Indigenous tribes of
Montana and Alberta wore braids of the grass and hung it in their homes
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US scientists have
identified the chemicals responsible for the mosquito-repelling activity of
sweetgrass, a plant traditionally used by some Native Americans to fend off the
bugs. In
laboratory tests, two sweetgrass compounds drove mosquitoes away from tantalizing
fake blood samples, just as well as the widely-used repellent Deet. Further
tests are needed to see how long the effects last. The researchers say folk
remedies are a rich source of possible new repellents.
"This
is the fourth plant that we've investigated in this manner," said Charles
Cantrell, a research chemist who works for the US Department of Agriculture.
"The
neat thing about this one is that it produces a compound, coumarin, which has a
great odour and was known... to have some repelling properties. And it's very
safe."
BBC report continues:
Dr
Cantrell was speaking in Boston at the 250th national meeting of the American
Chemical Society.
"There's
an interesting story about coumarin," he told journalists at the
conference.
"Back
in the 90s, Avon 'Skin So Soft' had a product that people discovered actually
worked well as an insect repellent. It wasn't marketed as an insect repellent,
but the effectiveness was well-known among consumers.
"Scientists
did an investigation and one of the constituents in Skin So Soft was coumarin -
which we've now isolated from sweetgrass."
Despite
this, coumarin is not currently registered or marketed as a repellent, Dr
Cantrell said.
The
second key ingredient he and his colleagues identified in sweetgrass was
phytol, a common constituent in essential oils from plants. Phytol, similarly,
is known to repel insects but is not currently marketed for that purpose.
Splat count
Dr
Cantrell's team isolated these chemicals from the grass by passing steam
through it, separating the oily and volatile compounds and then further
purifying them into 12 fractions.
Those
12 samples were presented to mosquitoes in a special test.
"The
bioassay is designed to mimic human skin," Dr Cantrell explained.
"You put a blood mimic in a little well and cover it with a
membrane."
Screengrab: Dr Cantrell describes
traditional sweetgrass customs, and some of his experiments
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That
membrane is then perfumed with the chemical to be tested, and the researchers
simply count the bites.
"We'll
have five mosquitoes per little chamber. You can watch them bite the membrane,
but for final confirmation... you squash them, to see which ones contain the
red dye."
There
is growing demand for non-synthetic alternatives to repellents like Deet
Once
these results were in, the team identified the specific molecules involved
using spectrometry.
Coumarin
and phytol were the stand-outs, Dr Cantrell said.
"In
this three minute time-frame, measuring the number of bites, they were just as
effective as Deet."
The
next step is to test them over a more practical timeframe.
"We
don't know yet what the duration of repellency is. It may work well in our
bioassay for three minutes, but how does it work for three hours?
"These are questions
that we're going to try to answer over the next year or two."
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