Full TGIF Record # 61949
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Web URL(s):https://academic.oup.com/jee/article/92/4/922/2217078/Impact-of-Halofenozide-Imidacloprid-and-Bendiocarb
    Last checked: 02/28/2017
    Access conditions: Item is within a limited-access website
    Notes: Guide page
Publication Type:
i
Refereed
Author(s):Kunkel, Brian A.; Held, David W.; Potter, Daniel A.
Author Affiliation:Department of Entomology, University of Kentucky
Title:Impact of Halofenozide, Imidacloprid, and Bendiocarb on beneficial invertebrates and predatory activity in turfgrass
Section:Horticultural entomology
Other records with the "Horticultural entomology" Section
Source:Journal of Economic Entomology. Vol. 92, No. 4, August 1999, p. 922-930.
Publishing Information:Lanham, MD: Entomological Society of America
# of Pages:9
Keywords:TIC Keywords: Halofenozide; Imidacloprid; Bendiocarb; Poa pratensis; Non-target effects; Earthworms; Predators of insect pests; Arthropoda; Application timing; Grub control; Popillia japonica; Agrotis ipsilon; Insecticides
Abstract/Contents:"Imidacloprid, a chloronicotinyl, and halofenozide, a bisacylhydrazine ecdysteroid agonist, recently have becom widely used for residual control of scarabaeid grubs in turf. We evaluated their impact on earthworms and beneficial arthropods in field trials, and tested whether application in late spring might interfere with subsequent predation on black cutworm, Agrotis ipsilon pratensis L., turf. Bendiocarb, a short-residual carbamate, was included for comparison. Imidacloprid caused some short-term suppression of earthworms, whereas bendiocarb had severe impact on earthworms, mesostigmatid mites, and Collembola. Pitfall trap captures of predatory coleopteran larvae and hister beetles were reduced by imidacloprid and bendiocarb, but abundance of ants, carabids, spiders, and staphylinids was largely unaffected. Halofenozide caused no reduction in abundance of any group of beneficial invertebrates. Scavenging on fresh-frozen A. ipsilon larvae was reduced for ^Du~1 wk after use of imidacloprid or bendiocarb, but predation rates on eggs or pupae of A. ipsilon, and on implanted P. japonica eggs, were unaffected. This work suggests that application of halefenozide or imidacloprid, followed by irrigation, will have relatively little impact on beneficial invertebrates, although both compounds are persistent enough to control P. japonica and Cyclocephala spp. grubs eclosing several months later."
Language:English
References:28
Note:Tables
Graphs
ASA/CSSA/SSSA Citation (Crop Science-Like - may be incomplete):
Kunkel, B. A., D. W. Held, and D. A. Potter. 1999. Impact of Halofenozide, Imidacloprid, and Bendiocarb on beneficial invertebrates and predatory activity in turfgrass. J. Econ. Entomol. 92(4):p. 922-930.
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Web URL(s):
https://academic.oup.com/jee/article/92/4/922/2217078/Impact-of-Halofenozide-Imidacloprid-and-Bendiocarb
    Last checked: 02/28/2017
    Access conditions: Item is within a limited-access website
    Notes: Guide page
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MSU catalog number: SB 931 .A1 J6
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