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Pharmacokinetics of Fenvalerate in Laboratory and Field Strains of Helicoverpa zea (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae)
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1996
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Field StrainsEntomologyChemical ControlFenvalerate PharmacokineticsComparative ToxicologyDrug ResistancePharmacological StudyBiorational PesticideToxicologyInsecticidePublic HealthBiochemistryTotal RadiocarbonPest ManagementArk LarvaeHelicoverpa ZeaPharmacologyBiologyPesticide ResistanceEnvironmental ToxicologyMedicinePharmacokinetics
Pharmacokinetics of fenvalerate-14C were examined in the bollworm, Helicoverpa zea (Boddie), 3rd instars from a pyrethroid-susceptible strain (BCIRL-S), a field strain (ARK) that possessed a low level of resistance to this pyrethroid (resistance ratio 2.7-fold at LD90), and a composite strain (HZC) that was reared under pyrethroid selection but did not significantly differ from ARK larvae in its suceptibility to fenvalerate. We observed differences in rates of fenvalerate penetration and degradation among larvae from the 3 strains. Based on actual disappearance of total radiocarbon from the insect rinses, half-times for fenvalerate penetration were ≈7, 16, and 18 h in BCIRL-S, ARK, and HZC 3rd instars, respectively. Fenvalerate was degraded fastest by HZC larvae followed by BCIRL-C and ARK larvae. The only difference in fenvalerate pharmacokinetics likely related to toxicity was slower pyrethroid penetration in the ARK and HZC strains as compared with the BCIRL-S strain.