1. Toxicity tests, bioaccumulation and residuality of pyrethroid insecticides commonly used to control conifer bark beetles in Mexico
- Author
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Olga Lidia Rivera-Dávila, Guillermo Sánchez-Martínez, and Roberto Rico-Martínez
- Subjects
Insecticides ,Insecta ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Water ,General Medicine ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Toxicology ,Bioaccumulation ,Coleoptera ,Soil ,Tracheophyta ,Pyrethrins ,Toxicity Tests ,Plant Bark ,Animals ,Mexico ,Ecosystem - Abstract
Effectiveness of pyrethroid insecticides against pests including bark beetles (Dendroctonus spp.) is well known, but little is known about their (a) residuality and persistence in forests after application to control an outbreak and (b) ability to bioaccumulate in insects, which could cause adverse effects on the trophic chains. The 24 h lethal toxicity, bioaccumulation factors, and lethal body burdens of the pyrethroid insecticides bifenthrin, deltamethrin, and cypermethrin were evaluated in the bark beetle Dendroctonus mexicanus. The residuality and persistence of the insecticide bifenthrin in the forest ecosystem (soil, water, and sediment) was also monitored after its application in a region infested by bark beetles. We determined whether contamination of soil, water, and sediments occurred near the sanitation site. For D. mexicanus, the most toxic insecticide for adults was bifenthrin for topical application (LC
- Published
- 2022