Product name | Fluazifop-p-butyl | ||||||
Specification | 95%TC, 150g/L EC | ||||||
Toxicology | Oral: Acute oral LD50 for male rats 3680, female rats 2451 mg/kg. | ||||||
Skin and eye: Acute percutaneous LD50 for rabbits >2000 mg/kg. Slight skin and mild eye irritant (rabbits). Not a skin sensitiser (guinea pigs). | |||||||
Inhalation: LC50 (4 h) for rats >5.24 mg/l. | |||||||
NOEL: (2 y) for rats 1.0 mg/kg b.w. daily (10 mg/kg diet); (1 y) for dogs 25 mg/kg b.w. daily; (90 d) for rats 9.0 mg/kg b.w. daily (100 mg/kg diet). Multi-generation study (rats) 0.9 mg/kg b.w. daily (10 mg/kg diet); developmental toxicity for rats 5 mg/kg b.w. daily, for rabbits 30 mg/kg b.w. daily. | |||||||
ADI: 0.01 mg/kg. | |||||||
Toxicity class: WHO (a.i.) III EC classification R63| N; R50, R53 | |||||||
Application | Mode of action: Fluazifop-P-butyl is quickly absorbed through the leaf surface, hydrolysed to fluazifop-P and translocated through the phloem and xylem, accumulating in the rhizomes and stolons of perennial grasses and the meristems of annual and perennial grasses. | ||||||
Uses: Post-emergence control of wild oats, volunteer cereals, and annual and perennial grass weeds in oilseed rape, sugar beet, fodder beet, potatoes, vegetables, cotton, soya beans, pome fruit, stone fruit, bush fruit, vines, citrus fruit, pineapples, bananas, strawberries, sunflowers, alfalfa, ornamentals, and other broad-leaved crops. Applied at 125-375 g/ha. | |||||||
Phytotoxicity: Non-phytotoxic to broad-leaved crops. Fluazifop-p-butyl Formulation types EC; EW. | |||||||
Package | 25KG/Drum, 200L/Drum, 20L/Drum, 5L/Bottle, 1L/Bottle,etc |