Abstract

.Pyrethroid resistance is a significant threat to agricultural, urban and public health pest control activities. Because economic incentives for the production of novel active ingredients for the control of public health pests are lacking, this field is particularly affected by the potential failure of pyrethroid‐based insecticides brought about by increasing pyrethroid resistance. As a result, innovative approaches are desperately needed to overcome insecticide resistance, particularly in mosquitoes that transmit deadly and debilitating pathogens. Numerous studies have demonstrated the potential of plant essential oils to enhance the efficacy of pyrethroids. The toxicity of pyrethroids combined with plant oils is significantly greater than the baseline toxicity of either oils or pyrethroids applied alone, which suggests there are synergistic interactions between components of these mixtures. The present study examined the potential of eight plant essential oils applied in one of two concentrations (1% and 5%) to enhance the toxicity of various pyrethroids (permethrin, natural pyrethrins, deltamethrin and β‐cyfluthrin). The various plant essential oils enhanced the pyrethroids to differing degrees. The levels of enhancement provided by combinations of plant essential oils and pyrethroids in comparison with pyrethroids alone were calculated and synergistic outcomes characterized. Numerous plant essential oils significantly synergized a variety of pyrethroids; type I pyrethroids were synergized to a greater degree than type II pyrethroids. Eight plant essential oils significantly enhanced 24‐h mortality rates provided by permethrin and six plant essential oils enhanced 24‐h mortality rates obtained with natural pyrethrins. By contrast, only three plant essential plants significantly enhanced the toxicity of deltamethrin and β‐cyfluthrin. Of the plant essential oils that enhanced the toxicity of these pyrethroids, some produced varying levels of synergism and antagonism. Geranium, patchouli and Texas cedarwood oils produced the highest levels of synergism, displaying co‐toxicity factors of > 100 in some combinations. To assess the levels of enhancement and synergism of other classes of insecticide, malathion was also applied in combination with the plant oils. Significant antagonism was provided by a majority of the plant essential oils applied in combination with this insecticide, which suggests that plant essential oils may act to inhibit the oxidative activation processes within exposed adult mosquitoes.

Highlights

  • Synergists are important components of some insecticide formulations and prevent the detoxification of active ingredients of insecticides (Metcalf, 1967; Yu, 2015)

  • The most toxic insecticide for Ae. aegypti in this study was β-cyfluthrin, with an estimated LD50 value of 0.03 μg/g mosquito. This was followed by permethrin, deltamethrin, malathion and natural pyrethrins, with LD50 values of 0.42 μg/g, 0.58 μg/g, 1.42 μg/g and 6.21 μg/g mosquito, respectively

  • The lethal dosages required to produce 25% mortality (LD25) values for β-cyfluthrin, deltamethrin, permethrin, malathion and natural pyrethrins were 0.004 μg/g, 0.01 μg/g, 0.19 μg/g, 1.02 μg/g and 2.87 μg/g mosquito, respectively

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Summary

Introduction

Synergists are important components of some insecticide formulations and prevent the detoxification of active ingredients of insecticides (Metcalf, 1967; Yu, 2015). These compounds function by inhibiting the enzymatic pathways that broadly metabolize and aid in the excretion of particular toxicants encountered by insects within their environments (Metcalf, 1967). If insecticide resistance to select modes of action is mediated by upregulated detoxification mechanisms, synergists may inhibit these processes. In this scenario, synergists may facilitate similar insecticidal activity in both insecticide-resistant and insecticide-susceptible strains of mosquito

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