TERMINATOR 505
Chloropyriphos 50% EC + Cypermethrin 5% EC
contact and stomach insecticide with vapour action and quick knock down eect.
Terminator 505 Versatile broad-spectrum insecticide. Extremely effective against all types of boll worms. It is a contact and stomach insecticide with vapour action and quick knock down effect. It also controls Aphids, Jassids, Thrips and white fly. Controls American Boll Worm, Pink Boll Worm, Spodoptra litura etc.
Cotton Cotton is the most important fibre crop not only of India but of the entire world. Cotton and its by-products are used in the production of a huge range of products including bank notes, margarine, rubber and medical supplies .There are 43 species of cotton in the world and some cotton grows on trees . It is produced in more than 100 countries in the world, but six of them – China, India, Pakistan, USA, Brazil and Uzbekistan – contribute about 80% of production . The fibre from one 227kg cotton bale can produce 215 pairs of jeans, 250 single bed sheets, 1,200 t-shirts, 2,100 pairs of boxer shorts, 3,000 nappies, 4,300 pairs of socks or 680,000 cotton balls . Cotton can absorb up to 27 times its own weight in water . The cotton plant requires about 180 – 200 days from planting to full maturity ready for harvest . Cotton is a unique crop in that it is both a food and a fibre
Target pest (APHID) Aphids are small sap-sucking insects and members of the super family Aphidoidea. Common names include greenfly and blackfly, but the insects can also be brown or pink, and the group includes the fluffy white woolly aphids. It is a true bug and sucks sap from plants. It is a widely
distributed pest of a variety of agricultural crops in the families Cucurbitaceae, Rutaceae and Malvaceae. The cotton aphid may be troublesome during the seedling stage when its feeding may result in plants being stunted. At the bollopening stage, the honeydew produced by the insect and the associated fungal moulds can foul the cotton lint. This lowers the quality of the crop and can cause harvesting difficulties. Adults and nymphs suck sap from growing points. Large numbers can cause leaf distortion and stunting.
Dose : 400 ml/acre
JASSIDS Jassid is a sucking pest occurring throughout the crop growing period on chilli in all the zones. The pest injects toxins into leaves while feeding which results in abnormal changes in leaves - marginal chlorosis and reddening. Since the pest severity is dependent on the occurrence of congenial weather conditions .We have devised weather based rules for weekly prediction of the pest severity. Based on severity prediction (based on ETL), pest management interventions and sprays can be taken up taking into account parameters such as pesticide eďŹƒcacy, safety, spray interval (a gap of 7-15 days is advised between sprays), crop age and economics.
Dose : 400 ml/acre
White FLY Whiteflies are sucking insects and their feeding removes nutrients from the plant. Whiteflies cause damage to cotton plants in two ways firstly by sucking the sap and secondly by excreting honey dew on which sooty mould grows. Feeding by high populations may result in stunting, poor growth, defoliation, boll shed and reduced yields. As they feed, whiteflies produce large quantities of honeydew which, if deposited on fibers, will reduce cotton quality and may interfere with picking, ginning, and spinning. Honeydew also supports the growth of black sooty molds that stain lint, lowering its quality. Both B. tabaci biotypes are efficient vectors of the cotton leaf crumple virus, a Geminivirus.
Dose : 400 ml/acre
THRIPS Thrips are tiny insects about as fat as a sewing needle that dine on many plants worldwide. Also known as thysanoptera or thunderflies, thrips are sucking insects that can cause some damage to plants. Thrips damage includes streaks, silvery speckling, and small white patches. This happens because the thrips suck plant cells from many garden plants, flowers, fruits, and shade trees. If you have a major infestation of thrips, your plants might be stunted with damaged flowers and fruit. The damage that you notice might instead come from the virus that the thrips spread
Dose : 400 ml/acre
Spotted Bollworm Spotted Bollworm is a common pest in southern region. he adults of E. insulana are small; fore wings with uniform silvery green colored whereas E. vittella has bu colored forewing with a green band on the middle of the fore wings. Earias vittella larvae are brownish with longitudinal white stripes on dorsal side having orange dots on prothorax without ďŹ nger shaped process on the cream colored body. E. insulana has ďŹ nger shaped process on atleast two thoracic segments and all abdominal segments. Pupa is covered in a boat shaped tough silken cocoon attached to plant parts or on the fallen leaves or fruiting bodies.
Dose : 400 ml/acre
american bollworm The American bollworm is a major insect pest of cotton which can cause losses to farmers. The young insect looks like a grub and is about the size of a match stick. It attacks and feeds on the inside of buds, owers and bolls. The grub has two lines on its back running from its head to its tail. As it feeds, it changes from yellowish white to greenish yellow and becomes older and larger. he grub puts its head into the boll, while keeping the rear of its body outside the boll. Its droppings are tiny black beads which are mostly found on lower leaves.
Dose : 400 ml/acre
PINK Bollworm The pink bollworm is an insect known for being a pest in cotton farming. The adult is a small, thin, gray moth with fringed wings. The larva is a dull white, caterpillar with eight pairs of legs with conspicuous pink banding along its dorsum. Pink bollworms damage squares and bolls, the damage to bolls being the most serious. Larvae burrow into bolls, through the lint, to feed on seeds. As the larva burrows within a boll, lint is cut and stained, resulting in severe quality loss. Under dry conditions, yield and quality losses are directly related to the percentage of bolls infested and the numbers of larvae per boll. With high humidity, it only takes one or two larvae to destroy an entire boll because damaged bolls are vulnerable to infection by boll rot fungi.
Dose : 400 ml/acre
Spodoptera Litura Spodoptera litura, otherwise known as the tobacco cutworm or cotton leafworm, is a nocturnal moth in the Noctuidae family. S. litura is a serious polyphagous pest. It has a very wide host range of over 120 plant species. Spodoptera litura, the tobacco caterpillar has attained major pest status because of its high reproductive potential along with the ability to migrate to long distances as adults. At the same time only larval stages cause 8090% economic losses due to its voracious feeding of the leaf. Feeding is initially by skeletonizing, or leaving the outline of the leave veins on the plant. As growth continues, caterpillars eat entire leaves, and even owers and fruits. The Caterpillar burrows into the soil several centimeters and there pupates without a cocoon. While pupating, it produces large amounts of uid. Attempts to allow pupation in captivity within an empty glass jar have resulted in drowning.
Dose : 400 ml/acre
RICE Rice was domesticated as early as 3500 BC, and by about 2,000 years ago it was grown in almost all of the present-day cultivation areas, predominantly deltas, floodplains and coastal plains, and some terraced valley slopes. Many paddies are flooded by rivers and rainfall during monsoon season, while others must be irrigated. In all countries, excluding India, paddies are worked by family labour alone and by the same methods as were used 2,000 years ago: hand cultivation with hoe and spade, or water-buffalo-, horse-, or ox-drawn plough with metal share.
Target pest (Stem Borer) The stem borer is a pest of deepwater rice. It is found in aquatic environments where there is continuous ooding. Second instar larvae enclose themselves in body leaf wrappings to make tubes and detach themselves from the leaf and falls onto the water surface. They attach themselves to the tiller and bore into the stem. Stem borers can destroy rice at any stage of the plant from seedling to maturity. They feed upon tillers and causes dead hearts or drying of the central tiller, during vegetative stage; and causes whiteheads at reproductive stage.
Dose : 250-300 ml
LEAF FOLDER Leaf folder caterpillars fold a rice leaf around themselves and attach the leaf margins together with silk strands. They feed inside the folded leaf creating longitudinal white and transparent streaks on the blade. Rice leaf folders occur in all rice environments and are more abundant during the rainy seasons. They are commonly found in shady areas and areas where rice is heavily fertilized. In tropical rice areas, they are active yearround, whereas in temperate countries they are active from May to October. The adults are nocturnal and during the day, they stay under shade to escape predation. Moths y short distances when disturbed
Dose : 250-300 ml
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