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Journal ArticleDOI

A method of computing the effectiveness of an insecticide

TLDR
In order to make experimental studies comparable and statistically meaningful, the article recommends the following formula: per cent control = 100(X - Y)/X, which eliminates errors due to deaths in the control sample which were not due to the insecticide.
Abstract
There are several statistical methods used in biology (entomology) for computing the effectiveness of an insecticide, based on relating the number of dead insects in the treated plat to the number of live ones in the untreated plat. In order to make experimental studies comparable and statistically meaningful, the article recommends the following formula: per cent control = 100(X - Y)/X, where X = % living in the untreated check sample and Y = % living in the treated sample. Calculation using this method eliminates errors due to deaths in the control sample which were not due to the insecticide. An example based on treatments of San Jose scale includes computation of probable errors for X and Y, and the significance of the difference between the two counts. Common biometric convention holds that when the difference between the results of two experiments is greater than three times its probable error, the results are significant and due to the treatment applied.

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The removal response ofApis mellifera L. colonies to brood in wax and plastic cells after artificial and natural infestation withVarroa jacobsoni Oud. and to freeze-killed brood

TL;DR: Considering the time-consuming method of the artificial infestation with living mites, the hygienic behaviour-including the removal of brood cells infested with mites-of large series of colonies can be tested using freeze-killed brood.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nematicidal Activity of Plant Essential Oils against Bursaphelenchus xylophilus (Nematoda: Aphelenchoididae)

TL;DR: Cinnamon bark oil was the most effective nematicide, followed by coriander herb oil, and levamisole hydrochloride and morantel tartrate usually exhibited semicircular and coiling shapes, respectively.
Journal ArticleDOI

Density-dependent predation of weed seeds in maize fields

TL;DR: The results of this study indicate that weed densities in maize fields currently are not regulated through directly density-dependent seed pr?dation, because the time between seed shed and seed movement into soil is too short for invertebrates to respond to and level out spatial differences at the scale of weed patches.
Journal ArticleDOI

Kinetics of Bacillus thuringiensis Toxin Binding with Brush Border Membrane Vesicles from Susceptible and Resistant Larvae of Plutella xylostella

TL;DR: The results suggest that factors other than binding may be altered in the authors' resistant diamondback moth strain and support the view that binding is not sufficient for toxicity.
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