Testing Methods for Mosquito-Repellent Treated Textiles
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Table 16.1: Classification of the effect of anti-mosquito textiles and points of evaluation.
Category
Classification
Effect against mosquitos
Evaluation
E-1
Blood feeding repel-
lency Physical block-
ing
Blocking of mosquito bit-
ing or blood-sucking
Number
of
biting
mosquitos or number
of bites
E-2
Contact
repellency
Spatial repellency
Inhibition of orientation or
landing to host
Number of repelled or
attracted mosquitos
E-3
Excito-repellency
Inhibition of probing
Number of repelled or
staying mosquitos
E-4
Knockdown
Inhibition
of
flight
or
movement
Number of knocked-
down mosquitos
E-5
Killing
Death
Number
of
dead
mosquitos
have to be involved in the test methods for textiles (Table 16.1). The most used test
methods for repellent-treated textiles are cage, cone, and excito chamber tests (Anuar
and Yusof, 2016). As Anuar and Yusof (2016) reported, test methods using mosquito
attractants (Table 16.2) might imitate the more realistic situation of mosquito biting.
Table 16.3 shows officially published test methods for anti-mosquito textiles.
2. The cage test: The cage test might be most common and simple test method for
evaluation of repellents and repellent-treated materials, although it needs ethical ap-
proval by volunteers and requires the assurance of pathogen free mosquitos. It also
needs enough replications to reduce data discrepancies caused by individual varia-
tions among volunteers (i.e., participant sex, age, etc.). A screened cage (40 cm³)
containing 200, 7 - 8 day old starved female mosquitos are used for each replicate of
the evaluation. Participants will wear a long-sleeved rubber glove on one hand/arm
that has a window cut out (6cm L x 5cm W) on the front sleeve of the glove. Next,
a piece (7cm L x 6cm W) of treated textile is used to cover the window on the glove
sleeve. The participant then exposes the treated arm into the screened cage with
mosquitos for 5 minutes. This exposure is repeated at 1 hr intervals until mosquitos
land/probe on the treated textiles on the window (Figure 16.1). Alternatively, wear-
ing a short sleeved glove to protect the hand, a large piece of repellent treated textile
can be used to wrap and cover all part of the forearm and exposed the treated forearm
(Figure 16.2) to the testing cage for 5 minutes. Again, repeated at 1 hr intervals until
the landing, probing and biting presents.
3. The cone and excito-repellency chamber test: These test methods are ethically more
ideal because they do not use human volunteers or animals subjects as mosquito