A contact and ingested insecticide and repellent with good activity on caterpillars.
9. APPLICATION METHODS AND TIPS:
Do not spray areas foraged by bees for 10 days before flowering to petal fall.
Thorough coverage in essential. Spray in the evening when bees are not foraging.
Do not spray areas foraged by bees for 10 days before flowering to petal fall.
Thorough spray coverage is essential.
Synthetic latex surfactants such as Bond improve control slightly under normal conditions and improve rainfastness and have maintained control levels with up to 50 mm rainfall after spraying.
Best results when used early as preventative treatment to stop the build up of large numbers of pest.
Not compatible with alkaline solutions, Bordeaux mixture, lime sulphur.
10. ADJUVANTS, WETTERS, OILS:
11. EQUIPMENT:
Aerial - use 80-100 micron droplets.
12. SPRAYER WASH OUT AND DECONTAMINATION:
13. WATER OR CARRIER DATA:
14. WEATHER:
15. RAINFASTNESS:
6 hours
16. SOIL:
17. PLANT HEALTH and OTHER EFFECTS:
18. WITHHOLDING PERIODS:
19. PLANT BACK PERIODS or RECROPPING INTERVALS:
20. MODE OF ACTION:
A contact and ingested broad spectrum insecticide. Has repellent and anti feeding action. Some insects will starve rather than eat treated plants. Non systemic. Stable in ultraviolet light which aids it persistence on foliage.
Has a very quick knockdown action (within minutes of application).
21. PESTICIDE RESISTANCE:
22. TOXICITY:
Poison schedule - S5
Mammalian toxicity - Low toxicity.
Acute oral LD50 - 242-542 mg/kg
Acute dermal LD50 - >3000 mg/kg
Skin - Irritant.
Eye - Irritant
Main exposure routes - Handling concentrate. Air blast application.
Birds - toxic. LD50 is mg/kg.
Fish - toxic.
Invertebrates - toxic.
Bees - Highly toxic.
Summary:
Details:
Poison schedule - S
Mammalian toxicity -
Acute oral LD50 - mg/kg (rats), [For comparison table salt is 3000 mg/kg]
Acute dermal LD50 - > mg/kg (rabbit).
Skin -
Eye -
Vapour inhalation - LC50 - > mg/L air (rat).
Chronic oral toxicity NOEL - ppm for two years.
Not mutagenic or teratogenic (i.e. does not cause cancer or reproductive problems).
Acceptable Daily Intake (ADI) -
23. TOXICITY SYMPTOMS:
Initial symptoms include numbness of lips and tongue, nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea and sneezing.
Poisoning usually occurs through skin absorption and inhalation. This may cause allergic attacks in sensitive people.
24. FIRST AID:
Contact a doctor or poison information centre on 008 119 244.
Remove contaminated clothing and wash skin with soap and water.
If swallowed, get medical attention as soon as possible.
If breathing has stopped apply resuscitation
25. PROTECTIVE CLOTHING:
26 RE ENTRY PERIODS and OTHER SAFETY ISSUES:
27. PROPERTIES:
8-10 residual activity can be expected on Native Budworm but this is reduced in high temperature and high light conditions.
Product appearance -
Shelf Life -
Product Flammability -
Half life in water - days at pH5 and 35 C.
Water solubility at 25 C. - ppm at pH
Oil solubility -
Octanol:Water ratio at 25 C. - at pH 5.
Vapour Pressure at 25 C. -
Dissociation constant - pKa.
Melting point - C.
Boiling point -
Molecular weight -
Density -
28. ENVIRONMENTAL FATE:
Stable in sunlight. Little leaching.
Summary -
Birds - toxicity.
Fish - toxicity LC50 > ppm.
Invertebrates - toxicity.
Bees - toxicity.
It has a half life in soil of .
It has an EPA classification for soil mobility that ranges from
Ground water contamination
Accumulation in milk and tissues.
29. COMPATIBILITY:
See HerbiGuide for compatability with other herbicides, insecticides and fungicides.
See HerbiGuide for a full list of pesticide compatabilies.
30. REGISTERED CROPS, INSECTS and DISEASES.
See Herbiguide Species Solutions Tab for registered uses.
31. GOVERNMENT AND REGULATORY INFORMATION:
Dangerous Goods Class -
Hazchem Code -
Packaging Group -
EPG -
UN Number -
Worksafe Classification -
32. References:
Acknowledgments:
Collated by HerbiGuide. Phone 08 98444064 for more information.