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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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Journal ArticleDOI

The efficacy of spinosad against the western flower thrips, Frankliniella occidentalis, and its impact on associated biological control agents on greenhouse cucumbers in southern Ontario.

TL;DR: In laboratory bioassays conducted in 2001, spinosad was effective against immature and adult WFT life stages and suggest it would be a valuable reduced-risk control agent for greenhouse cucumber IPM programs.
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The ‘4-Poster’ Passive Topical Treatment Device to Apply Acaricide for Controlling Ticks (Acari: Ixodidae) Feeding on White-Tailed Deer

TL;DR: A ‘4-poster’ device that attracts white-tailed deer to a bait source, and as they feed, allows a self-application of a pesticide to the head, ears, and neck to control ticks was designed, constructed, and tested.
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Studies of the effects of essential oils isolated from 14 species of Labiatae on the carmine spider mite,Tetranychus cinnabarinus

TL;DR: Bean leaf discs freshly sprayed with different concentrations of the acetonic solutions of the oils caused mortality and induced repellency in adult females of the carmine spider mite,Tetranychus cinnabarinus (Boisd.), and egg-laying was reduced.
Journal ArticleDOI

Beauveria bassiana as a Pathogen of the Mexican Fruit Fly (Diptera: Tephritidae) Under Laboratory Conditions

TL;DR: Mortality of the immature stages was low, 2–8% in larvae and 0% in pupae, however, very high levels of mortality were obtained for adult flies, with values of 100, 98, and 98% for the strains Bb16, Bb24, and Bb 26, respectively.
Journal ArticleDOI

Acephate Resistance in Populations of the Tarnished Plant Bug (Heteroptera: Miridae) From the Mississippi River Delta

TL;DR: Results from field tests showed that plant bug populations with resistance ratio (RR50) values >3.0 for acephate would be difficult to control in the field, and entomologists in the mid-South strongly recommended that alternation of insecticide classes in field treatments for plant bug control be used by growers in 2007.
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