Label & SDS
EPA Label:
link
Registration information
- U.S. EPA Registration number: 7969-77
- U.S. EPA Status:
CANCELLED
Description
'Manifest B Herbicide' is an herbicide terrestrial. Its Federal EPA registration number is: 7969-77. It was originally approved by EPA on 27 Apr 1987. Its registration got cancelled on 17 Feb 2006. It has a 'Danger' signal word. It has the following active ingredients: Sodium acifluorfen and Sodium bentazon. It's approved for 3 sites including peanuts and soybeans. It is also approved for 43 pests and pest groups including but not limited to beggarticks, black nightshade, bristly starbur, canada thistle, cocklebur, common lambsquarters, common morningglory, common purslane, common ragweed, and common waterhemp.
Original registration date:
Cancellation date:
Alternative names:
- DOBLE POSTEMERGENCE HERBICIDEInactive
- GALAXY HERBICIDEActive
- GALAXY POSTEMERGENCE HERBICIDEAlternate
- MANIFEST B HERBICIDEAlternate
Registrant:
- BASF CORPORATION
Agricultural Products - Address:
26 Davis Drive
Research Triangle Park, NC 27709
Active ingredients:
- Sodium acifluorfen 6.8%
- Sodium bentazon 33.4%
- Other ingredients 59.8%
Signal word:
Product type:
Formulation:
Registered target pests:
- Beggarticks
- Black nightshade
- Bristly starbur
- Canada thistle
- Cocklebur
- Common lambsquarters
- Common morningglory
- Common purslane
- Common ragweed
- Common waterhemp
- Cypressvine morningglory
- Dayflower
- Devil's claw
- Eastern black nightshade
- Entireleaf morningglory
- Galinsoga
- Giant ragweed
- Ivyleaf morningglory
- Jimsonweed
- Ladysthumb
- Morningglory
- No pest
- Palmleaf morningglory
- Pennsylvania smartweed
- Pitted morningglory
- Prickly sida
- Purple moonflower morningglory
- Redroot pigweed
- Redweed
- Shepherdspurse
- Smallflower morningglory
- Smooth pigweed
- Spurred anoda
- Tall morningglory
- Tall waterhemp
- Teaweed
- Velvetleaf
- Venice mallow
- Wild buckwheat
- Wild mustard
- Wild poinsettia
- Wild sunflower
- Yellow nutsedge
Registered target sites:
- Peanuts (foliar treatment)
- Peanuts (soil treatment)
- Soybeans (foliar treatment)