© Benaki Phytopathological Institute
Sublethal effects of essential oils on
Acanthoscelides obtectus
97
damage of the beans. A similar rapid action
has been reported for citrus peel essential
oil vapours against larvae of
Callosobruchus
maculatus
F. (7).
Previous studies have shown that the
essential oils and their main components,
monoterpenoids, adversely affect the
growth and development of larvae of vari-
ous species via ingestion (8, 13, 15). Our re-
sults showed that the essential oils can also
affect larval and pupal growth and develop-
ment as well as fecundity of the survivors via
their vapour action.
Exposure of
A. obtectus
larvae and pu-
pae to sublethal doses of lavender and rose-
mary essential oil vapours did not affect the
developmental time to adult emergence ex-
cept for the doses causing about 70% mor-
tality, where a slight prolongation of the de-
velopmental time was observed mainly in
the male adults. On the contrary, in the case
of the eucalyptus essential oil, a prolonged
larval developmental time was observed at
all doses tested. Differences in the chemical
composition of the three essential oils test-
ed (levanter, rosemary and eucalyptus) (17)
may account for their different biological ac-
tion against
A. obtectus
.
Regarding the effect of essential oil va-
pours on the weight of adults derived from
treated larvae or pupae, a slight decrease
was observed which, in most cases, was
not statistically significant. In similar experi-
ments, Gunderson
et al.
(8) and Lee
et al.
(15)
recorded higher levels of decrease in adult
weight (in some cases up to 60%). However,
in those experiments the insects were not
exposed to oil vapours as the essential oils
had been incorporated into their diet.
Adult longevity of
A. obtectus
seems to
depend on the stage exposed to the essen-
tial oil vapours and the sex of the surviving
adult. In fact, the longevity of the adults of
both sexes derived from larvae exposed to
essential oil vapours was not affected at all
doses tested, whereas the exposure of pu-
pae to essential oil vapours resulted in an
average 14-34% reduction in the longev-
ity of the female adults at all doses tested.
The males were less affected than females,
as the longevity of male adults was reduced
only in the case of eucalyptus essential oil.
The most severe physiological effect of
exposure of larvae and pupae to sublethal
doses of the essential oil vapours was the re-
duction in the female fecundity although the
viability of the eggs laid was not decreased
significantly. In fact, females emerged from
treated larvae or pupae laid 25-40% fewer
eggs than control females. The effects of es-
sential oil vapours on the male reproductive
system were not investigated in the pres-
ent study, but similar studies (8) have shown
that males were less sensitive than females.
Overall, an adverse impact on the devel-
opment and especially fecundity of
A. obtec-
tus
individuals surviving the exposure to va-
pours of three different essential oils should
be added to their main rapid mortality ac-
tion. However, in the interpretation of sub-
lethal effects it is difficult to differentiate
whether these effects are due to insecticid-
al action or to inherent characteristics of the
insecticide-selected individuals (6). Subse-
quently, comparison between treated and
control individuals would, thus, be biased
(2). In fact, in preliminary experiments with
A. obtectus
adults resistant to lavender es-
sential oil vapours (DP Papachristos, un-
publ.), a reduced biological potential (lon-
ger developmental time and lower intrinsic
rate of increase compared to susceptible
population) was observed, but no data are
available at the moment for the other insect
stages. The practical implications of these
findings suggest that, when
A. obtectus
is
exposed to lavender, rosemary or eucalyp-
tus essential oil vapours, satisfactory control
may be achieved even if some insects sur-
vive the treatment.
Literature Cited
Abbott, W.W. 1925. A method of computing the
1.
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Journal of Eco-
nomic Entomology
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Alford, A.R. and Holmes, J.A. 1986. Sublethal ef-
2.
fects of carbaryl, aminocarb, fenitrothion, and
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