Abstract: | The two insecticidal benzoylurea compounds, diflubenzuron and chlorfluazuron, show large differences in their toxicity against the larvae of insects like the tobacco budworm, Heliothis virescens, or the Egyptian cotton leafworm, Spodoptera littoralis, chlorfluazuron being about 100 times more toxic. This difference is due mainly to a much faster metabolism of diflubenzuron. Its half-life within the larvae is about 5 h, compared to about 50 h for chlorfluazuron. Chlorfluazuron is also the much better ovicide of the two, following injection of the compounds into the females of H. virescens. Again the difference in the rate of metabolism is the main cause. The rate of excretion of the parent benzoylureas is relatively low, but their metabolites are excreted very quickly. |