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Pesticide Used (pesticide + used)
Selected AbstractsChlorpyrifos-induced DNA damage in rat liver and brainENVIRONMENTAL AND MOLECULAR MUTAGENESIS, Issue 6 2008Anugya Mehta Abstract Chlorpyrifos (O,O'-diethyl- O -3,5,6-trichloro-2-pyridyl phosphorothionate, CPF) is a broad spectrum organophosphate pesticide used to control a variety of pests. The present study was undertaken to test the in vivo genotoxic potential of CPF in rats, using the single cell gel electrophoresis (or comet) assay. The rats were administered 50 mg and 100 mg CPF/kg body weight daily for 1, 2, and 3 days as well as 1.12 mg and 2.24 mg CPF/kg body weight for 90 days. The level of DNA damage was estimated by scoring 100 cells per animal, dividing into five types: types 0, I, II, III, and IV. The results clearly indicate that exposure to CPF, acutely or chronically, caused a dose-dependent increase in DNA damage in the liver and brain of rats. From the present study, it can be concluded that CPF exhibits genotoxic potential in vivo. Environ. Mol. Mutagen., 2008. © 2008 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] Atrazine-induced changes in aromatase activity in estrogen sensitive target tissuesJOURNAL OF APPLIED TOXICOLOGY, Issue 3 2008A. C. Holloway Abstract Atrazine (ATR) is a pesticide used widely throughout North America. Although not directly estrogenic, ATR treatment has been shown to increase aromatase activity in tumor cell lines. Thus, it is suggested that ATR can increase local tissue estrogen levels in estrogen sensitive target tissues through increased aromatase activity. Therefore the effect of ATR on aromatase activity was measured in human granulosa-lutein cell cultures, cells that abundantly express aromatase, and endometrial stromal cell (ESC) cultures, cells that do not express aromatase. Aromatase activity was quantified by the tritiated water method and the specificity of the assay was confirmed by co-incubation with 4-hydroxyandrostenedione, an irreversible inhibitor of the catalytic activity of aromatase. Aromatase activity in ATR treated (1,10 µm) granulosa-lutein cells was increased more than 2-fold compared with control cultures. There were no treatment related changes in cellular protein and thus it is suggested that the ATR-induced change in aromatase activity was not due to an increase in cell number. ATR-treatment had no effect on ESC aromatase activity at any concentration tested. Similarly, there was no effect of ATR treatment on human recombinant aromatase activity in our cell-free test system. Therefore it is concluded that µm concentrations of ATR can increase aromatase activity of human granulosa cells but not ESC and this effect is not elicited at the enzyme level. Copyright © 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Ecological network analysis: an application to the evaluation of effects of pesticide use in an agricultural environmentPEST MANAGEMENT SCIENCE (FORMERLY: PESTICIDE SCIENCE), Issue 10 2007Peter Andras Abstract Ecological network analysis is used to evaluate the impact of pesticide use on ecological systems in the context of agricultural farmland environments. The aim is to provide support for the design of effective and minimally damaging pest control strategies. The ecological network analysis can identify species that are important to the integrity of the ecological network. The methodology can be used to monitor the impact of shifts in terms of types of pesticide used on the ecological system. The authors' intention is to use this methodology to provide supporting evidence for the UK Voluntary Initiative programme aimed at convincing farmers voluntarily to make improved choices in the use of a wide range of pesticides. Copyright © 2007 Society of Chemical Industry [source] Determination of abamectin in soil samples using high-performance liquid chromatography with tandem mass spectrometryRAPID COMMUNICATIONS IN MASS SPECTROMETRY, Issue 15 2004Bobby N. Brewer Abamectin, which is comprised of a mixture of avermectins B1a and B1b, is a natural pesticide used as an anti-parasitic agent in livestock, ornamental, and agricultural crops, which can potentially be transported to aquatic systems. These compounds are highly toxic to both aquatic vertebrates and invertebrates at low concentrations in water. This investigation developed high-performance liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometry (HPLC/MS/MS) techniques to support automated extraction by an accelerated solvent extraction (ASE®) system and chromatographic techniques to measure residues of avermectins in complex soil samples. HPLC along with atmospheric pressure chemical ionization (APCI) MS/MS was used for separation and determination of avermectin isomers in soil samples. Average method recovery for abamectin by UV was 91%, while detection by MS/MS resulted in a 68% recovery for abamectin. Individual method recoveries by MS/MS were 53.6% for avermectin B1a and 36.8% for avermectin B1b. The use of tandem technology eliminated matrix interferences and resulted in an approximately eight-fold increase in sensitivity. Copyright © 2004 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Emission of legacy chlorinated pesticides from agricultural and orchard soils in British Columbia, CanadaENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY & CHEMISTRY, Issue 6 2006Terry F. Bidleman Abstract Air samples were collected above agricultural fields in the Fraser Valley and orchards in the Okanagan Valley, British Columbia, Canada, to investigate volatilization of organochlorine pesticides used in the past. Concentrations of pesticides in air were elevated over soils that contained higher residues. Soil/air fugacity ratios at sites with the higher soil residues were calculated relative to air sampled at 40 cm height and background air. The fugacity ratios in the first case indicated net volatilization or soil-air equilibrium for most compounds and occasional net deposition for p,p, -dichlorodiphenyldichloroethene (p,p, -DDE), whereas those in the second case showed a strong potential for net volatilization of all compounds. The enantiomer fraction (EF) of chiral compounds ,-hexachlorocyclohexane (,-HCH), trans -chlordane, cis -chlordane, and o,p, -DDT were determined in overlying air samples and soils. Enantiomer fractions in air corresponded to those in soils at fields in which soil concentrations were high but were decoupled from soil signatures at fields with low soil residues. Mean EFs in air sampled over soils were significantly (p < 0.001) nonracemic for ,-HCH and the chlordanes and agreed with published EFs in regional ambient air. The mean EF of o,p, -DDT for all air samples did not show a significant deviation from racemic EFs (p > 0.2), but EFs of individual samples reflected the ambivalent nature of o,p, -DDT degradation, sometimes preferring the (+) enantiomer and other times the (,) enantiomer. The study indicates that soils are continuing to emit "legacy" pesticides into the regional atmosphere. [source] Microbial degradation of isoproturon and related phenylurea herbicides in and below agricultural fieldsFEMS MICROBIOLOGY ECOLOGY, Issue 1 2003Sebastian R Sørensen Abstract The phenylurea herbicides are an important group of pesticides used extensively for pre- or post-emergence weed control in cotton, fruit and cereal crops worldwide. The detection of phenylurea herbicides and their metabolites in surface and ground waters has raised the awareness of the important role played by agricultural soils in determining water quality. The degradation of phenylurea herbicides following application to agricultural fields is predominantly microbial. However, evidence suggests a slow degradation of the phenyl ring, and substantial spatial heterogeneity in the distribution of active degradative populations, which is a key factor determining patterns of leaching losses from agricultural fields. This review summarises current knowledge on the microbial metabolism of isoproturon and related phenylurea herbicides in and below agricultural soils. It addresses topics such as microbial degradation of phenylurea herbicides in soil and subsurface environments, characteristics of known phenylurea-degrading soil micro-organisms, and similarities between metabolic pathways for different phenylurea herbicides. Finally, recent studies in which molecular and microbiological techniques have been used to provide insight into the in situ microbial metabolism of isoproturon within an agricultural field will be discussed. [source] Selectivity of pesticides used on cotton (Gossypium hirsutum) to Trichogramma pretiosum reared on two laboratory-reared hosts,PEST MANAGEMENT SCIENCE (FORMERLY: PESTICIDE SCIENCE), Issue 1 2006Cristina S Bastos Abstract The side-effects of pesticides (insecticides, fungicides, herbicides and plant growth regulators) used on cotton were tested on adults and pupae of Trichogramma pretiosum Riley reared in the laboratory on two different hosts, the Angoumois grain moth (Sitotroga cerealella Olivier) and the Mediterranean flour moth (Ephestia kuehniella (Zeller)). The eggs of the host enclosing the parasitoid pupae received direct pesticide sprays, while the adults of the parasitoid were exposed to the pesticides through contact with residues on sprayed eggs offered to parasitism. Alpha-cypermethrin, carbosulfan, deltamethrin, endosulfan, profenofos and zeta-cypermethrin were highly noxious to the parasitoid, significantly reducing the percentage of emergence and parasitism of T. pretiosum developing in E. kuehniella or S. cerealella eggs. However, the pupal stage of the parasitoid developing in S. cerealella eggs was less susceptible to alpha-cypermethrin and deltamethrin. Lufenuron and metamidophos greatly reduced the percentage of adult emergence from eggs of both hosts, while novaluron only interfered on this variable when the wasps were developing in E. kuehniella eggs. However, lufenuron and monocrotophos had no effect on the parasitoid pupae of T. pretiosum developing in E. kuehniella eggs. Chlorfluazuron, diafenthiuron, diflubenzuron, fentin hydroxide, mepiquat chloride, novaluron, thiacloprid and triflumuron did not affect T. pretiosum emergence when eggs of S. cerealella enclosing pupae of the wasps were surface treated. The pesticides azoxystrobin, carbendazin + thiram, mepiquat chloride and novaluron had no effect on the ability of the wasps to parasitise E. kuehniella eggs. However, only mepiquat chloride did not affect the percentage of F1 wasps emerging from E. kuehniella eggs. The remaining pesticides moderately reduced the percentage of emergence and parasitism of the wasps when they had contact with the chemicals during their pupal or adult stage. Thus there were differences in pesticide toxicity according to the host used for parasitoid development. These differences were hypothesised to occur because of differences in egg morphology and parasitoid performance. Copyright © 2005 Society of Chemical Industry [source] |