“…Often, such methods of choice are being based on high-and ultra-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC and UPLC) combined with the sensitive detection by a diode-array (Obana et al, 2002;Mandić et al, 2005;Watanabe et al, 2007), mass spectrometry (Obana et al, 2003;Kamel, 2010;Liu et al, 2010), thermal-lens spectrometry (Guzsvány et al, 2007a), amperometric detector (De Erenchun et al, 1997) or with an electrochemical detector and post column photochemical reactor (Rancan et al, 2006a,b). Furthermore, procedures based on photochemically induced fluorescence detection (Vilchez et al, 1998;Vilchez et al, 2001), micellar electrokinetic capillary chromatography (Carretero et al, 2003) and Fourier transform infrared spectrometry (Quintas et al, 2004), simple derivative spectrophotometry (Guzsvány, 2006;Guzsvány et al, 2009a) have also been used for the determination of imidacloprid or thiamethoxam. There are also studies related to bioassayes, the enzyme-linked immuno assay (ELISA) for identifying imidacloprid (Li et al, 2000;Lee et al, 2001;Watanabe et al, 2006), acetamiprid (Watanabe et al, 2006) and thiamethoxam Kim et al, 2006).…”