2000
DOI: 10.1303/aez.2000.177
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Toxicity of insecticides to predators of rice planthoppers: Spiders, the mirid bug and the dryinid wasp.

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Cited by 153 publications
(94 citation statements)
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“…Spider species richness was also shown to strongly decrease with insecticide treatment in our study, a pattern already shown by LEE et al (1993) for rice in South Korea. TANAKA et al (2000) in evaluating the toxicity of nine insecticides on predators of rice pests in Japan found that some products were very toxic to spiders, with a variation in response among spider species. In the TANAKA et al (2000) study, the insecticide most toxic to spiders caused a resurgence of the rice planthoppers.…”
Section: Spider Feeding Guildsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Spider species richness was also shown to strongly decrease with insecticide treatment in our study, a pattern already shown by LEE et al (1993) for rice in South Korea. TANAKA et al (2000) in evaluating the toxicity of nine insecticides on predators of rice pests in Japan found that some products were very toxic to spiders, with a variation in response among spider species. In the TANAKA et al (2000) study, the insecticide most toxic to spiders caused a resurgence of the rice planthoppers.…”
Section: Spider Feeding Guildsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…TANAKA et al (2000) in evaluating the toxicity of nine insecticides on predators of rice pests in Japan found that some products were very toxic to spiders, with a variation in response among spider species. In the TANAKA et al (2000) study, the insecticide most toxic to spiders caused a resurgence of the rice planthoppers. Given our results of differing abundance and richness, combined with similar species composition, among treatments, the whole spider assemblage seems to be indiscriminately affected.…”
Section: Spider Feeding Guildsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These chemicals are commonly synthetic pyrethroids (as alpha-cypermethrin, beta-cyfluthrin, cypermethrin, lambda-cyhalothrin, zeta-cypermethrin) and partly organic phosphoruses (as chlorpyrifos-ethyl). Many investigations have shown that spiders are usually more sensitive than insects to synthetic pyrethroids and organic phosphoruses (Brown et al, 1983;Birnie et al, 1998;Huusela-Veistola, 1998;Yardım and Edwards, 1998;Marc et al, 1999;Holland et al, 2000;Tanaka et al, 2000). When considered from this perspective, it is important to protect and sustain the fauna of natural enemies of pests in the cereal agroecosystem of Northern Cyprus.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…1999ϳ2003 5 Table 2 1 Table 3 1986; Hardin et al, 1995 Fabellar andHeinrichs, 1984;Dobel and Denno, 1994;Tanaka et al, 2000Tanaka et al, 1988Ffrench-Constant et al, 1988;Harrington et al, 1989 1989 1999 1 Fig. 3, Table 4 1,000 ϭ500 ppm …”
Section: Linnaeusmentioning
confidence: 99%