maybe
No. Soap is often an ingredient in organic insecticides. It is also an ingredient in many herbicides, but, I believe, only as a "sticky" agent to help the herbicide stick to the foliage. == ==
The Green Hill Landscaping website does not mention whether non-organic or organic insecticides are used. Botanical insecticides may not be the best choice when active ingredients such as rotenone are used. For example, the active ingredient in question tracks back to the roots of Fabaceae family members and to the seeds and stems of the jicama vine plant, sources of toxicity in insects and such aquatic life as fish.
You don't, the properties in tobacco, when steeped in an infusion, will make you sick to your stomach. Tobacco "tea" (an infusion made by steeping tobacco in water) is a main ingredient in natural or "green" insecticides.
yes , i think insecticides are irritant substances
"Insecticides" is a plural noun.
No, liquid Sevin does not kill tomato lice.Specifically, the term tomato lice designates aphids. Liquid Sevin has the active ingredient carbaryl. Aphids may be controlled by insecticides which contain the active ingredients acephate, chlorpyrifos, or malathion.
Yes. It is the plural of insecticide, as in, "There are various insecticides from which to choose."
to remove poisonous substances from insecticides
Insecticides contain chemical compounds known to be lethal to the creatures identified in the product information. Refer to the related link below for a Wikipedia article on insecticides.
Some insecticides are just as toxic to humans as they are to insects. Typically, it just takes a larger exposure to affect a human. However, some insecticides can be toxic even in small quantities. Insecticides such as malathion or diazinon would be harmful to humans in much smaller quantities than insecticides derived from soaps or orange peels.
Insecticides have active and inert ingredients. It is the active ingredient that ultimately makes the insecticide work. Ginger oil can be made by collecting the drops from steaming the ginger root. But it is a skin irritant. And so the end product must be hugely diluted. The oil ends up accounting for less than 1% of the product. Lemon grass oil is not an active ingredient. Naphthalene is the active ingredient in moth balls.
Fumio Matsumura has written: 'Toxicology of insecticides' -- subject(s): Environmental aspects, Environmental aspects of Insecticides, Insecticides, Pesticides and wildlife, Physiological effect, Toxicology