Guest guest Posted January 5, 2005 Report Share Posted January 5, 2005 If any of you know of reliable methods of dealing with fire ants, please respond to this posting. Thank you ! ~*~*~*~*~ Hi, I've been trying to find ways of dealing with my healthy ant population and as of this afternoon, haven't a clue about this problem ! Furthermore, The ant population has increased again due to our rainy weather in Texas. I finally found a company which allegedly deals in organic pesicides and was told about Permethrin, which is supposed to be harmless. Sure. Then I looked it up on the net and........yikes ! Toxicological Effects: Acute toxicity: Permethrin is moderately to practically non-toxic via the oral route, with a reported LD50 for technical permethrin in rats of 430 to 4000 mg/kg [12]. Via the dermal route, it is slightly toxic, with a reported dermal LD50 in rats of over 4000 mg/kg, and in rabbits of greater 2000 mg/kg [12,2]. Permethrin caused mild irritation of both the intact and abraded skin of rabbits. It also caused conjunctivitis when it was applied to the eyes [9]. The 4-hour inhalation LC50 for rats was greater than 23.5 mg/L, indicating practically no inhalation toxicity. The toxicity of permethrin is dependent on the ratio of the isomers present; the cis-isomer being more toxic [12]. Chronic toxicity: No adverse effects were observed in dogs fed permethrin at doses of 5 mg/kg/day for 90 days [15]. Rats fed 150 mg/kg/day for 6 months showed a slight increase in liver weights [9]. Very low levels of permethrin in the diet of chickens (0.1 ppm for 3 to 6 weeks after hatching) have been reported to suppress immune system activity [9]. Reproductive effects: The fertility of female rats was affected when they received very high oral doses of 250 mg/kg/day of permethrin during the 6th to 15th day of pregnancy [25]. It is not likely that reproductive effects will be seen in humans under normal circumstances. Teratogenic effects: Permethrin is reported to show no teratogenic activity [9]. Mutagenic effects: Permethrin is reported to show no mutagenic activity [9]. Carcinogenic effects: The evidence regarding the carcinogenicity of permethrin is inconclusive. Organ toxicity: Permethrin is suspected of causing liver enlargement of the liver and nerve damage [9]. Effects on the immune system have been noted in animal studies. Fate in humans and animals: Permethrin is efficiently metabolized by mammalian livers [40]. Breakdown products, or " metabolites, " of permethrin are quickly excreted and do not persist significantly in body tissues [41]. When permethrin is administered orally to rats, it is rapidly metabolized and almost completely eliminated from the body in a few days. Only 3 to 6% of the original dose was excreted unchanged in the feces of experimental animals [41]. Permethrin may persist in fatty tissues, with half-lives of 4 to 5 days in brain and body fat [9]. Permethrin does not block, or inhibit, cholinesterase enzymes [40]. ** source: http://extoxnet.orst.edu/pips/permethr.htm ******************************************************************* Did you all read the part about it being suspected of causing nerve damage and enlarging the liver ? And that company had the nerve to tell me that it doesn't bother dogs. I don't believe anyone. No one. If any of you would like to raise ants, just e-mail me privately and I'll ship some out to you. :>) Shirley in rainy Texas Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 6, 2005 Report Share Posted January 6, 2005 In a message dated 1/5/2005 7:49:16 P.M. Eastern Standard Time, Shirl4116 writes: If any of you know of reliable methods of dealing with fire ants, please respond to this posting. Thank you Pennyroyal repels ants and fleas. also spraying with a bottle of water mixed with 15 drops of peppermint essential oil.. or , better yet.. PLANTING peppermint .. ants won't cross it! Fleas either! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 6, 2005 Report Share Posted January 6, 2005 TO; PRIMAL MOMMIE: Are you talking about treating an entire lawn/yard using 15 drops of peppermint to a water bottle? If so, what would be the most effective way of covering an " entire yard " with peppermint? AND, would this be a one-time application? Like in the Spring ... or when would be best time?? As far as planting peppermint plants, do you suggest using these plants as a border along the front of a house? What those plants be effective for the entire front yard then? And doing the same in the back yard along the back of the house? Or would more strategic planting need to be done? Anxiously awaiting a response. I'm mostly concerned about eliminating fleas in the grass/yard for my dogs. Just me...... Jan ================================================= On Thu, 6 Jan 2005 00:55:04 EST primalmommieto5 writes: In a message dated 1/5/2005 7:49:16 P.M. Eastern Standard Time, Shirl4116 writes: If any of you know of reliable methods of dealing with fire ants, please respond to this posting. Thank you --------- Pennyroyal repels ants and fleas. also spraying with a bottle of water mixed with 15 drops of peppermint essential oil.. or , better yet.. PLANTING peppermint .. ants won't cross it! Fleas either! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 6, 2005 Report Share Posted January 6, 2005 I would say that spraying, while highly effective.. would require serious muliplication of the AMOUNT suggested. I'd plant some pepperment. It doesn't have to be an entire bed or border.. but just kind of " here and there " to create a wide scope of protection/repellent. In a message dated 1/6/2005 2:45:58 A.M. Eastern Standard Time, creativesources writes: Are you talking about treating an entire lawn/yard using 15 drops of peppermint to a water bottle? If so, what would be the most effective way of covering an " entire yard " with peppermint? AND, would this be a one-time application? Like in the Spring ... or when would be best time?? As far as planting peppermint plants, do you suggest using these plants as a border along the front of a house? What those plants be effective for the entire front yard then? And doing the same in the back yard along the back of the house? Or would more strategic planting need to be done? Anxiously awaiting a response. I'm mostly concerned about eliminating fleas in the grass/yard for my dogs. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 6, 2005 Report Share Posted January 6, 2005 I have heard of people using nematodes also on their lawn. Amy - <creativesources Thursday, January 06, 2005 2:05 AM Re: Are organic pesticides a myth ?? > Anxiously awaiting a response. I'm mostly concerned > about eliminating fleas in the grass/yard for my dogs. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.