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Title: Insecticidal activity of a nonsteroidal moulting hormone agonist on mosquito larvae and effects on ecdysteroid amounts. Author: Boudjelida H, Bouaziz A, Smagghe G, Soltani N. Journal: Meded Rijksuniv Gent Fak Landbouwkd Toegep Biol Wet; 2002; 67(3):657-63. PubMed ID: 12696434. Abstract: The secondary effects of conventional insecticides on the environment, vertebrates and beneficial organisms have caused a move to the use of more target-specific chemicals such as insect growth regulators. Halofenozide (RH-0345) is a novel nonsteroidal ecdysteroid agonist that induces a precocious and incomplete moult in several insect orders. In the present study, the insecticidal activity of a commercial formulation of halofenozide (23% EC) was evaluated at different concentrations ranging between 8 and 32 micrograms/l. Treatment was made on newly moulted fourth-instar larvae of the mosquito, Culex pipiens (Diptera: Culicidae), and mortality was scored until adult emergence. Results showed that death in the larval stage was relatively important. Moreover, treatment caused a significant reduction in the length of the larval and pupal stage. In a second series of experiments, halofenozide was tested at two doses (LC50 = 12.58 micrograms/l and LC90 = 28.58 micrograms/l) and the ecdysteroid amounts during the fourth instar were evaluated in an enzyme immunoassay. We noted that halofenozide did not shifted the moment of the single larval ecdysteroid peak, but it caused an increase of the titre values. Finally, the compound at the highest concentration was found to increase significantly the cuticle thickness recorded at day 4 following treatment.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]