Insecticides crops

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  1. Crops Cucumber Remove This Item
  2. Crops Parsnip Remove This Item
  3. Crops Garlic Remove This Item
  4. Mode of action contact Remove This Item

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  1. Cucumber 25 items
  2. Parsnip 1 item
  3. Alfalfa 3 items
  4. Almond 1 item
  5. Anthurium 1 item
  6. Apple tree 40 items
  7. Apricot tree 12 items
  8. Arborvitae 1 item
  9. Azalea and Rhododendron 1 item
  10. Balcony flowers 1 item
  11. Barley 14 items
  12. Basil 1 item
  13. Beans 8 items
  14. Beet fodder 1 item
  15. Beet sugar 8 items
  16. Begonia 2 items
  17. Blackberries 1 item
  18. Blueberry 1 item
  19. Bonsai 1 item
  20. Broccoli 3 items
  21. Brussels sprouts 1 item
  22. Butternut squash 4 items
  23. Buxus 1 item
  24. Cabbages 24 items
  25. Callistephus chinensis 1 item
  26. Carnations 4 items
  27. Carrot 5 items
  28. Cauliflower 10 items
  29. Celery 2 items
  30. Cherry tree 16 items
  31. Chestnut tree 1 item
  32. Chickpeas 1 item
  33. Chrysanthemums 4 items
  34. Citrus 4 items
  35. Climbing plants 1 item
  36. Common beet 2 items
  37. Coriander 1 item
  38. Corn 13 items
  39. Cranberries 1 item
  40. Decorative shrubs 2 items
  41. Eggplant 15 items
  42. Ficus 2 items
  43. Fragole 6 items
  44. Gazania 1 item
  45. Geranium 1 item
  46. Gerbera 4 items
  47. Grain 3 items
  48. Grapes 1 item
  49. Grass 1 item
  50. Green plants 1 item
  51. Hazelnut 1 item
  52. Horseradish 1 item
  53. Indoor flowers 2 items
  54. Kalanchoe 2 items
  55. Leek 1 item
  56. Lettuce 8 items
  57. Linseed 1 item
  58. Lovage 1 item
  59. Melons 5 items
  60. Mustard 4 items
  61. Oat 7 items
  62. Olive 2 items
  63. Onion 11 items
  64. Orchid 2 items
  65. Oregano 1 item
  66. Ornamental plants 5 items
  67. Ornamental trees 3 items
  68. Palm tree 2 items
  69. Parsley 3 items
  70. Peach tree 15 items
  71. Pear tree 6 items
  72. Peas 5 items
  73. Pepper 22 items
  74. Petunia 1 item
  75. Plum tree 26 items
  76. Potato 30 items
  77. Pumpkins 2 items
  78. Quince tree 1 item
  79. Radishes 4 items
  80. Rapeseed 16 items
  81. Raspberries 1 item
  82. Romanian peppers 2 items
  83. Rosemary 1 item
  84. Roses 1 item
  85. Sorghum 3 items
  86. Sour cherries 2 items
  87. Soybean 8 items
  88. Spinach 3 items
  89. Summer savory 1 item
  90. Sunflower 9 items
  91. Sylviculture 8 items
  92. Thyme 1 item
  93. Tobacco 4 items
  94. Tomatoes 25 items
  95. Turnip 2 items
  96. Vineyard 27 items
  97. Violets 3 items
  98. Walnut tree 1 item
  99. Wheat 16 items
  100. Zucchini 8 items
 
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Bio Crops  
 
Effect on Bees  
 
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Being a substance meant to kill insects, insecticides can be of different kinds, as they attack insects at different stages of life. Insect growth regulators are meant to inhibit the development of these pests, and depending on what type of pests you are fighting against, you can use ovicides and larvicides, to make sure you stop their growth and reproduction. They are also divided by their ability to alter the ecosystems they come in contact with, as some have residual, long-term activity, and others kill on contact. Insecticides can also be categorized by their natural, biological kind and synthetic, chemical structure.

They can be in solid, liquid, or gaseous form, and depending on a different category, they can be classified by whether they will be toxic to unrelated, non-targeted species. Insecticides can also be repellent or non-repellent, with the latter killing slowly, but managing to eradicate more individuals from a colony, as they cannot detect the insecticide and carry it to their nest.

Nearly all insecticides have the potential to significantly alter ecosystems and some are even toxic to humans.