Frog 'key to mosquito repellents'
A bottle-green Australian frog may hold the key to
future mosquito repellents, a study says.
A University of Adelaide team found the secretions of
the dumpy tree frog are effective at warding off
mosquitoes.
Researchers found mice given the secretions remained
bite-free for four times longer than those not, the
Biology Letters journal reported.
But experts said such repellents would only have a
limited effect in fighting malaria, which is spread by
mosquitoes.
Researchers chose to investigate frogs because previous
research had uncovered that their secretions can act as
powerful painkillers and hallucinogens.
The team also found two other Australian species - the
desert tree frog and Mjoberg's toadlet - released
mosquito repellent odour from their skin, although their
secretions were not tested on mice.
In the study, mice given the secretions from the dumpy
tree frog remained bite-free for around 50 minutes
compared to 12 minutes for an untreated group.
However, mice given Deet, the chemical that is typically
used in commercial mosquito repellents, were protected
for up to two hours.
The researchers said the frog secretions should not yet
be considered as an alternative to Deet, which was
originally formulated for the US army after WWII.
But they said: "The discovery highlights the potential
of the unsung properties of amphibian skin.
"Many aspects of frog chemical ecology remain
unexplored."
However, a leading expert suggested the impact on
fighting malaria, which is responsible for one million
deaths a year, would be limited.
Dr Nigel Hill, a disease control expert at the London
School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, said repellents
had "limited, but interesting" uses for controlling
malaria.
"Afghan refugee camps have found the use of repellent
soap to reduce malaria to some degree."
But he said some of the plant-based repellents which had
been tried were more practical than frog-based ones
because the plants were more readily available.