Label & SDS
EPA Label:
link
Registration information
- U.S. EPA Registration number: 11746-42
- U.S. EPA Status:
CANCELLED
Description
'Davis Kill-a-bug Diazinon 4e' is an insecticide and miticide. Its Federal EPA registration number is: 11746-42. It was originally approved by EPA on 19 Jul 1994. Its registration got cancelled on 15 Nov 2001. It has a 'Caution' signal word. It has the following active ingredients: Diazinon. It's approved for 39 sites including arborvitae, azalea, birch, boxwood, building foundations, camellia, carnation, chrysanthemum, commercial/institutional/industrial buildings, and domestic dwellings. It is also approved for 71 pests and pest groups including but not limited to ants, aphids, apple-and-thorn skeletonizer, armyworm, bagworm, bermudagrass mite, boxelder bug, brown dog tick, carnation bud mite, and carnation shoot mite.
Original registration date:
Cancellation date:
Alternative names:
- DAVIS KILL-A-BUG DIAZINON 4EActive
Registrant:
- LOUISIANA CHEMICAL USA, LLC
- Address:
10135 Mammoth Avenue
Baton Rouge, LA 70814
Active ingredients:
- Diazinon 47.5%
- Other ingredients 52.5%
Signal word:
Product type:
Formulation:
Registered target pests:
- Ants
- Aphids
- Apple-and-thorn skeletonizer
- Armyworm
- Bagworm
- Bermudagrass mite
- Boxelder bug
- Brown dog tick
- Carnation bud mite
- Carnation shoot mite
- Carpet beetle
- Chiggers (redbugs)
- Cigarette beetle
- Clover mite
- Cockroaches
- Collembola
- Cotoneaster webworm
- Cottonycushion scale (crawlers)
- Crickets
- Cutworms
- Cyclamen mite
- Digger wasps
- Dipterous leafminers
- Drugstore beetle
- Earwigs
- European chafer
- European pine shoot moth
- European red mite
- Fall webworm
- Flea beetles
- Fleas
- Flies
- Flour beetles
- Frit fly
- Hemlock chermes
- Holly bud moth
- Hyperodes weevils
- Indian meal moth
- Japanese beetle (larvae)
- Juniper webworm
- Lawn billbugs
- Lawn chinch bugs
- Lawn moths
- Leafhoppers
- Lecanium scales (crawlers)
- Millipedes
- Mimosa webworm
- Obliquebanded leafroller
- Obscure root weevil
- Omnivorous leaftier
- Pearslug
- Pillbugs
- Pine needle scale (crawlers)
- Privet mite
- Rhodesgrass scale
- Rice weevil
- San jose scale (crawlers)
- Sawtoothed grain beetle
- Scorpions
- Silverfish
- Sod webworms
- Southern chafer
- Sowbugs
- Spiders
- Springtails
- Tent caterpillars
- Thrips
- Twospotted spider mite
- Waterbugs
- Western oak looper
- Whiteflies
Registered target sites:
- Arborvitae (foliar treatment)
- Azalea (foliar treatment)
- Birch (foliar treatment)
- Boxwood (foliar treatment)
- Building foundations (soil treatment)
- Camellia (foliar treatment)
- Carnation (foliar treatment)
- Chrysanthemum (foliar treatment)
- Commercial/institutional/industrial buildings (indoor)
- Domestic dwellings (indoor)
- Domestic dwellings (outdoor)
- Douglas-fir (foliar treatment)
- Eating establishments (residual crack and crevice treatment)
- Eating establishments (residual spot treatment-edible areas)
- Elm (foliar treatment)
- Food marketing/storage/distribution facilities (residual crack and crevice treatment)
- Food marketing/storage/distribution facilities (residual spot treatment-edible areas)
- Food processing plants (residual crack and crevice treatment)
- Food processing plants (residual spot treatment-edible areas)
- Gladiolus (foliar treatment)
- Hawthorn (foliar treatment)
- Holly (foliar treatment)
- Hospitals (indoor inedible)
- Juniper (foliar treatment)
- Lilac (foliar treatment)
- Locust (foliar treatment)
- Maple (foliar treatment)
- Oak (foliar treatment)
- Ornamental lawns (foliar treatment)
- Pet sleeping quarters
- Pine (foliar treatment)
- Plum (ornamental) (foliar treatment)
- Poplar (foliar treatment)
- Rhododendron (foliar treatment)
- Roses (foliar treatment)
- Rugs/carpets
- Spruce (foliar treatment)
- St. augustinegrass (lawns) (foliar treatment)
- Willow (foliar treatment)