Pesticide and Environmental Update
Old-Time
Mosquito Remedy May Work Against Ticks, Too
By Luis Pons
A granddad's wisdom, already helpful in the fight against mosquitoes,
may also prove useful in battling disease-spreading ticks.
Last year, Agricultural Research Service (ARS) scientists in Oxford,
Miss., isolated compounds from a plant called American beautyberry that
enable its crushed leaves to repel mosquitoes.
This work, led by chemist Charles Cantrell at the ARS Natural Products
Utilization Research Unit in Oxford, was inspired by a tip another ARS
scientist—botanist Charles Bryson in Stoneville, Miss.—got long ago
from his grandfather: that beautyberry was used in northeastern
Mississippi to protect people and farm-work animals from biting bugs.
Now ARS scientists in Beltsville, Md., have shown that two beautyberry
compounds—callicarpenal and intermedeol—may effectively repel
blacklegged ticks as well.
Blacklegged ticks are the principal carrier of bacteria that in humans
cause Lyme disease, an affliction known for its fevers, headaches and
bull's-eye rash. Left untreated, this disease can cause severe and chronic
illness.
Blacklegged ticks, Ixodes scapularis, are the principal carrier of
bacteria that cause Lyme disease in humans. Preliminary studies by ARS
scientists in Maryland have shown that compounds from American beautyberry
plants may have use as repellents against them. Click the images for more
information about them.
ARS entomologists John Carroll, in the Animal Parasitic Diseases
Laboratory, Beltsville, and Jerome Klun, in the Chemicals Affecting Insect
Behavior Laboratory, also in Beltsville, tested the compounds by
administering them to cloth strips wrapped around a person's finger in
dosages at which the commercial repellent DEET repels ticks.
The treated strips repelled more than 95 percent of blacklegged
tick nymphs.
Callicarpenal did especially well in a separate duration test,
repelling all the blacklegged ticks tested for three hours after
application, and 53 percent after four hours.
The researchers also tested the natural compounds against nymphs of
lone star ticks, which transmit potentially serious human diseases known
as ehrlichioses.
The two compounds, as well as DEET, were considerably more potent
against blacklegged ticks than against lone star ticks. An experimental
repellent developed by ARS and known as SS220 was most effective against
the lone star variety.
While the findings are preliminary, the beautyberry compounds' usage
history leads Carroll to believe that callicarpenal and intermedeol have
potential for human use.
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