Repellents vs. Toxicants as Clothing Treatments for Protection from Mosquitoes and Other Biting Flies12
- 1 December 1978
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Journal of Economic Entomology
- Vol. 71 (6) , 919-922
- https://doi.org/10.1093/jee/71.6.919
Abstract
Two repellents, deet and M-1960 (military clothing mixture), and a toxicant, resmethrin, were compared on military fatigue clothing in laboratory and field studies with mosquitoes and other biting flies to determine their effectiveness in protecting the exposed, untreated hands and faces of test subjects. Statistical analysis of the data revealed that resmethrin-treated clothing gave significantly greater protection from bites on exposed skin than repellent-treated clothing. When the repellents were worn in combination with clothing treated with permethrin, protection time was significantly longer than protection time obtained when untreated uniforms or uniforms treated with M-1960 were worn.This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Durability of Permethrin as a Potential Clothing Treatment to Protect Against Blood-feeding Arthropods1Journal of Economic Entomology, 1978
- Further Studies of Repellents in Alaska1Journal of Economic Entomology, 1951