Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q417017> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 44 of
44
with 100 triples per page.
- Q417017 subject Q7363343.
- Q417017 subject Q8297710.
- Q417017 subject Q8343663.
- Q417017 abstract "Bendiocarb is an acutely toxic carbamate insecticide used in public health and agriculture and is effective against a wide range of nuisance and disease vector insects. Many bendiocarb products are or were sold under the tradenames "Ficam" and "Turcam."All bendiocarb-containing products in the United States were recently cancelled, after its manufacturers voluntarily chose to pull their products off the market, rather than conduct additional safety studies required by the EPA. In other countries, it is still used in homes, industrial plants, and food storage sites to control bedbugs, mosquitoes, flies, wasps, ants, fleas, cockroaches, silverfish, and ticks but can be used against a wide variety of insects as well as snails and slugs. It is one of 12 insecticides recommended by the World Health Organization for use in malaria control.Bendiocarb is not considered to be carcinogenic, but it is acutely toxic. Like other carbamates, it reversibly inhibits acetylcholinesterase, an enzyme required for normal transmission of nerve impulses. Bendiocarb binds to the active site of this enzyme leading to an accumulation of acetylcholine, which is required for the transmission of nerve impulses, at nerve muscle sites.Bendiocarb was invented in 1971 and was first introduced into the market by Fisons Ltd. It is currently marketed by Bayer CropScience and Kuo Ching under various trade names: Ficam, Dycarb, Garvox, Turcam, Niomil, Seedox, TattooBendiocarb is highly toxic to birds and fish. In mammalian tissue, carbamates are generally excreted rapidly and do not accumulate.".
- Q417017 iupacName "(2,2-Dimethyl-1,3-benzodioxol-4-yl) N-methylcarbamate".
- Q417017 thumbnail Bendiocarb_Formula_V.2.svg?width=300.
- Q417017 wikiPageExternalLink bendioca.htm.
- Q417017 wikiPageExternalLink bendiogen.pdf.
- Q417017 wikiPageExternalLink bendiotech.pdf.
- Q417017 wikiPageExternalLink Detail_Chemical.jsp?Rec_Id=PC32991.
- Q417017 wikiPageExternalLink bendiocarb.html.
- Q417017 wikiPageExternalLink 0409fact.pdf.
- Q417017 wikiPageWikiLink Q10304508.
- Q417017 wikiPageWikiLink Q11451.
- Q417017 wikiPageWikiLink Q12156.
- Q417017 wikiPageWikiLink Q152051.
- Q417017 wikiPageWikiLink Q180623.
- Q417017 wikiPageWikiLink Q18123008.
- Q417017 wikiPageWikiLink Q181322.
- Q417017 wikiPageWikiLink Q189603.
- Q417017 wikiPageWikiLink Q25312.
- Q417017 wikiPageWikiLink Q26842.
- Q417017 wikiPageWikiLink Q30.
- Q417017 wikiPageWikiLink Q388162.
- Q417017 wikiPageWikiLink Q407983.
- Q417017 wikiPageWikiLink Q422899.
- Q417017 wikiPageWikiLink Q5455210.
- Q417017 wikiPageWikiLink Q7363343.
- Q417017 wikiPageWikiLink Q7367.
- Q417017 wikiPageWikiLink Q7386.
- Q417017 wikiPageWikiLink Q7817.
- Q417017 wikiPageWikiLink Q8297710.
- Q417017 wikiPageWikiLink Q8343663.
- Q417017 wikiPageWikiLink Q940337.
- Q417017 wikiPageWikiLink Q9458574.
- Q417017 iupacname "N-methylcarbamate".
- Q417017 type ChemicalCompound.
- Q417017 type ChemicalSubstance.
- Q417017 type ChemicalObject.
- Q417017 type Thing.
- Q417017 type Q11173.
- Q417017 comment "Bendiocarb is an acutely toxic carbamate insecticide used in public health and agriculture and is effective against a wide range of nuisance and disease vector insects. Many bendiocarb products are or were sold under the tradenames "Ficam" and "Turcam."All bendiocarb-containing products in the United States were recently cancelled, after its manufacturers voluntarily chose to pull their products off the market, rather than conduct additional safety studies required by the EPA.".
- Q417017 label "Bendiocarb".
- Q417017 depiction Bendiocarb_Formula_V.2.svg.