Table 1.
Classification of Pesticides based on (i) the mode of entry, (ii) the action, (iii) the chemical composition, (iv) the toxicity, and (v) the source of origin
Classification Based on | Class | Sub-class | Examples | Use/Function | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mode of entry | Systemic pesticide | 2,4-D, glyphosate | They can kill weeds in addition to being absorbed by plants or animals and moving to untreated tissues. | ||
Non-systemic (Contact) | Paraquat, diquat | They act on target pests when they come in contact. | |||
Stomach | Malathion | They enter into the pest’s body through their mouth and digestive system. | [32-34] | ||
Fumigant | Phosphine | They act or may kill the target pests by producing vapour and entering the pest body through a tracheal system. | |||
Repellent | Methiocarb | They do not kill the pest’s but make pesticides target tasteless enough to keep pests away from the treated area | |||
Action | Physical Poison | Activated clay | Starts killing pests by applying a physical effect | ||
Protoplasm | Arsenicals | Subjected for the precipitation of protein | |||
Respiratory | Hydrogen cyanide | Inactivate the respiratory enzymes | |||
Nerve | Malathion | Obstruct impulse conduction | |||
Chitin Inhibition | Diflubenzuron | Obstruct the chitin synthesis in pests | |||
Chemical Composition | Insecticide: | Organophosphates | Monocrotophos | Kill or repel insects and related species | |
Carbamates | Carbaryl | ||||
Pyrethroids | Permethrin | ||||
Organochlorines | Endosulfan | ||||
Neonicotinoids | Imidacloprid | ||||
a) Fungicides: | Dodine | Used to prevent and cure to completely eliminate the fungi | |||
Aliphatic nitrogen fungicides | Carpropamid | ||||
Amide fungicides | |||||
Aromatic fungicides | Chlorothalonil | ||||
Dicarboximide fungicides | Famoxadone | ||||
Dinitrophenol fungicides | Dinocap | ||||
b) Herbicide: | Flufenacet | Used to kill weeds or obstruct the growth of undesirable herbs or weeds | |||
Anilide herbicides | |||||
Phenoxyacetic herbicides | 2, 4-D | ||||
Quaternary ammonium herbicides | |||||
Chlorotriazine herbicides | Paraquat | ||||
Sulfonylurea herbicides | |||||
Atrazine | |||||
Chlorimuron | |||||
c) Rodenticide: | Used to kill mice and other rodents | ||||
Inorganic rodenticides | Zinc phosphide, Aluminium Phosphide | ||||
Coumarin rodenticides | |||||
(organic) Bromadiolone, Coumatetralyl | |||||
Toxicity | Acute | Carbamates (Carbaryl, Thiram) | Indicate how poisonous a pesticide for human, animal or plant is after a single short-term exposure | ||
Organochlorines (Aldrin, lindane) | |||||
Organophosphates (Malathion, Parathion, Chlorpyrifos) | |||||
Chronic | Organochlorines (DDT, Endosulfan) | Indicate how poisonous a pesticide for human, animal or plant is after a regular dose long-term exposure | |||
Source of Origin | Biopesticide: | Azadirachtin (Neem bio-pesticide) | Acts on the target pests and those organisms which are strongly linked to the pests | ||
a) Microbial | Bacterial toxins | Made up of microorganisms and the active component of these microbial pesticides are microorganisms | |||
b) Plant incorporated protectants | GMO with foreign genes | They are produced by plants naturally and genetic material introduced together | |||
c)Biochemical pesticides | Insect sex pheromones | They combine natural material that have non-toxic mechanism to controls pests | |||
Chemical | a) Organochlorine | Toxic and not constantly biodegradable and also affects a large group of non-target organisms | |||
b) Organophosphate | |||||
c) Carbamates | |||||
d) Pyrethroids |