Faculty of Land and Food Systems, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia V6T 1Z4, Canada; email:
Annu Rev Entomol. 2020 Jan 7;65:233-249. doi: 10.1146/annurev-ento-011019-025010. Epub 2019 Oct 8.
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 oils, while in North America and the European Union, stricter requirements have slowed progress toward commercialization of new products. Botanicals are likely to remain niche products in many agricultural regions and may have the greatest impact in developing countries in tropical regions where the source plants are readily available and conventional products are both expensive and dangerous to users.
在过去的 20 年中,学术界对具有杀虫特性的植物天然产物的兴趣持续增长,而新的植物性杀虫剂的商业化和现有植物性杀虫剂的市场扩张却大大滞后。以除虫菊和印楝(印楝素)为基础的杀虫剂仍然是这类农药的标准产品,但在全球范围内,它们的出现更多地是由于引入了新的司法管辖区。基于植物精油的杀虫剂刚刚开始成为有用的植物保护剂。一些国家(如土耳其、乌拉圭、阿拉伯联合酋长国和澳大利亚)放宽了对特定植物提取物和油的监管要求,而在北美和欧盟,更严格的要求减缓了新产品商业化的进展。在许多农业地区,植物性杀虫剂可能仍然是利基产品,在热带地区的发展中国家可能产生最大的影响,因为那里的源植物随处可得,而传统产品对使用者既昂贵又危险。