Cargando…

Development and evaluation of pymetrozine controlled-release formulation to control paddy planthopper

Continuous outbreaks of rice planthoppers in rice-growing regions in China indicates the importance of redesigning several planthopper management programs. Chemical control remains the main strategy for planthopper control in China and other subtropical and temperate regions. Most common chemical in...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Xu, Wei-Ming, Zhang, Ming, Wei, Kun, Chen, Yan, Liu, Qin, Xue, Wei, Jin, Lin-Hong, He, Ming, Chen, Zuo, Zeng, Song
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society of Chemistry 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9081349/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35539714
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c8ra03516d
_version_ 1784702966046916608
author Xu, Wei-Ming
Zhang, Ming
Wei, Kun
Chen, Yan
Liu, Qin
Xue, Wei
Jin, Lin-Hong
He, Ming
Chen, Zuo
Zeng, Song
author_facet Xu, Wei-Ming
Zhang, Ming
Wei, Kun
Chen, Yan
Liu, Qin
Xue, Wei
Jin, Lin-Hong
He, Ming
Chen, Zuo
Zeng, Song
author_sort Xu, Wei-Ming
collection PubMed
description Continuous outbreaks of rice planthoppers in rice-growing regions in China indicates the importance of redesigning several planthopper management programs. Chemical control remains the main strategy for planthopper control in China and other subtropical and temperate regions. Most common chemical insecticides are emulsifiable concentrates, suspension concentrates, soluble concentrates, and wettable powders. These insecticides are applied by dusting or spraying using simple equipment. The active ingredient, with short effectiveness time, is degraded rapidly in natural paddy ecosystems. Thus, repeated pesticide applications are required to control rice planthoppers. Altering the short-term effect formulation of pesticides to a long-acting formulation may be an alternative solution. A pymetrozine controlled-release granule (CRG; 1%) was developed by loading the pesticide on bentonite and coating the solid pesticide with resin. Analysis of pymetrozine release indicated that the 1% pymetrozine CRG release was more than 80% for 60 days. In the field trial screening, the 1% pymetrozine CRG showed a controlled effect of 61.96–78.87% at 48 days after CGR application. Application of 1% pymetrozine CRG at the recommended dosage and 1.5 times the recommended dosage resulted in terminal residues on brown rice below the maximum residue limit (0.1 mg kg(−1)) of China and Japan. Moreover, the pesticide granules showed low toxicity against all tested beneficial organisms in the environment. Pymetrozine CRG (1%) showed good controlled release and efficacy for controlling paddy planthoppers. The compound exhibited a low terminal residue and low toxicity against all tested beneficial organisms. Pymetrozine CRG (1%) showed great potential for field applications to control paddy planthoppers, because it overcame the rapid loss of biological function during treatment.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9081349
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2018
publisher The Royal Society of Chemistry
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-90813492022-05-09 Development and evaluation of pymetrozine controlled-release formulation to control paddy planthopper Xu, Wei-Ming Zhang, Ming Wei, Kun Chen, Yan Liu, Qin Xue, Wei Jin, Lin-Hong He, Ming Chen, Zuo Zeng, Song RSC Adv Chemistry Continuous outbreaks of rice planthoppers in rice-growing regions in China indicates the importance of redesigning several planthopper management programs. Chemical control remains the main strategy for planthopper control in China and other subtropical and temperate regions. Most common chemical insecticides are emulsifiable concentrates, suspension concentrates, soluble concentrates, and wettable powders. These insecticides are applied by dusting or spraying using simple equipment. The active ingredient, with short effectiveness time, is degraded rapidly in natural paddy ecosystems. Thus, repeated pesticide applications are required to control rice planthoppers. Altering the short-term effect formulation of pesticides to a long-acting formulation may be an alternative solution. A pymetrozine controlled-release granule (CRG; 1%) was developed by loading the pesticide on bentonite and coating the solid pesticide with resin. Analysis of pymetrozine release indicated that the 1% pymetrozine CRG release was more than 80% for 60 days. In the field trial screening, the 1% pymetrozine CRG showed a controlled effect of 61.96–78.87% at 48 days after CGR application. Application of 1% pymetrozine CRG at the recommended dosage and 1.5 times the recommended dosage resulted in terminal residues on brown rice below the maximum residue limit (0.1 mg kg(−1)) of China and Japan. Moreover, the pesticide granules showed low toxicity against all tested beneficial organisms in the environment. Pymetrozine CRG (1%) showed good controlled release and efficacy for controlling paddy planthoppers. The compound exhibited a low terminal residue and low toxicity against all tested beneficial organisms. Pymetrozine CRG (1%) showed great potential for field applications to control paddy planthoppers, because it overcame the rapid loss of biological function during treatment. The Royal Society of Chemistry 2018-06-20 /pmc/articles/PMC9081349/ /pubmed/35539714 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c8ra03516d Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Xu, Wei-Ming
Zhang, Ming
Wei, Kun
Chen, Yan
Liu, Qin
Xue, Wei
Jin, Lin-Hong
He, Ming
Chen, Zuo
Zeng, Song
Development and evaluation of pymetrozine controlled-release formulation to control paddy planthopper
title Development and evaluation of pymetrozine controlled-release formulation to control paddy planthopper
title_full Development and evaluation of pymetrozine controlled-release formulation to control paddy planthopper
title_fullStr Development and evaluation of pymetrozine controlled-release formulation to control paddy planthopper
title_full_unstemmed Development and evaluation of pymetrozine controlled-release formulation to control paddy planthopper
title_short Development and evaluation of pymetrozine controlled-release formulation to control paddy planthopper
title_sort development and evaluation of pymetrozine controlled-release formulation to control paddy planthopper
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9081349/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35539714
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c8ra03516d
work_keys_str_mv AT xuweiming developmentandevaluationofpymetrozinecontrolledreleaseformulationtocontrolpaddyplanthopper
AT zhangming developmentandevaluationofpymetrozinecontrolledreleaseformulationtocontrolpaddyplanthopper
AT weikun developmentandevaluationofpymetrozinecontrolledreleaseformulationtocontrolpaddyplanthopper
AT chenyan developmentandevaluationofpymetrozinecontrolledreleaseformulationtocontrolpaddyplanthopper
AT liuqin developmentandevaluationofpymetrozinecontrolledreleaseformulationtocontrolpaddyplanthopper
AT xuewei developmentandevaluationofpymetrozinecontrolledreleaseformulationtocontrolpaddyplanthopper
AT jinlinhong developmentandevaluationofpymetrozinecontrolledreleaseformulationtocontrolpaddyplanthopper
AT heming developmentandevaluationofpymetrozinecontrolledreleaseformulationtocontrolpaddyplanthopper
AT chenzuo developmentandevaluationofpymetrozinecontrolledreleaseformulationtocontrolpaddyplanthopper
AT zengsong developmentandevaluationofpymetrozinecontrolledreleaseformulationtocontrolpaddyplanthopper