Pesticides:
Pesticides are chemical or biological substances used to prevent, destroy, repel, or control pests such as insects, weeds, fungi, rodents, or other organisms harmful to crops, stored products, animals, or human health.
- The word “pesticide” includes insecticides (against insects), herbicides (against weeds), fungicides (against fungi), rodenticides (against rodents), and many others.
- They can be of synthetic origin (man-made chemicals) or biopesticides (derived from natural materials like bacteria, plants, or minerals).
Pesticide Formulations:
A pesticide formulation is the final form in which the pesticide is manufactured, packaged, and sold to end-users. Pure pesticide active ingredients are often too toxic, unstable, or concentrated to be applied directly. Formulations make them safe, effective, and easy to use.
Examples of formulations include:
- EC (Emulsifiable Concentrate)
- WP (Wettable Powder)
- SC (Suspension Concentrate)
- GR (Granules)
- DF (Dry Flowables)
- CS (Capsule Suspension)
Uses of Pesticides and Formulations:
Protect crops, improve yield and quality, reduce post-harvest losses.
Control mosquitoes, flies, rodents to reduce disease spread.
Protect animals from parasites like ticks, mites, and worms.
- Household & Industrial Uses:
Termite control, insect repellents, weed control.
Importance of Pesticide Testing
- Quality Control – Ensures AI concentration matches label claim.
- Human & Environmental Safety – Toxicology and residue studies ensure safe use.
- Regulatory Compliance – Mandatory before product registration and approval.
- Efficacy – Confirms effectiveness against target pests.
- Environmental Protection – Checks persistence, contamination, and non-target safety.