WHAT HAPPENS TO DEGRADABLE PESTICIDES? SOME PESTICIDE TRANSFORMATION PRODUCTS ARE AS ACUTELY TOXIC, OR MORE TOXIC, THAN THEIR PARENT COMPOUNDS BiblioCategory: Research
Structural requirements for monoterpenoid activity against insects BiblioCategory: Insect ToxicologyTags: insect toxicologyQSARnatural products
Model ecosystem evaluation of the environmental impacts of the veterinary drugs phenothiazine, sulfamethazine, clopidol, and diethylstilbestrol. BiblioCategory: Research
Effects of water hardness and salinity on the acute toxicity and uptake of fenvalerate by bluegill (Lepomis macrochirus) BiblioCategory: Research
Catnip, Nepeta cataria (Lamiales: Lamiaceae)-a closer look: seasonal occurrence of nepetalactone isomers and comparative repellency of three terpenoids to insects BiblioCategory: Insect ToxicologyRepellencyTags: insect toxicologyrepellencynatural products
Pesticide degradation mechanisms and environmental activation BiblioCategory: Environmental Toxicology and ChemistryEnvironmental FateTags: environmental toxicologyenvironmental fateenvironmental chemistry
Degradation of pesticides in soil as influenced by the presence of hydrolysis metabolites BiblioCategory: Environmental FateTags: environmental toxicologyenvironmental fateenvironmental chemistrypesticides
Pesticide transformation products. Fate and significance in the environment. BiblioCategory: Research
European corn borer (Lepidoptera: Pyralidae) leaf-feeding resistance and DIMBOA content in inbred lines of dent maize grown under field versus greenhouse conditions BiblioCategory: Research
Toxic effects of< i> d</i>-limonene in the earthworm< i> Eisenia fetida</i>(Savigny) BiblioCategory: Research