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40 and
Procedure. There were three replications of the same experiment, and the
results of these were compiled and diagramed in figures 34 and 39. Maximum
effects were recorded in each case after 220 hours of observation. Figures 34, 35, 36, 37, 38 and 39 give
the results ten, 15, 30 and 60 second
exposures, respectively. Heptachlor exceeded all other chemicals, both with
respect to rapidity and and magnitude of kill, in all but the 6o-second
exposure where it was surpassed by aldrin.
Furthermore, it showed a 77 per cent kill in the one second exposure
and then diminished to 67 per cent with five seconds. The highest effectiveness of 9? per cent was achieved with 30 seconds exposure.
It showed a decreased effectiveness again with 60 seconds where it
gave only an 83 per cent kill. Aldrin made a consistent increase in effectiveness from
the start, except for a slight duration between the five and 15-eecond
exposure periods. It started out with
a 40 per cent kill at the one-second exposure and concluded with an 83 per
cent kill at 30 and 60 seconds. Dieldrin was similar in that it maintained a steady
increase in effectiveness throughout the experiment, varying only slightly
between the ten and 3O-second exposures.
Its effectiveness at the onset was 19 per cent kill with one second
exposure and culminated with a 72 per cent mortality in the 60-second
exposure. Even though the effectiveness of chlordane was improved
with the longer exposures, it showed a rather inconsistent improved kill with
increased exposures. There was no
difference in its potency after the 30-second exposure, where it killed 55 per cent after 220 hours. |