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The susceptibility of tsetse flies to topical applications of insecticides. II.—Young adults of Glossina morsitans Westw. and organophosphorus compounds, pyrethrins and Sevin

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 July 2009

G. F. Burnett
Affiliation:
Tropical Pesticides Research Institute, Arusha, Tanganyika.

Summary

Solutions of six organophosphorus compounds, Sevin, and pyrethrins (alone or synergised with piperonyl butoxide) were applied by microburette in drops of constant volume (0·0216 μl.) to the dorsum of the thorax of young adults of Glossina morsitans Westw., 2–5 days old that had taken their first blood-meal the previous day. The solvents used were decalin (decahydronaphthalene), toluene and lighting kerosene, respectively.

Malathion, methyl-parathion, DDVP (dichlorvos) and Sevin were eliminated in preliminary tests as insufficiently toxic. Muscatox (coumaphos) was reasonably toxic but not readily soluble and was therefore not considered further. Diazinon and Baytex (fenthion) were fully evaluated; the former was about as lethal as DDT, the latter as γ BHC (LD50 about 0·004 μg.). The LD50 of diazinon for males (0·0115 μg.) was significantly smaller than that for females (0·016 μg.) but the LD95 was much the same for both sexes.

Pyrethrins were about equitoxic with dieldrin (LD50, 0·002 μLg.); when synergised with 15 parts of piperonyl butoxide to one of pyrethrins the LD50 for males was reduced to less than half this value, and there was a significant difference in susceptibility of the sexes, the LD50 for females being 1·4 times that for males. However, the slopes of the regression lines were such that at LD95 the difference between synergised and plain pyrethrins was too small to be of any practical use.

These results show that, judged by innate toxicity to young flies, none of these insecticides can compete with dieldrin or Telodrin for practical control, although Baytex is a useful reserve should Glossina acquire resistance to chlorinated hydrocarbons.

Type
Research Paper
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1961

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References

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