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Revista de Protección Vegetal

Print version ISSN 1010-2752On-line version ISSN 2224-4697

Rev. Protección Veg. vol.30  supl.1 La Habana Dec. 2015

 

RESUMEN DEL SEGUNDO SEMINARIO INTERNACIONAL DE SANIDAD AGROPECUARIA (SISA)

 

Botanical secondary metabolites as alternatives for pest management in Cuba

 

Metabolitos secundarios de origen botánico como alternativas para el manejo de plagas en Cuba

 

 

Oriela PinoI*, Yaíma SánchezI, Miriam M. RojasI, Fanny JorgeI, Ana BuzziI, Cecil GonzálezI, Daylen TurtosI, Nerdys AcostaI, Mayra RodríguezI, Dainé HernándezI, Roberto E. RegaladoI, Lidia LópezI, Mylene CorzoI, Aleika YglesiaI, María A. MartínezI, Heyker L BañosI, Moraima SurisI, Susana RamírezI, Adayakni SánchezI, Héctor RodríguezI, Yanebis PérezI, Reinaldo ChicoI, Yailen AriasI, Ivonne GonzálezI, Yusely HernándezI, Benedicto MartínezI, Yanisisa DuarteI, Danay InfanteI, Teresa M. CorreaII, Dayamín MartínezII, Rodney Montes de OcaII, Georgina BerroaIII, Lázaro CotillaIII, Belkis PeteiraI, Maria Fátima das Graças Fernandes da SilvaIV, Edson Rodrigues FilhoIV, Yasmin AkhtarV, Murray B. IsmanV

ICentro Nacional de Sanidad Agropecuaria (CENSA) Apartado 10, San José de las Lajas, Mayabeque. *E-mail: oriela@censa.edu.cu.
IIInstituto de Medicina Deportiva (IMD). 100 y Aldabó, Boyeros, La Habana, Cuba.
IIICentro de Desarrollo de la Montaña (CDM), Limonar, El Salvador, Guantánamo, Cuba.
IVUniversidade Federal de São Carlos, UFSCAR, Brasil.
VFaculty of Land and Food Systems, University of British Columbia, Canada.

 

 

Plants have historically been used in agricultural practices in Cuba; nevertheless, the Cuban flora has not yet been fully studied as a potential source of pesticides, partly due to its great diversity. At the National Centre for Animal and Plant Health (CENSA), systematic research on more than 100 plant species belonging to several families has been conducted in recent years. The protocol involves the establishment of bioassay conditions, the isolation and characterization of bioactive compounds, assessment of compatibility with other biological control agents, mode of action studies and the semi-synthesis of analogues using biotechnological techniques. Among the secondary metabolites studied, essential oils obtained from plants belonging to the families Piperaceae, Lamiaceae, Apiaceae, Rutaceae, and Myrtaceae stood out as a promising group due to their efficacy and spectrum of action under laboratory and semi-controlled conditions. As botanical pesticides, the main areas of use may include protected crops, nurseries, seed treatments in protected and field-grown crops, and in stored product pest management. The use of known botanicals and the identification of local candidates for developing phytosanitary products offer alternatives that may combine efficiency and safety for pest management in Cuban agriculture.

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