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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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Larvicidal efficacy of some Cucurbitacious plant leaf extracts against Culex quinquefasciatus (Say).

TL;DR: Larvicidal efficacies of extracts of five species of Cucurbitacious plants, Momordica charantia, Trichosanthes anguina, Luffa acutangula, Benincasa cerifera and Citrullus vulgaris were tested against the late third larval age group of Culex quinquefasciatus.
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Synergized mixtures of Apiaceae essential oils and related plant-borne compounds: Larvicidal effectiveness on the filariasis vector Culex quinquefasciatus Say

TL;DR: The results pointed out the promising potential of four Apiaceae essential oils from Trachyspermum ammi, Smyrnium olusatrum, Pimpinella anisum and Helosciadium nodiflorum to develop cheap and effective mosquito larvicides, as well as the importance to consider the synergistic effects among the tested botanicals during the design of novel mosquito larVicides.
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Managing Resistance to Bacillus thuringiensis: Lessons from the Diamondback Moth (Lepidoptera: Plutellidae

TL;DR: The rapid response to laboratory selection shows intrapopulation genetic variation in susceptibility to B. thuringiensis and suggests that intense selection may produce much higher levels of resistance to B .
Journal ArticleDOI

Radiation biology of mosquitoes

TL;DR: It is concluded that the optimal radiation dose chosen for insects that are to be released during an SIT programme should ensure a balance between induced sterility of males and their field competitiveness, with competitiveness being determined under (semi-) field conditions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Differential Toxicity of Leaf Litter to Dipteran Larvae of Mosquito Developmental Sites

TL;DR: Investigation of the relative toxicity of leaf litter to nematocerous dipteran larvae characteristic of mosquito developmental sites revealed that the midgut epithelium is the main target organ of the toxic effect of dietary leaf litter, which appears to be stronger than that of previously reported tannic acid.
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