The Free Press Journal

Coconut oil compounds better than repellents

- PIC: TWIPU.COM

Compounds derived from coconut oil are better than DEET at preventing disease transmissi­on and discomfort associated with insect bites, according to a study. For more than 60 years, DEET has been considered the gold standard in insect repellents – the most effective and long-lasting available commercial­ly, said researcher­s from US Department of Agricultur­e (USDA).

However, increasing regulation­s and growing public health concerns about synthetic repellents and insecticid­es like DEET have sparked interest in developing plant-based repellents that are more effective and longer lasting, they said.

The study, published in the journal Scientific Reports, identified specific coconut oil fatty acids that have strong repellency and long-lasting effectiven­ess against multiple insects – mosquitoes, ticks, biting flies and bed bugs – that can transmit diseases to humans and animals.

A team of scientists led by Junwei Zhu found that the coconut oil compounds were effective against biting flies and bed bugs for two weeks and had lasting repellency against ticks for at least one week in laboratory tests. The compound showed strong repellency against mosquitoes when higher concentrat­ions of coconut oil compounds were topically applied.

Some people refuse to use DEET and turn to folk remedies or plant-based repellents. Most currently available plant-based repellents work for only a short period, Zhu noted. The coconut oil-derived free fatty acid mixture – lauric acid, capric acid and caprylic acid as well as their correspond­ing methyl esters – provides strong repellency against blood-sucking insects.

By encapsulat­ing coconut fatty acids into a starchbase­d formula, field trials showed this all-natural formula could provide protection to cattle against stable flies for up to 96 hours or four days, researcher­s said.

Coconut oil fatty acids also provided more than 90 per cent repellency against mosquitoes – including Aedes aegypti, the mosquito that can transmit the Zika virus, according to Zhu. These coconut oil-derived compounds offer longer-lasting protection than any other known natural repellent against insect blood-feeding, Zhu said.

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