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Choice Modeling for the Commercial Cultivation of Underutilized Aromatic Plants for Producing Mosquito Repellents: Targeting Rural Sector Income Generation.

K D MunugodaT S TalagalaS M C U P SubasingheD S HettiarachchiA T Cooray
Published in: Economic botany (2023)
Tropical countries face considerable economic losses due to mosquito-borne diseases which can be effectively combatted using plant-based mosquito repellents. Therefore, using a questionnaire survey, we selected the 25 top-ranked common but underutilized aromatic plants with mosquito repellent ability in Sri Lanka to investigate the rural sector's willingness to cultivate and supply them. Cinnamomum verum , Citrus aurantiifolia , Citrus sinensis , Citrus reticulata , Aegle marmelos , and Ocimum tenuiflorum were the common species thus identified. The willingness to cultivate and supply aromatic plants with mosquito repellent ability varied between 88% and 60%. The Chi-squared test indicated a significant association between gender and willingness to cultivate and supply these plants. Men had a higher willingness (82%). Persons formally educated up to elementary school level had the highest willingness (85%). The willingness from households with many non-income-generating members was 100%. The random forest model developed in this study identifies farmers' willingness to cultivate and supply aromatic plants with mosquito repellent properties. It was trained using an upsampling strategy. Our findings aid in understanding the scenarios involved with introducing, cultivating, and supplying aromatic plants.
Keyphrases
  • aedes aegypti
  • dengue virus
  • amino acid
  • mental health
  • climate change
  • zika virus
  • physical activity
  • south africa
  • essential oil
  • cross sectional
  • gene expression
  • genome wide
  • middle aged