PHYTOCHEMICAL COMPOSITION AND FUNCTIONAL GROUP PROFILE OF Millettia aboensis EXTRACTS TO ELUCIDATE THEIR BIOCHEMICAL BASIS FOR LARVICIDALACTIVITY AGAINST Anopheles AND Culex MOSQUITOES
Keywords:
Biohemical, Culex, Elucidate, Functional group, Larvicide, Phytochemicals, Plant extract, Susceptibility profileAbstract
Mosquitoes are major vectors of life-threatening diseases and their control is increasingly challenged by the emergence of insecticide resistance. Millettia aboensis has demonstrated promising larvicidal activity against mosquito species. This study evaluated the phytochemical composition and functional group profile of M. aboensis extracts to elucidate the biochemical basis of their larvicidal activity against Anopheles and Culex mosquitoes. Plant materials collected from Lafia metropolis were extracted by maceration and subjected to qualitative and quantitative phytochemical analyses, alongside Fourier Transform Infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy. Qualitative screening revealed the presence of alkaloids, flavonoids, saponins, steroids, terpenoids, cardiac glycosides, phenols, and anthraquinones, with the leaf extracts showing greater phytochemical diversity and abundance of active constituents. Quantitative analysis indicated that saponins (18.78 mg/100 g) and steroids (16.65 mg/100 g) were predominantin the leaf extract. The FTIR spectroscopy further validated these findings by identifying characteristic absorption bands corresponding to hydroxyl (–OH), carbonyl (C=O), amine (–NH), ether (C–O–C), and chloro (C–Cl) groups, which are associated with alcohols, phenols, carboxylic acids, and alkaloids. The presence of these functional groups suggests multiple larvicidal mechanisms, including oxidative stress induction, neurotoxic interference, enzymatic inhibition, and cuticular disruption. The integrated phytochemical and FTIR analyses provide molecular evidence supporting the larvicidal potency of M. aboensis, highlighting its potential as a sustainable botanical alternative to synthetic larvicides. The findings establish M. aboensis as a promising bio-resource for the development of eco-friendly vector control agents and contribute to the growing body of knowledge on plant-based mosquito management strategies.
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
How to Cite
Most read articles by the same author(s)
- Adejoh, Victor Ameh, Pam, Victoria Adamu, Ombugadu Akwashiki, Maikenti, James Ishaku, Ashigar, A. Mohammed, Habitat Characterization of Culicine Mosquitoes in Two Local Government Areas of Nasarawa State, Nigeria , FULafia Journal of Science and Technology : Vol. 9 No. 1 (2025): Vol. 9 No. 1 (March, 2025): Fulafia Journal of Science and Technology (FJST)
- Pam, V. A., Adejoh, V. A., Ombugadu, A., Maikenti, J. A., Ashigar, M. A, LOCAL HABITAT CONDITIONS DRIVE MORPHOMETRIC VARIATIONS, BUT NOT SPATIAL PATTERNS OF Anopheles MOSQUITOES IN NORTH-CENTRAL, NIGERIA , FULafia Journal of Science and Technology : Vol. 10 No. 2 (2026): Fulafia Journal of Science and Technology (FJST)
Similar Articles
- Adebisi O. I., Adejumobi A. I., Olanipekun A. J., Bello O. H., DEVELOPMENT OF A FUEL LEVEL MEASURING SYSTEM FOR UNDERGROUND LIQUID TANKS , FULafia Journal of Science and Technology : Vol. 4 No. 2 (2018): Fulafia Journal of Science and Technology (FJST)
- Victor Oluwayomi Adepoju, Adewole Ayobami Aderinlewo, Oladimeji Babatunde Azeez, Peter Olugbenga Omotainse, S. U. Esezobor, INVESTIGATING THE EFFECTS OF PRE-TREATMENT WITH GRANULATEDPLANTAIN PEEL ON BIOGAS PRODUCTION FROM POULTRY WASTE , FULafia Journal of Science and Technology : Vol. 10 No. 2 (2026): Fulafia Journal of Science and Technology (FJST)
- Ugbene I. J., Mbah M. A., ON THE COMBINATORIAL PROPERTIES OF NILPOTENT AND IDEMPOTENT CONJUGACY CLASSES OF THE INJECTIVE ORDER-DECREASING TRANSFORMATION SEMIGROUP , FULafia Journal of Science and Technology : Vol. 1 No. 1 (2015): Fulafia Journal of Science and Technology (FJST)
- Olanipekun M. U., Olanipekun A. J., Amusa K. A., Opeodu A. J., PARAMETERS EXTRACTION OF A DOUBLE-DIODE MODEL OF PHOTOVOLTAIC CELL USING NEWTON-RAPHSON METHOD , FULafia Journal of Science and Technology : Vol. 4 No. 2 (2018): Fulafia Journal of Science and Technology (FJST)
- Enebi Jasper, Abigail Isoje, Yvonne Marshall-Enudi, Clare Chigbufe, Bright Agwogie, Adeiza Omeiza, Oteiva Frank, EXTRACTION, PHYSICOCHEMICAL, AND STRUCTURAL CHARACTERIZATION OF NANOCELLULOSE FROM PINEAPPLE (Ananas comosus) PEELS WITHPOTENTIAL FOR SUSTAINABLE PAPER APPLICATIONS , FULafia Journal of Science and Technology : Vol. 10 No. 1 (2026): Fulafia Journal of Science and Technology (FJST)
- Dinah Dung Ishaya , Matthew Olaleke Aremu, Sule Philip Ivom Ogah, Folashade Habibat Omotehinwa, EFFECT OF TRADITIONAL PROCESSING METHODS ON THE LIPID PROFILES OF SELECTED FISH SPECIES FROM DOMA RIVER, NASARAWA STATE , FULafia Journal of Science and Technology : Vol. 10 No. 1 (2026): Fulafia Journal of Science and Technology (FJST)
- Usman Mohammed Yusuf, Dr. Mbah Moses A., Alaku A. Abimiku, On Signed Full Transformation Semigroup of a Finite Set , FULafia Journal of Science and Technology : Vol. 9 No. 1 (2025): Vol. 9 No. 1 (March, 2025): Fulafia Journal of Science and Technology (FJST)
- Usman Mohammed Yusuf, Babayo A. M., Mbah M. A., Products of Nilpotents in Partial Transformation Semigroups using Digraphic Paths and Chains , FULafia Journal of Science and Technology : Vol. 9 No. 1 (2025): Vol. 9 No. 1 (March, 2025): Fulafia Journal of Science and Technology (FJST)
- Aderinlewo A. A., Biobaku O. L., Adepoju V. O., DESIGN AND CONSTRUCTION OF A MOTORISED JUICE EXTRACTOR , FULafia Journal of Science and Technology : Vol. 4 No. 2 (2018): Fulafia Journal of Science and Technology (FJST)
You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.