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Chemical Composition and Insecticidal Activity of Crithmum Maritimum L. Essential Oil against Stored‐Product Beetle Tribolium Castaneum
Author(s) -
Mustapha Mayssa Ben,
ZardiBergaoui Afifa,
Chaieb Ikbel,
Flamini Guido,
Ascrizzi Roberta,
Jannet Hichem Ben
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
chemistry and biodiversity
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.427
H-Index - 70
eISSN - 1612-1880
pISSN - 1612-1872
DOI - 10.1002/cbdv.201900552
Subject(s) - essential oil , chemistry , composition (language) , chemical composition , pesticide , toxicity , fraction (chemistry) , horticulture , food science , insect , toxicology , botany , biology , chromatography , agronomy , organic chemistry , philosophy , linguistics
Several plant essential oils have been used against diverse insect pests since, unlike conventional pesticides, they pose almost no risk to humans and the environment. For this reason, the essential oil (EO) isolated from the fresh leaves of Crithmum maritimum L. and its fractions (F 1 –F 5 ) obtained by chromatographic simplification were investigated for their chemical profile, as well as for their toxicity and repellency effects against Tribolium castaneum ( Herbst ) adults. The analysis by GC/MS allowed the identification of 92.8–99.1 % of the compositions of the total oil (EO) and of its fractions (F 1 –F 5 ). The EO and its fractions F 3 –F 5 were characterized by the presence of a high amount of phenylpropanoids (94.4, 94.8, 93.6, and 88.7 %, respectively): in all the samples, dill apiole was the most abundant component (EO: 94.1 %, F 3 : 94.6 %, F 4 : 93.4 %, and F 5 : 83.3 %). In addition, the repellency assay results showed that the volatile fraction F 5 and the complete EO exhibited a higher repellency towards T. castaneum (97 % and 93 %, respectively) after 2 h of exposure at the dose of 0.04 μL/cm 2 . The median lethal dose of the topical application of the EO was 9 %. Furthermore, the fraction F 1 possessed interesting contact toxicity against T. castaneum (80 % of mortality) at the concentration of 10 %. These results suggested that the essential oil of C. maritimum leaves might be used as an alternative to synthetic insecticides in order to prevent insects from damaging the stored products.

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