Biological and chemical assays of pyrethroids in cattle dung

被引:30
|
作者
Vale, GA [1 ]
Grant, IF [1 ]
Dewhurst, CF [1 ]
Aigreau, D [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Greenwich, Nat Resources Inst, Chatham Martime ME4 4TB, Kent, England
关键词
D O I
10.1079/BER2004300
中图分类号
Q96 [昆虫学];
学科分类号
摘要
Bioassays were developed in Zimbabwe to measure pyrethroid in cattle dung. These and chemical assays then estimated concentrations in dung from treated oxen and elucidated risks to dung fauna. Laboratory bioassays with adult beetles (Histeridae and Scarabaeinae, including Copris, Digitonthophagus, Onitis and Sisyphus spp.) and muscoid larvae (Musca lusoria Wiedemann) indicated that the LC50 of pyrethroids, as ppm in the wet weight, averaged 0.04 for deltamethrin pour-on, 0.25 for deltamethrin dip, 0.22 for alphacypermthrin pour-on, 0.10 for cyfluthrin pour-on, 0.23 for cypermethrin dip and 0.63 for flumethrin dip. Field bioassays involved artificial dung pats of 800 g, deployed in woodland and inspected after 24 h to record insects dead and alive. Beetles were most abundant in the wet season. Muscoid larvae were less seasonal. The LC50 of insecticides in the field confirmed laboratory indications. Adult Diptera (muscoids and Sepsidae) were not repelled or killed until the deltamethrin concentration reached 10 ppm. Pat dispersal by dung fauna and termites (Microtermes spp.) was halved by deltamethrin at 0.1-1 ppm. Scavenging of dead beetles by ants was greatest with small beetles (< 15 mm long) uncontaminated with insecticide. Dips and pour-ons of deltamethrin on cattle gave residues of about 0.01-0.1 ppm in dung produced in the fortnight after application. About 1.67% of the deltamethrin applied was transferred to dung. Deltamethrin and alphacypermethrin in dung showed no detectable degradation in 64 days. Contamination levels threaten populations of slow-breeding beetles.
引用
收藏
页码:273 / 282
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Changes in the chemical composition of cattle dung in grasslands
    Rodríguez, I
    Crespo, G
    Torres, V
    Fraga, S
    CUBAN JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL SCIENCE, 2001, 35 (03): : 285 - 290
  • [2] PYRETHROIDS - CHEMICAL-STRUCTURE AND BIOLOGICAL-ACTIVITY
    HIRATA, R
    QUIMICA NOVA, 1995, 18 (04): : 368 - 374
  • [3] Sessile droplets for chemical and biological assays
    Garcia-Cordero, Jose L.
    Fan, Z. Hugh
    LAB ON A CHIP, 2017, 17 (13) : 2150 - 2166
  • [4] Thermostability of Allicin Determined by Chemical and Biological Assays
    Fujisawa, Hiroyuki
    Suma, Kaoru
    Origuchi, Kana
    Seki, Taiichiro
    Ariga, Toyohiko
    BIOSCIENCE BIOTECHNOLOGY AND BIOCHEMISTRY, 2008, 72 (11) : 2877 - 2883
  • [5] NONLINEAR STANDARD CURVES IN CHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL ASSAYS
    METZLER, CM
    ELFRING, GL
    BIOMETRICS, 1970, 26 (03) : 605 - &
  • [6] STABILITY OF ATROPINE SOLUTIONS - BIOLOGICAL AND CHEMICAL ASSAYS
    LU, FC
    HUMMEL, BCW
    JOURNAL OF PHARMACY AND PHARMACOLOGY, 1960, 12 (11) : 698 - 702
  • [7] CHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL ASSAYS OF LINDANE RESIDUES ON ALFALFA
    FRANCE, HL
    TREECE, RE
    WARE, GW
    JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC ENTOMOLOGY, 1961, 54 (04) : 642 - &
  • [8] Assemblages of dung beetles using cattle dung in Madagascar
    Rahagalala, P.
    Viljanen, H.
    Hottola, J.
    Hanski, I.
    AFRICAN ENTOMOLOGY, 2009, 17 (01) : 71 - 89
  • [9] THE VALUE OF CATTLE DUNG IN WASTELAGE FOR CATTLE FEEDING
    HASAN, QZ
    DANIEL, SJ
    NATH, K
    BIOLOGICAL WASTES, 1988, 25 (01): : 69 - 73
  • [10] BIOGASIFICATION OF CATTLE DUNG AND CATTLE DUNG RICE STRAW MIXTURE AT DIFFERENT SOLID CONCENTRATIONS
    PATHAK, BS
    JAIN, AK
    DEV, DS
    AGRICULTURAL WASTES, 1985, 13 (04): : 251 - 259