Insecticidal properties of eugenol, isoeugenol and methyleugenol and their effects on nutrition of Sitophilus zeamais Motsch. (Coleoptera: Curculionidae) and Tribolium castaneum (Herbst) (Coleoptera: Tenebrionidae)
2002; Elsevier BV; Volume: 38; Issue: 5 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1016/s0022-474x(01)00042-x
ISSN1879-1212
AutoresYan Huang, Shuit-Hung Ho, Hsien-Chieh Lee, Yen-Ling Yap,
Tópico(s)Pesticide Exposure and Toxicity
ResumoEugenol, isoeugenol and methyleugenol showed similar contact toxicity to Sitophilus zeamais (LD50 values approximately 30 μg/mg insect). For Tribolium castaneum, the order of potency of these chemicals compared by the LD50 level was isoeugenol>eugenol>methyleugenol. Furthermore, S. zeamais was generally more susceptible than T. castaneum to these three compounds except for isoeugenol based on the LD50 level. When sublethal doses (doses that produce no appreciable mortality) of eugenol, isoeugenol and methyleugenol were topically applied to adults of either species of beetles pre-treated with deltamethrin, the toxicity of deltamethrin was enhanced. A flour disc bioassay using no-choice tests was employed to assess, in terms of food consumption and growth rate, the susceptibility of S. zeamais and T. castaneum to media treated with eugenol, isoeugenol, and methyleugenol. Only eugenol significantly (P<0.05) reduced food consumption (RCR) in the adults of S. zeamais at a concentration of 13.2 mg/g food. However, it reduced the growth rate (RGR), food consumption and food utilisation (ECI) in adults and larvae of T. castaneum at concentrations of 35 and 99 mg/g food, respectively. Isoeugenol reduced the RGR and RCR in S. zeamais adults and T. castaneum adults and larvae, in a concentration-dependent manner, but only reduced ECI in the adults of T. castaneum at the concentration of 76 mg/g food. In comparison, methyleugenol reduced the RGR and RCR in the three groups of insects, and the ECI of S. zeamais adults and T. castaneum larvae.
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