Abstract

A synthetic insect juvenile hormone analog (a juvenoid), ethyl N-[2-[4-[[2,2-(ethylenedioxy)cyclohexyl]methyl]phenox]ethyl]carbam ate, which has displayed high biological activity against different insect species and high stability under field conditions, was selected as a biologically active model compound for a study of a juvenile hormone analog degradation. The biologically active compound itself and its three diversely radiolabeled derivatives were applied to the flesh fly (Sarcophaga bullata) or the tsetse fly (Glossina palpalis), respectively. Monitoring of a fate of the applied juvenile hormone analog was carried out using a detection method of the radioactivity microdistribution within the whole insect body in combination with a radio high performance liquid chromatography (radio-HPLC), both of whole-body extracts made in different, but in advance scheduled, time intervals, and of extracts of insect excreta accumulated over an eight-day experiment.

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