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Insecticides

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The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Insecticides

 

chemicals for the control of insect pests. Depending on the path by which they penetrate the insect organism, they are divided into four groups.

Stomach poisons, which enter the organism through the mouth, include most inorganic arsenic compounds (calcium, magnesium, barium, and lead arsenates; calcium arsenite), silicofluorides and fluorides of metals, thiodiphenylamine, and a group of special preparations (Eulans, mitin, irgan, and others), which are used for the protection of wool and furs from destruction by moths.

Contact poisons, which penetrate through the skin, include the organic compounds of phosphorus, chlorine, nitrogen, and sulfur and the pyrethrins and pyrethroids.

Systemic poisons, which are absorbed by the roots and leaves of plants, migrate within the vascular system with the nutrients, making the plants poisonous to parasitic insects; such poisons include metilmerkaptofos and fosfamid. Systemic (organic phosphorus) insecticides are also used to control ectoparasites of animals (the blood of the animal becomes poisonous to insects after the introduction of the preparation) and to eliminate rats (leading to the death of the animal, which is the reservoir of the infection, and of the parasitic carriers). Butadion is used in exceptional cases for delousing humans. A single dose renders human blood insecticidal for a period of two weeks.

Fumigants, or inhalation insecticides, enter the organism of insects in the vapor or gaseous state through the tracheal system during breathing. These materials include hexachlorobutadiene and dikhlorfos, as well as finely milled silicates and mineral oils, which disrupt the respiratory functions of insects. The accepted insecticide classification is arbitrary, since most insecticides are capable of penetrating the organism simultaneously by several paths. For this reason, some preparations are included in a particular group based on the principal path of entry.

Worldwide losses caused by insect pests are estimated at $30 billion in agriculture alone. For this reason, total insecticide production is increasing. At the same time, the world production of inorganic insecticides, such as arsenic and fluorine compounds, is decreasing because of their high toxicity; in several European countries their production has been completely discontinued. On the other hand, the overall production increase is due to the manufacture of new organic compounds. The worldwide line of available insecticides includes more than 200 names. Organic compounds of phosphorus, chlorine, and carbamic acid derivatives are the most commonly used materials. Some of the organic insecticides used in the USSR are listed in Table 1.

Insecticides are applied by spraying, dusting, fumigation, and impregnation. There is a variety of physical forms of these preparations, such as dusts, emulsions or suspensions, and wettable powders.

Depending on the degree of toxicity to humans and warmblooded animals, the insecticides are divided into four groups: strongly active (LD50 up to 50), highly toxic (50–200), moderately toxic (200–1,000), and low-toxicity (above 1,000). The persistence of insecticide activity on plants or in the bodies of animals varies widely, from one day to several years. The rules concerning the storage, application, and transportation of insecticides should be strictly observed in order to prevent harmful effects, such as contamination of water reservoirs and poisoning of bees, bumblebees, other pollinating insects, and parasitic and predatory insects, and accumulation in animal and vegetable products and in feeds.

REFERENCES

Mel’nikov, N. N. Khimiia pestitsidov. Moscow, 1968.
Chemie der Pflanzenschutz- und Schadlingsbekämpfungsmittel, vol. 1. Edited by R. Wegler. Berlin, 1970.
Table 1. Most important organic insecticides used in the USSR (LD50 is the average dose, in mg/kg liveweight, at which 50% of the affected anima1s die)
 Chemical nameLD50FormPurpose
Chloroorganic insecticides
HCBD ............. Hexachlorobutadiene200–250LiquidSoil fumigant for control ot phylloxera and vine louse
HCCH (lindane) ............. γ-hexachlorocyclohexane125Suspensions, powders, aerosoles, etc.For control of locust pests and larvae of the click beetle, nocturnal ground beetle, cabbage and cotton moths, and silver γ moth
Heptachlor ............ 1,4,5,6,7,8,8-heptachloro-4,7-endomethylene- 3a,4,7a-tetrahydrindene60–13560% emulsion concentrateSeed disinfectant for all crops, excluding edible root crops; for control of gray weevils and beet pests, flea beetles, and larvae of the click beetle, nocturnal ground beetle, and fly
Polychlorocamphene ....[Mixture of polychloroterpenes]60–20050% emulsion concentrateTreatment of potato plants against Colorado beetle and of sugar beet against sugar beet flea beetles and beet pests
Polychloropinene ............. [Same as polychlorocamphene]35020% and 50% oil solution; 65% emulsion concentrateTreatment of potato plants against Colorado beetle and of sugar beet against sugar beet flea beetles and beet pests Same as polychlorocamphene
Organic phosphorus insecticides
Karbofos (malathion) ........ O.O-dimethyl-S(1,2-dicarbethoxyethyl) phosphorodithioate500–1,50035% emulsion concentrateFor control of aphids
Metalos (methyl parathion) ............ O,O-dimethyl-O 4-nitrophenyl-thiophosphate25–50′20% emulsion concentrate; 2.5% dustFor control of shield bugs, aphids, thrips, mealybugs, and other pests
Metilmerkaptofos
(Metasystox) ..................
[Mixture of O,O-dimethyl-ethylthiophosphate with its thio isomer (70:30))80–10030% emulsion concentrateFor control of aphids
Metilnitrofos ........ [Mixture of 0,O-dimethyl-O-4-nitro-3-methylphenyl-thiophosphate with its 6-nitro isomer (70:30)]400–1,000Same as metilmerkaptofosSame as metilmerkaptofos
Trikhlormetafos-3 ....... O-methyl-O-ethyl-2,4,5-trichloro-phenylthiophosphate330–80030–50% emulsion concentrateFor control of jumping plant lice and hoppers, aphids, scale insects, fly larvae, and other pests
Fosfamitd (Rogor) ......... O,O-dimethyl-S-(N-methylcarbamoyl-methyl)-dithiophosphate200–25040% emulsion concentrateFor control of sucking and gnawing pests
Khlorofos (trikhlorfon) ......... O,O-dimethyl-2,2,2-trichloro-1-hydroxy-ethylphosphonate63080% wettable powder,7% granulated powderFor control of shield bugs, caterpillars and larvae, aphids, thrips, horseflies, and houseflies
Carbamic acid derivatives
Sevin (naphtylcarbamate, Carbaryl ......N-methyl-1 -naphthyl-carbamate56085% wettable powder For control of codling moths, plum fruit moths, tortrix moths, black-veined white butterflies, aphids, bugs on Cruciferae fruit plants, Colorado beetle, and many other pests
Plant insecticides
Anabasine .............. (2-piperidyl)-pyridine70–100Aqueous solutionUsed mainly to control aphids and thrips in bean crops, flax, tobaceo, sugar beet, hops, and fruit and berry crops
Pyrethrin (powdered Dalmatia chrysanthemum) ............[Same as anabasine]Same AS anabasinePowderFor control of bedbugs, lice, and other insects
Berim, N. G. Biologicheskie osnovy primeneniia insektitsidov. Leningrad, 1971.

N. N. MEL’NIKOV

The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
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