58 research outputs found
Acción diferencial de dos formulaciones de azadiractina sobre los estados de desarrollo de Ceratitis Capitata (Wiedemann) (Diptera: Tephritidae)
Pruebas de toxicidad con dos formulados de azadiractina (Align y Neem-e) sobre
Ceratitis capitata (Wiedemann) realizadas en laboratorio, mostraron un distinto grado
de actividad dependiente del producto y del estado de desarrollo de la mosca tratado.
A bajas concentraciones Neem-e no tuvo acción ovicida ni larvicida, mientras que
Align inhibió la eclosión del 90% de los huevos tratados a una dosis de 4,2 mg/l y a
1 mg/l no emergieron adultos, cuando las larvas neonatas se criaron en dieta tratada.
Por el contrario, Align no tuvo ningún efecto tóxico al ser suministrado en el agua de
beber a adultos de la mosca, mientras que Neem-e fue moderamente activo, obteniéndose
una mortalidad del 100% para una dosis de 50 mg/
Is emamectin benzoate effective against the different stages of Spodoptera exigua (Hübner) (Lepidoptera, Noctuidae)?
peer-reviewedThis work was partially supported by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (project AGL 2007-66130-C03-02 to P. Medina). F. Amor and P. Bengochea acknowledge the ministry of Education
and Culture and the Technical University of Madrid (UPM) for the doctoral fellowships. Special thanks to Syngenta Agro S.A. for their support.The beet armyworm, Spodoptera exigua (Hübner) (Lepidoptera, Noctuidae), is a major
polyphagous pest in greenhouses and open fields worldwide and also a main problem
in sweet pepper greenhouses. The effectiveness of the pesticide emamectin benzoate was tested in the laboratory on different stages of S. exigua using different concentrations and uptake routes. After dipping young (48-h-old) S. exigua eggs in emamectin benzoate at 0.5, 1 and 1.5 mg/L a.i. the chemical did not exhibit any ovicidal activity. There was, however, progressive neonate mortality at all concentrations,
culminating at 72 hours after hatching, when 100% of the larvae from the treated young
eggs died. Second and fourth instar S. exigua larvae did not exhibit significant mortality when exposed to the inert surfaces which were treated. In contrast, ingesting a diet contaminated with 0.5 mg/L a.i. of emamectin benzoate caused 100% mortality in L2 and L4 larvae 24 and 72 hours after ingestion, respectively. The LC50 value of the compound against L4 larvae that fed on sprayed sweet pepper leaves for 24 hours was 0.81 mg/L a.i..
When adults were fed on a solution of 0.5 mg/L a.i., there was a reduction in the female and male lifespan of 29.3% and 55.3%, respectively. Fecundity was reduced by more than 99%. These data suggest that emamectin benzoate is not only a useful insecticide when ingested by beet armyworm larvae but it also has ovolarvicidal and adult activity.Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovatio
Pairing Properties In Relativistic Mean Field Models Obtained From Effective Field Theory
We apply recently developed effective field theory nuclear models in mean
field approximation (parameter sets G1 and G2) to describe ground-state
properties of nuclei from the valley of -stability up to the drip lines.
For faster calculations of open-shell nuclei we employ a modified BCS approach
which takes into account quasi-bound levels owing to their centrifugal barrier,
with a constant pairing strength. We test this simple prescription by comparing
with available Hartree-plus-Bogoliubov results. Using the new effective
parameter sets we then compute separation energies, density distributions and
spin--orbit potentials in isotopic (isotonic) chains of nuclei with magic
neutron (proton) numbers. The new forces describe the experimental systematics
similarly to conventional non-linear relativistic force
parameters like NL3.Comment: 29 pages, 17 figures, accepted for publication in PR
Surface Incompressibility from Semiclassical Relativistic Mean Field Calculations
By using the scaling method and the Thomas-Fermi and Extended Thomas-Fermi
approaches to Relativistic Mean Field Theory the surface contribution to the
leptodermous expansion of the finite nuclei incompressibility has been
self-consistently computed. The validity of the simplest expansion, which
contains volume, volume-symmetry, surface and Coulomb terms, is examined by
comparing it with self-consistent results of the finite nuclei
incompressibility for some currently used non-linear sigma-omega parameter
sets. A numerical estimate of higher-order contributions to the leptodermous
expansion, namely the curvature and surface-symmetry terms, is made.Comment: 18 pages, REVTeX, 3 eps figures, changed conten
Pairing and continuum effects in nuclei close to the drip line
The Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov (HFB) equations in coordinate representation are
solved exactly, i.e., with correct asymptotic boundary conditions for the
continuous spectrum. The calculations are preformed with effective Skyrme
interactions. The exact HFB solutions are compared with HFB calculations based
on box boundary conditions and with resonant continuum Hartree-Fock-BCS
(HF-BCS) results. The comparison is done for the neutron-rich Ni isotopes. It
is shown that close to the drip line the amount of pairing correlations depends
on how the continuum coupling is treated. On the other hand, the resonant
continuum HF-BCS results are generally close to those of HFB even in
neutron-rich nuclei.Comment: 9 figures, corrected ref.
Relativistic Mean Field Model with Generalized Derivative Nucleon-Meson Couplings
The quantum hadrodynamics (QHD) model with minimal nucleon-meson couplings is
generalized by introducing couplings of mesons to derivatives of the nucleon
field in the Lagrangian density. This approach allows an effective description
of a state-dependent in-medium interaction in the mean-field approximation.
Various parametrizations for the generalized couplings are developed and
applied to infinite nuclear matter. In this approach, scalar and vector
self-energies depend on both density and momentum similarly as in the
Dirac-Brueckner theory. The Schr\"{o}diger-equivalent optical potential is much
less repulsive at high nucleon energies as compared to standard relativistic
mean field models and thus agrees better with experimental findings. The
derivative couplings in the extended model have significant effects on
properties of symmetric nuclear matter and neutron matter.Comment: 35 pages, 1 table, 10 figure
Thomas-Fermi theory for atomic nuclei revisited
The recently developed semiclassical variational Wigner-Kirkwood (VWK)
approach is applied to finite nuclei using external potentials and
self-consistent mean fields derived from Skyrme interactions and from
relativistic mean field theory. VWK consists of the Thomas-Fermi part plus a
pure, perturbative hbar^2 correction. In external potentials, VWK passes
through the average of the quantal values of the accumulated level density and
total energy as a function of the Fermi energy. However, there is a problem of
overbinding when the energy per particle is displayed as a function of the
particle number. The situation is analyzed comparing spherical and deformed
harmonic oscillator potentials. In the self-consistent case, we show for Skyrme
forces that VWK binding energies are very close to those obtained from extended
Thomas-Fermi functionals of hbar^4 order, pointing to the rapid convergence of
the VWK theory. This satisfying result, however, does not cure the overbinding
problem, i.e., the semiclassical energies show more binding than they should.
This feature is more pronounced in the case of Skyrme forces than with the
relativistic mean field approach. However, even in the latter case the shell
correction energy for e.g. 208Pb turns out to be only -6 MeV what is about a
factor two or three off the generally accepted value. As an ad hoc remedy,
increasing the kinetic energy by 2.5%, leads to shell correction energies well
acceptable throughout the periodic table. The general importance of the present
studies for other finite Fermi systems, self-bound or in external potentials,
is pointed out.Comment: 37 pages, 14 figures, revtex
Khon-Sham Density Functional Inspired Approach to Nuclear Binding
A non-relativisitic nuclear density functional theory is constructed, not as
usual, from an effective density dependent nucleon-nucleon force but directly
introducing in the functional results from microscopic nuclear and neutron
matter Bruckner G-matrix calculations at various densities. A purely
phenomenological finite range part to account for surface properties is added.
The striking result is that only four to five adjustable parameters, spin-orbit
included, suffice to reproduce nuclear binding energies and radii with the same
quality as obtained with the most performant effective forces, containing on
the order of ten parameters. In this pilot work, for the pairing correlations,
simply a density dependent zero range force is adopted from the literature.
Possible future extensions of this approach are pointed out
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