Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4422132 | Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety | 2008 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
Laboratory trials were carried out to evaluate the toxicity and the influence of a commercial mixture of vegetal, essential oils, and potassium salts of fatty acids (Acaridoil 13SL®) on the population growth rate (ri-instantaneous rate of increase) of two mite species, the phytophagous Tetranychus urticae Koch and the predator Phytoseiulus persimilis Athias-Henriot. A residue of 1.3Â mg/cm2 of pesticide solution was harmless for Ph. persimilis eggs, while a moderate mortality of eggs and of larvae from treated eggs of T. urticae, was observed (53.8%). The pesticide also caused a delay in the postembryonic development of the tetranychid. Moreover, 83.4% mortality was reported for treated females tetranychids and only 24.0% for Ph. persimilis females. The pesticide influenced negatively the population growth of T. urticae which showed a very low rate of increase (ri=0.07), compared to that obtained in the control (ri=0.68). The pesticide did not affect negatively the reproductive potential of Ph. persimilis (ri=0.54 and ri=0.57 for test and control, respectively). These results suggest a considerable acaricidal activity of potassium salts of fatty acids and caraway oil on T. urticae and a good selectivity on Ph. persimilis.
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Authors
H. Tsolakis, S. Ragusa,