Daily News Archive
Government
Researchers Use Catnip Oil to Repel Termites
(from March 28, 2003)
According to the USDA Forest Service, the same catnip that people have
been giving to their cats for hundreds of years may also have a future
in termite control. Recent experiments by USDA Forest Service researcher
Chris Peterson show that catnip oil repels and even kills termites in
a laboratory setting. Dr. Peterson, a researcher with the Forest Service
Southern Research Station (SRS), and fellow researcher Janice Ems-Wilson,
a chemist at Valencia Community College in Orlando, FL, presented the
results of their research at the national meeting of the American Chemical
Society held March 23 - 27 in New Orleans.
Dr. Peterson has been testing essential catnip oil as a possible replacement
for the more toxic pesticides presently used to control termites. Probably
the most common termite control method is treating the soil next to
wood structures with chemical compounds: some of the active ingredients
of traditional termiticides, such as chlordane and chlorpyrifos, have
lost their registrations in the U.S. due to their toxicity. New, less
toxic compounds are being sought to fill the void.
The search for new termiticidal products is active. "The USDA Forest
Service routinely tests about three new termite formulations for effectiveness
every year, with a new active ingredient tested about once in every
two years," said Peterson. "Natural compounds from plants,
bacteria, and fungi could provide new commercial products that are less
toxic to humans and the environment."
For their termite study, the researchers infused sand with catnip essential
oil--the kind routinely sold in pet stores--to test the effectiveness
of the oil as a barrier to termite tunneling. To test vertical tunneling,
the researchers placed yellow pine sapwood in the bottom of a test tube
filled with sand. A two-inch barrier of catnip-treated sand separated
the termites in the top layer of untreated sand from the pine. To test
horizontal tunneling, the researchers constructed a barrier of treated
sand across the middle of a transparent box of sand, again with the
tempting pine placed across the barrier from the termites. In both tests,
catnip oil reduced or eliminated termite tunneling.
The researchers also tested the catnip oil for its toxicity to termites
by treating them directly with a dilution of the oil, fumigating them,
and exposing them to catnip-infused soil. The researchers carefully
counted the termites in the multiple tests on barriers to make sure
the barrier-effect they found was not due to termite mortality.
Unfortunately, catnip oil breaks down quickly in the environment. The
chemicals now used to prevent termite infestation must remain effective
for more than five years in government testing. "There is the inevitable
tradeoff," said Dr. Peterson. "Chemicals that last a long
time also have greater potential for environmental damage. We hope that
the active ingredients in catnip oil can eventually be modified to last
longer."
Dr. Peterson emphasizes that his experiments are preliminary: catnip
oil has not been officially tested for safety and effectiveness in the
field. "The other factor is cost," said Peterson. "Catnip
oil is much too expensive to use at effective rates when compared to
other compounds. Until a way is found to produce the oil competitively
and formulate it for long-term use, its only practical use would be
for controlling isolated populations of termites."
Previous work by Dr. Peterson has shown catnip oil to be an effective
mosquito repellent. Beyond Pesticides covered this story in the August
31, 2001 edition of Daily News.