly, Jean
Gaborit, Pascal
Stien, Didier
Eparvier, Véronique
Dusfour, Isabelle
Houël, Emeline
Falkowski, Michaël
Jahn-oyac, Arnaud
Odonne, Guillaume
Flora, Claudiane
Estevez, Yannick
Touré, Seindé
Boulogne, Isabelle
Robinson, Jean-charles
Béreau, Didier
Petit, Philippe
Azam, Didier
Coke, Maïra
Issaly, Jean
Gaborit, Pascal
Stien, Didier
Eparvier, Véronique
Dusfour, Isabelle
Houël, Emeline
Source :
Acta Tropica (0001-706X) (Elsevier BV), 2020-01 , Vol. 201 , P. 105179 (12p.)
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Natural products have proven to be an immeasurable source of bioactive compounds. The exceptional biodiversity encountered in Amazonia, alongside a rich entomofauna and frequent interactions with various herbivores is the crucible of a promising chemodiversity. This prompted us to search for novel botanical insecticides in French Guiana. As this French overseas department faces severe issues linked to insects, notably the strong incidence of vector-borne infectious diseases, we decided to focus our research on products able to control the mosquito Aedes aegypti. We tested 452 extracts obtained from 85 species originating from 36 botanical families and collected in contrasted environments against an Aedes aegypti laboratory strain susceptible to all insecticides, and a natural population resistant to both pyrethroid and organophosphate insecticides collected in Cayenne for the most active of them. 8 species (Maytenus oblongata Reissek, Celastraceae; Costus erythrothyrsus Loes., Costaceae; Humiria balsamifera Aubl., Humiriaceae; Sextonia rubra (Mez) van der Werff, Lauraceae; Piper hispidum Sw., Piperaceae; Laetia procera (Poepp.) Eichl., Salicaceae; Matayba arborescens (Aubl.) Radlk., Sapindaceae; and Cupania scrobitulata Rich., Sapindaceae) led to extracts exhibiting more than 50% larval mortality after 48h of exposition at 100 µg/mL against the natural population and were considered active. Selectivity and phytochemistry of these extracts were therefore investigated and discussed, and some active compounds highlighted. Multivariate analysis highlighted that solvents, plant tissues, plant family and location had a significant effect on mortality while light, available resources and vegetation type did not. Through this case study we highlighted that plant defensive chemistry mechanisms are crucial while searching for novel insecticidal products.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Acta Tropica (0001-706X) (Elsevier BV), 2020-01 , Vol. 201 , P. 105179 (12p.)
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1409518894
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016.j.actatropica.2019.105179