PHYTOCHEMICAL AND
TOXICOLOGICAL STUDIES ON ESSENTIAL OILS OF AROMATIC
PLANTS AGAINST Tetranychus urticae
Koch.
Doctor of
Philosophy, Cairo University, Faculty of Agriculture by Ehab Mostafa Bakr
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Under
supervision:
- Prof.
Dr.: Ahmed Abd-El-Salam Barakat.
- Prof.
Dr.: Hany Mahmoud Ashour Badawy.
- Prof.
Dr.: Ahmed Mohamed Ibraheem Farrag.
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Abstract
- This study
was aimed to evaluate the acaricidal activity of
some essential oils and some of their main
component against the two spotted mite Tetranychus
urticae. Essential oils used in this study
were coriander herb and seed oils, cumin seed
oil, eucalyptus oil, geranium herb oil, lemon
grass oil, marjoram oil, parsley herb and seed
oils, two species of mint peppermint and
spearmint oils, sweet basil herb oil and bitter
orange new leaves oil.
- Results
showed that, parsley seed, sweet basil and
coriander herb oils proved superiority against
all of tested mite stages.
- Various
changes were observed in biological aspects of
survived mites protonymphs after exposure to LC50
concentrations of tested oils. Most investigated
oils significantly shortened adult oviposition
period and decrease egg number per female.
- Forty-six
compounds were identified in Parsley seed crude
oil. Apiol was the dominant compound in Parsley
seed crude oil, amounting to 41.49 %, followed by
myristicine amounting to 39.6 %. Phenylpropanoid
was the dominant chemical group amounting to 86.44
%.
Forty-three compounds were identified basil crude
oil. linalool was the dominant compound,
amounting to 41.62 % followed by eugenol
amounting to 20.51 % and cineole amounting to 9.19
%. Monoterpene was the dominant chemical group
amounting to 79.79 % followed by Sesquiterpene
amounting to 16.65 %.
Thirty-eight compounds were detected in coriander
herb oil. 2-decenal was the dominant compound
amounting to 37.23 % followed by decanal
amounting to 17.90 % and linalool amounting to 14.16
%. The dominant chemical group in coriander herb
oil was aldehyds with total amount 75.22 %
followed by monoterpenes amounting to 18.3%.
- After fractionation by TLC, the third fraction of
parsley seed oil, which contains apiol, was the
most potent fraction against mites adult females.
In case of coriander herb oil the second
fraction, which contains decanal (70.70 %),
undecanal (16.50 %) and tetradecanal (12.80 %)
proved to be the most potent fraction.
- Out of the
standard materials: cinole, decanal, eugenol,
limonene, linalool and undicanal. Eugenol was the
most effective substance against mite eggs
followed by limonene, decanal, undicanal,
linalool and cinole with LC50 values 0.99, 1.49,
1.95, 1.96, 3.14 and 141.66 %, respectively.
Lemonene was the most effective substance against
mite protonymphs followed by eugenol, linalool,
dicanal, undicanal and cinoele with LC50 values 0.28,
0.53, 0.97, 1.00, 1.45 and 2.41 %, respectively.
Also against mite adults lemonene proved to be
the most effective substance followed by eugenol,
decanal, linalool, undicanal and cineole with LC50
values 0.59, 0.71, 1.03, 1.34, 1.65, and 3.06 %,
respectively.
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