Citronella Plant – Does it Really Keep Mosquitoes Away?

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Robert Pavlis

Mosquitoes are becoming a more important pest as new varieties move north in North America, and the incidence of diseases increases. Around here there is a big concern about the West Nile Virus so it is only natural that people try to find simple ways to keep mosquitoes away.

A very common solution is citronella. Some suggest planting the citronella plant next to your patio to keep mosquitoes away. Others rely on citronella candles. These solutions are just myths.

Pelargonium Citrosum - marketed as "mosquito plant"
Pelargonium Citrosum – marketed as “mosquito plant”, source: Chhe (talk)

What is the Citronella Plant?

As I started researching for this post I was very surprised to learn that the so-called “citronella plant” is not the plant that produces citronella oil – the active ingredient in citronella candles. The picture above shows the citronella plant; also called Pelargonium citrosum. This geranium is unrelated to the true citronella. Not only that but the scientific name of the plant is not even recognized as a valid name. It is a geranium (ie Pelargonium) and it sort of smells like citronella. It even has some of the same aromatic chemicals found in citronella, but it is a different plant.

But does it work? Testing shows that it does not repel mosquitoes. In fact, mosquitoes seem to enjoy sitting on the plant. For more details see Mosquito Plant, Pelargonium Citrosum – The Citrosa Plant.

What is the Real Citronella Plant

Citronella oil is extracted from various species of lemongrass (genus Cymbopogon – say that name 3 times fast!). This is a perennial clumping grass that grows to a height of 6 feet. It is not frost hardy.

Cymbopogon citratus - lemongrass
Cymbopogon citratus – lemongrass

Does Citronella Control Mosquitoes?

So much for botany – does the real citronella plant or the oil work?

Let’s first consider the plant itself. If the aroma from the plant wards off mosquitoes, then this would only work for you if you are sitting in or right next to the plant. The reality is the amount of chemicals given off by plants is very small. You will smell them most when you brush against them or you crush a leaf. Growing the plant will have almost no effect on mosquito control.

Growing Great Tomaotes, by Robert Pavlis

Research in North America has confirmed that citronella oil is effective and the oil is registered as an insect repellant in the US. Studies in the EU failed to validate its effectiveness and they have banned the product as an insecticide. We must conclude from this that “we don’t know if it works”, but if Europe can’t find any evidence that citronella oil works, I tend to be skeptical.

YouTube video

If it does work, it does need to be applied frequently – at least every hour.

Citronella oil is a natural product – a good ‘organic product’. Keep in mind that it is also 2 times more deadly than Roundup. Both products are relatively safe, but it is important to understand that this organic solution does have a risk. How toxic is citronella oil? One way to measure toxicity is to measure the LD 50, in this case, the LD 50 on rabbit skin. It turns out citronella oil has a value (4700 mg/Kg) and DEET  is (4280 mg/Kg). Both have similar toxicities and both are very safe.

You might also be interested in this post: Mosquito Repellents That Work Against Zika Virus

What About Citronella Candles – Do They Keep Mosquitoes Away?

This is a myth. The amount of oil in candles is extremely small and citronella candles don’t work any better than regular candles – neither works well.

Correction: The above statement was the initial entry in the post. It is not quite correct. Work at the University of Guelph tested citronella candles. In a 5 minute period subjects received 6, 8, and 11 bites for citronella candles, regular candles, and no candles, respectively. Citronella candles were marginally better than regular candles and reduced bites by half compared to using nothing. So they work, a bit, but I don’t consider 1 bite a minute as satisfactory. Deet is much more effective.

Fragrant Plants and Mosquitoes

There are lots claims that fragrant plants such as catnip, citronella grass, beebalm, marigolds, lemon balm, lavender, geraniums, thyme, wormwood, rosemary and various mints, repel mosquitoes in the garden. Do they work? I’ve reviewed this in Mosquitoes Repelled By Fragrant Plants.

What Did the Voyageurs Do About Mosquitoes?

The voyageurs were responsible for exploring much of North America for the white man. They traveled through the wilderness with few comforts of home. A million black flies and mosquitoes and no DEET! Just think about that. What did they use? One source, The Voyageurs, suggests that the best repellant was a mixture of bear grease and skunk urine. I guess that after collecting the skunk urine you smelled so bad that even the bugs stayed away. Another source suggests that spruce bows tied around the neck are of some help. I have spent a lot of time in the wilderness and have tried the spruce boughs – I’ll stick to DEET.

What Does Work for Mosquitoes?

You will see from the above list that most mosquito repelling devices either don’t work, or work in a very limited way. So how do you keep mosquitoes from biting?

DEET and Picaridin are still your best choice for both safety and efficacy.

Here are some other posts that might interest you.

Mosquito Repellents – Best Options

DEET – Is It Safe?

Mosquito Repelling Devices – Do They Work?

Mosquito Apps for Your Smart Phone – Do They Keep Mosquitoes Away?

Mosquitoes Repelled By Fragrant Plants

Mosquito Repellents That Work Against Zika Virus

 

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Robert Pavlis

I have been gardening my whole life and have a science background. Besides writing and speaking about gardening, I own and operate a 6 acre private garden called Aspen Grove Gardens which now has over 3,000 perennials, grasses, shrubs and trees. Yes--I am a plantaholic!

197 thoughts on “Citronella Plant – Does it Really Keep Mosquitoes Away?”

  1. ” Now, when does it bloom or what do,I do to make it bloom would like to enjoy the flowers while swatting …” was in the reading of this site when I did a search for how to get citronella to bloom. Upon entering this site I read everything EXCEPT the statement that lead me to click on this site’s link to start with.So if anyone here has a true knowledge of the plant, then someone answer this question. please. I have planted citronella plants around my house for 10 years and NEVER has any of them bloomed out.

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  2. Just came upon this long duscussion on mosquitos. Recently I read that mosquitos are attracted to people with the ‘O’ blood type, which I have, which may explain why I attract so many of them whilst my husband has less trouble.
    Also nobody mentioned the electric bug zappers that people hung up on their patios or decks, that were all the rage some years ago. Do they even exist any more?

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    • The problem with bug zappers is that they kill indiscriminately – all the good bugs as well as mosquitoes. I don’t think they were very effective.

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      • Hello Robert, thank you for your very informative footwork. Did you try the coils? You know, the ones you light like incense?

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      • News “is it true” segments said that the zappers made the bugs come to it so you ended up with more in the area of the zapper..not cool.

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    • I am O positive and the mosquitoes will usually leave me alone and go after my husband, who is A positive. He also tends to put out more body heat than me. I think that has more to do with the mosquito attraction than blood type. Does your body temperature tend to be high? My body temp stays below the standard 98º.

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    • I have B+ and my husband and I can relate to your situation. I’m slaughtered while my husband is unbitten. I don’t think blood type is a valid indicator.

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  3. I’m one of those who gets turned into a buffet by mosquitoes, and my skin welps with each bite. Oddly enough I was the only person not bitten during an outing on a few occasions, and I had used a scented cream from Bath and Body Works- Japanese Cherry Blossom. Not rocommending this, but curious as to having an explanation from someone as to why this actually worked. It’s a very strongly scented item, wondering if maybe they just couldn’t “smell” me.

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    • The current science as to why mosquitoes like certain people indicates that it a result of chemicals we give off, and we all give them off differently. A covering scent may well work. Or the soap modified the chemicals you give off.

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    • So you prefer to use the chemical IR3535, or 3-[N-Butyl-N- acetyl]-aminopropionic acid, ethyl ester, which is the active insecticide found in skin so Soft instead of DEET.

      Both are considered safe and neither causes cancer.

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    • Yes it does, Wonderfully !!!
      I have been using it for over 25 years! I also wipe my screens with it, in the spring and in July to keep them and other bugs out!

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  4. It’s interesting how passionate and singleminded uneducated people can be about what they think is ‘science’. Science is largely based on observation. I’m sitting here in front of my citronella lamp and my Tasmanian whisky without a single bite. Since I started using the oil lamp I’ve not even seen a mossie. Consider this a peer-reviewed article as my microbiologist sits here with me and agrees. 🙂

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    • Actually, no, you sitting in front of a lamp with your whisky counting your lack of bites does not, in any way, constitute science. The linked abstract along with numerous other studies do, because the word “science” has an actual definition of which you seem to be unaware.

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  5. I find that when my husband and I go out to sit in the shade or on our front porch, that my husband gets eaten up but not me. This gets me to thinking we are both type 2 diabetics. sweet blood, but our medicines are different. even before I became one I didn’t get eaten up by them. There is also another difference I eat a lot of garlic in my foods and love to try different spices as we, one being curry, and cumin. I have known for years that the citronella plant doesn’t work, but sure remember as a child using DEET and it did work. I do take B12 shots due to medical condition so didn’t know if that had a reason as well either. Maybe some thing works for some while others it don’t. I do know for a fact lemongrass oil does attract bees, black flies, green flies and wasp, as well as yellow jackets. I know this because we use it in our mix with spearmint to feed our honey bees during dearth season. I adore the mixture, the smell is so amazing. I found Humming birds and bats are the best control for us and our garden.

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    • I did some looking up on spices and cumin repels mosquitos. Oh and I do remember DEET left a tingling numb like feeling on my skin.

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    • Thank you for the details on lemongrass. I sprayed deet on my patio walls [about 2-3 meters from my plants] and any spray that even touched my plants instantly dried them out, or they developed black spots. DEET close to plants was certainly a bad experience in my case. Hope its okay to share the experience.

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  6. I’m highly allergic to deet so it is very unsafe for me. I didn’t know deet was used in anything other than mosquito repellent! I’m shocked and very upset about this.

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    • I don’t know if it is out imagination or just circumstantial but every since we have planted “imposter” citronella, we have not had any mosquitos around the perimeter of our plants e.g. front porch and back deck and pool.

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  7. I have a lemongrass plant in a pot (3ft plant) and I’m west of Atlanta GA. My issue with the plant is that it ATTRACTS houseflies!! No matter where I put the plant, flies are drawn to it therefore I keep it away from my front door. But I love the smell of the plant. Apparently science is missing something because my lemongrass does not fit in to this equation.

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  8. Have you had any dealing with Permethrin as a viable deterrent? I know it works great at keeping most bugs at bay around my house and also on survival/hiking gear. Not sure about misquotes though.

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      • Well maybe you should reconsider that point of view:

        Commonly grown as ornamental border plants, marigolds are hardy annual plants which have a distinctive smell which mosquitoes, and some gardeners, find particularly offensive. Marigolds contain Pyrethrum, a compound used in many insect repellents.

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        • “marigolds are hardy annual plants” – not in a large part of the world.

          Just because something has a smell does not mean it keeps mosquitoes away.

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          • Interesting link on marigolds:

            https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg13918823-200-science-could-marigolds-slay-killer-mosquitoes/

            And some warnings on Deet:

            https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/is-it-true-that-the-deet/

            https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/00001475.htm

            While it may be safe for most people, some people may not tolerate. Also repeated frequent use did cause issues with Everglades National Park Employees:
            8. McConnell R, Fidler AT, Chrislip D, NIOSH. Everglades National Park health hazard evaluation report. Cincinnati, Ohio: US Department of Health and Human Services, Public Health Service, 1986; NIOSH health hazard evaluation report no. HETA-83-085-1757

          • It is never good to use a reference that starts with a false statement “Organic gardeners know that marigolds help neighbouring plants by warding
            off nasty pests. ” – they also attract nasty pests and if fact they are a big source of trips in gardens.

            The marigold reference does not add any useful information to the mosquito topic. Plants produce insecticides – lots of them, and marigolds are no different. Without statements on how the tests were performed, and what quantities were used – you can’t conclude that marigold repel mosquitoes.

          • So since you know a lot about this please deplane to me how I can keep mosquitos away without using chemicals every time I want to take my kids out to play??

          • You can’t. All of the insect repellents – even the natural oils are chemicals.

            Any thing, except cloths, that keeps mosquitoes away is a pesticide. I use DEET in small amounts.

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