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TOXICITY OF SOME INSECTICIDES TO INSECTICIDE-SUSCEPTIBLE STRAINS OF THE ONION, CABBAGE, AND SEEDCORN MAGGOTS (DIPTERA: ANTHOMYIIDAE) AND THE DARKSIDED CUTWORM (LEPIDOPTERA: NOCTUIDAE)1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 May 2012

C. R. Harris
Affiliation:
Research Centre, Agriculture Canada, London, Ontario N6A 5B7
S. A. Turnbull
Affiliation:
Research Centre, Agriculture Canada, London, Ontario N6A 5B7

Abstract

Direct contact toxicity data were obtained with selected insecticides on 24–48 h old adults of insecticide-susceptible onion maggot, Hylemya antiqua (Meigen), cabbage maggot, H. brassicae (Bouché), and seedcorn maggot, H. platura (Meigen); and on third-stage darksided cutworm, Euxoa messoria (Harris). All insecticides were highly toxic to onion maggot flies, with the order of toxicity being: cypermethrin > chlorpyrifos > fenvalerate > permethrin > parathion > isofenphos > terbufos. Chlorfenvinphos was 1.4 × more toxic to cabbage maggot adults than parathion; the pyrethroids were less toxic, with fenvalerate being 1/13 as toxic as parathion. The order of toxicity of insecticides tested on seedcorn maggot flies was: diazinon > cypermethrin > chlorpyrifos > fenvalerate > permethrin. With the darksided cutworm, DDT and leptophos were 1/10 and 3/4 as toxic as chlorpyrifos, while cypermethrin, fenvalerate, permethrin, and decamethrin were ca. 10, 11, 12, and 120 × more toxic, respectively.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Entomological Society of Canada 1980

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