Results 241 to 250 of about 19,307 (269)
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Insecticidal Properties of a Chenopodium-Based Botanical

Journal of Economic Entomology, 2004
The emulsifiable concentrate UDA-245 based on an essential oil extract from Chenopodium ambrosioides variety near ambrosioides, a North American herbaceous plant, was compared with commercially available pesticides for their effectiveness to control green peach aphid, Myzus persicae (Sulzer) (Homoptera: Aphididae), western flower thrips, Frankliniella ...
H, Chiasson, C, Vincent, N J, Bostanian
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Advances in Research of Botanical Insecticide

Applied Mechanics and Materials, 2015
Botanical insecticides have advantages of wide range of sources, easily made with local materials, low-cost, cost savings, useful and safe to people, animals and crops, etc. The compound of botanical insecticide is an effective way to improve the efficacy of such pesticides.
Shi Wei Wu   +5 more
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Botanical Insecticides

2012
Tijekom nekoliko zadnjih desetljeća uporaba sintetskih, konvencionalnih insekticida u suzbijanju biljnih štetočinja bila je standardna praksa. Međutim, zbog brojnih saznanja i dokaza o vrlo štetnom i opasnom utjecaju brojnih sintetskih pesticida na zdravlje ljudi i životinja, sve je veća potreba za pronalaženjem i uvođenjem u uporabu znatno manje ...
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Research status of ginger insecticidal components in botanical insecticides.

Ying yong sheng tai xue bao = The journal of applied ecology, 2023
The development and application of botanical insecticides is important for the sustainable development of green agriculture. The abuse of chemical pesticides has caused serious problems of environment and human health. Botanical insecticides have become an environment-friendly insecticides due to their nature, low toxicity, easy degradation and other ...
Yong-Xing, Zhu   +7 more
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Botanical insecticide research: many publications, limited useful data

Trends in Plant Science, 2014
Our analysis of >20000 papers on botanical insecticides from 1980 to 2012, indicates major growth in the number of papers published annually (61 in 1980 to 1207 in 2012), and their proportion among all papers on insecticides (1.43% in 1980 to 21.38% in 2012). However, only one-third of 197 random articles among the 1086 papers on botanical insecticides
Murray B, Isman, Michael L, Grieneisen
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Botanical insecticides inspired by plant–herbivore chemical interactions

Trends in Plant Science, 2014
Plants have evolved a plethora of secondary chemicals to protect themselves against herbivores and pathogens, some of which have been used historically for pest management. The extraction methods used by industry render many phytochemicals ineffective as insecticides despite their bioactivity in the natural context.
Saber, Miresmailli, Murray B, Isman
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Botanical insecticides: for richer, for poorer

Pest Management Science, 2007
AbstractBotanical insecticides presently play only a minor role in insect pest management and crop protection; increasingly stringent regulatory requirements in many jurisdictions have prevented all but a handful of botanical products from reaching the marketplace in North America and Europe in the past 20 years. Nonetheless, the regulatory environment
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A renaissance for botanical insecticides?

Pest Management Science, 2015
AbstractBotanical insecticides continue to be a subject of keen interest among the international research community, reflected in the steady growth in scientific publications devoted to the subject. Until very recently though, the translation of that theory to practice, i.e.
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Exploration of Novel Botanical Insecticide Leads: Synthesis and Insecticidal Activity of β-Dihydroagarofuran Derivatives

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, 2016
The discovery of novel leads and new mechanisms of action is of vital significance to the development of pesticides. To explore lead compounds for botanical insecticides, 77 β-dihydroagarofuran derivatives were designed and synthesized. Their structures were mainly confirmed by (1)H NMR, (13)C NMR, DEPT-135°, IR, MS, and HRMS.
Ximei, Zhao   +4 more
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Botanical insecticides effectively control chickpea weevil, Callosobruchus maculatus

Environmental Sustainability, 2018
Health hazards associated with the excess use of chemical insecticides used for the post-harvest preservation of food grains has prompted the emphasis on the use of natural insecticides in agriculture. In this regards, botanical insecticides have emerged as one of the best, safer, green, eco-friendly, promising and sustainable alternatives for ...
Beenam Saxena, R. Z. Sayyed
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