Botanical Insecticides in the Twenty-First Century—Fulfilling Their Promise?
University of British Columbia
Abstract
Academic interest in plant natural products with insecticidal properties has continued to grow in the past 20 years, while commercialization of new botanical insecticides and market expansion of existing botanicals has lagged considerably behind. Insecticides based on pyrethrum and neem (azadirachtin) continue to be standard bearers in this class of pesticides, but globally, their increased presence is largely a consequence of introduction into new jurisdictions. Insecticides based on plant essential oils are just beginning to emerge as useful plant protectants. Some countries (such as Turkey, Uruguay, the United Arab Emirates, and Australia) have relaxed regulatory requirements for specific plant extracts and…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 67.51
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 64
Authors
1Topics & keywords
- Pyrethrum
- Commercialization
- Azadirachtin
- Biology
- Agriculture
- European union
- Biotechnology
- Pesticide