Responses of Pests to Fumigation. II. Toxicity of Hydrogen Cyanide toCalandraspp. under Reduced Pressure
- 10 July 1953
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Bulletin of Entomological Research
- Vol. 44 (2) , 225-230
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s000748530002304x
Abstract
Adults ofCalandra granariaandC. oryzaehave been fumigated with hydrogen cyanide by the methods of sustained pressure reduction and preliminary pressure reduction, the main criterion of response being death. Of the factors studied, starvation and sex of the insects are without influence. With pressure reduction, Haber's Rule relating mortality, concentration and period of exposure is not followed; for a given concentration-time product, the mortality is higher, the shorter the period of exposure.Preliminary pressure reduction increases mortality much less than sustained pressure reduction. With the latter the mortality ofC. oryzaeis higher than that ofC. granaria. The increases in susceptibility are largely accounted for by increases caused by pressure reduction alone in the absence of fumigant. The number of eggs laid by untreated females and by females surviving treatment was excessively variable and no discrimination between factors could be made.This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Observations on Grain‐Weevils, Calandra (Col., Curculionidae), General Biology and Oviposition.Journal of Zoology, 1947
- FACTORS AFFECTING THE RESISTANCE OF THE FLOUR BEETLE, TRIBOLIUM CONFUSUM DUV., TO HYDROGEN CYANIDE1Annals of Applied Biology, 1939