Impact Of Insecticides Thiodicarb And Dimethoate On Soil Microbial Activities (Amylase) In Two Groundnut (Arachishypogaea. L) Soils

Research Article
Rekhapadmini A Anuradha B and Rangaswamy V
DOI: 
xxx-xxxxx-xxxx
Subject: 
science
KeyWords: 
Amylase, Dimethoate, Groundnut (Arachishypogaea L.) soils, Thiodicarb,
Abstract: 

In Agricultural practices pesticides are used for crop production and to produce high yield. But indiscriminate and excessive use of pesticides in agriculture leads to environmental pollution and in soil it is not degrading. A pesticide disturbs the activities of soil enzymes and soil micro biota. So we investigated inlaboratory conditions that the effect of two insecticides, ThiodicarbDimethyl N, N '- (thiobis ((methylimino) carbonyloxy)) bis (ethanimidothioate) and Dimethoate (O, O-dimethyl S- [2-(methylamino)-2-oxoethyl]) dithiophosphate) on enzyme activities, such as amylase and invertase in two soils collected from groundnut (Arachishypogaea. L) Cultivated fields of Anantapuram district of Andhra Pradesh, India, by conducting experiments at different concentrations (10, 25, 50, 75, 100ppm) which are equivalent to field application rates (1.0, 2.5, 5.0, 7.5,10.0 kg ha-1 ). In our present study we observed, Amylase activities were significantly enhanced at 2.5 and 5.0 kg ha-1 in black and red soils after 10 days of incubation. Furthermore increase in concentration of insectcides and decreased the rate of enzyme activity. However the stimulatory effect was continued up to 20 days of incubation in black and redsoils. Whereas, the decline phase was started after 20 days and the minimum enzyme activities were noticed at the end of 40 days of incubation. But higher concentrations of insecticides at the level of 7.5 to 10.0 kg ha-1 were either toxic or innocuous to amylaseactivity in black and red soils