Essential Oils Links for Bug Repellants
Lemon Eucalyptus Facts
From the CDC
Oil
of lemon eucalyptus [p-menthane 3,8-diol (PMD)], a plant based repellent, is also registered with EPA. In two recent scientific
publications, when oil of lemon eucalyptus was tested against mosquitoes found in the US
it provided protection similar to repellents with low concentrations of DEET.
From WebMD
Due to concern over mosquitoes carrying West Nile Virus, the CDC has made several new entries on their list
of recommended repellents. Previously their only recommendation was any repellent containing the ingredient DEET. Now the
CDC recommends picaridin, which is a chemical, or oil of lemon eucalyptus, but says that DEET is still on the list of recommended
repellents.
Although picaridin and oil of lemon eucalyptus have been available as repellents in other parts of the world,
they have had a difficult time getting a foothold in the U.S. due to the prevalence of DEET. Now, though, many may start using
picaridin or lemon eucalyptus oil, which lack the unpleasant odor of DEET.
Catnip Oil
From CNN
Worried about getting West Nile Virus, encephalitis, or some other nasty disease spread by mosquitoes?
You may some day find relief in oil that can be extracted from catnip.
New research presented at the meeting of the American Chemical Society indicates nepetalactone (pron. nep-PEET-all-ACT-tone),
the oil in catnip that gives it a distinctive minty odor, is a highly effective mosquito repellent.
The research was conducted by Chris Peterson and Joel Coats at Iowa State University. The scientists put 20
mosquitoes in a two-foot-long tube -- half of which was treated with the catnip oil.
After 10 minutes, only 20 percent of the mosquitoes (about four of them) remained on the treated side. In
a similar test with DEET, the popular mosquito repellent, 40-45 percent of the mosquitoes remained on the treated side.
From Iowa State University
AMES, Iowa -- Iowa State University researchers have begun testing catnip oil as a possible repellent
against mosquitoes carrying the West Nile Virus.
Joel Coats, an Iowa State entomologist, began investigating the idea
of using catnip oil as a mosquito repellent five years ago with Chris Peterson, a former graduate student. The researchers
found that catnip oil repels mosquitoes significantly better than the compound used in most commercial bug repellents. Nepetalactone,
the primary active ingredient in catnip oil, was recently patented by ISU.
"Consumers are developing some concern about
traditional bug sprays. They seem to be looking for alternatives and believe that natural alternatives may be safer," Coats
said.
Gretchen Schultz, an Iowa State entomology graduate student, is now working with Coats to test nepetalactone's
effectiveness against the mosquito species that carries West Nile Virus. The virus can cause fatal encephalitis in humans
and horses, and can kill certain domestic and wild birds.
The researchers also are conducting tests to compare the
repellency of catnip oil to DEET (diethyl-meta-toluamide), the compound used in many commercial repellents. In laboratory
tests, the nepetalactone repelled more mosquitoes at lower concentrations. When tested on cockroaches, the repellency of catnip
oil didn't last as long as the DEET. Schultz and Coats are currently testing the repellency time of catnip oil against mosquitoes.
"We've
begun testing on the species of mosquito that transmits West Nile Virus," Coats said. "We also are studying how long catnip
oil will protect against mosquitoes. That seems to be the big issue at this time."
Catnip is primarily known for its
stimulating effect on cats, although some people use the leaves in tea, as a meat tenderizer and as a folk treatment for fevers,
colds, cramps and migraines. The catnip plant is a perennial herb in the mint family and grows wild in most parts of the United
States.
Coats warns that pure catnip oil is too strong to put directly on skin. The doses tested in his laboratory
only contain one to five percent of the essential oil. No human testing is planned at Iowa State.