Label & SDS
EPA Label:
link
Registration information
- U.S. EPA Registration number: 746-34
- U.S. EPA Status:
CANCELLED
Description
'New M.f.a. Multi-spray Wettable Powder' is a fungicide, insecticide, and miticide. Its Federal EPA registration number is: 746-34. It was originally approved by EPA on 10 Jan 1961. Its registration got cancelled on 22 Jan 1991. It has a 'Danger' signal word. It has the following active ingredients: Captan, Malathion (NO INERT USE), Methoxychlor, and Zinc ethylenebis(dithiocarbamate). It's approved for 17 sites including apples, cantaloupes, cherries, grapes, ornamental herbaceous plants, ornamental trees, ornamental woody shrubs, peaches, plums, and roses. It is also approved for 60 pests and pest groups including but not limited to anthracnose of tomato, aphids, apple blotch, apple scab, bagworm, black rot of grapes, black spot of rose, blight, boxwood leafminer, and brown rot blossom/twig blight.
Original registration date:
Cancellation date:
Alternative names:
- M.F.A. MULTI-SPRAY WETTABLE POWDERAlternate
- NEW M.F.A. MULTI-SPRAY WETTABLE POWDERActive
- NEW M.F.A. MULTI-SPRAY WETTABLE POWDERInactive
Registrant:
- MFA OIL CO
- Address:
200 S 7th
Columbia, MO 65201
Active ingredients:
- Captan 8.35%
- Malathion (no inert use) 15%
- Methoxychlor 15.35%
- Zinc ethylenebis(dithiocarbamate) 12.5%
- Other ingredients 48.8%
Signal word:
Product type:
- Fungicide
- Insecticide
- Miticide
Formulation:
Registered target pests:
- Anthracnose of tomato (colletotrichum phomoides)
- Aphids
- Apple blotch (phyllosticta)
- Apple scab (venturia inaequailis)
- Bagworm
- Black rot of grapes (guignardia bidwellii)
- Black spot of rose (diplocarpon rosae)
- Blight
- Boxwood leafminer
- Brown rot blossom/twig blight (monilinia fructicola/m. laxa)
- Cankerworms
- Catalpa sphinx
- Cedar-apple rust (gymnosporangium)
- Chrysanthemum thrips
- Climbing cutworms
- Codling moth
- Curculios
- Downy mildew of cucurbits (pseudoperonospora cubensis)
- Early blight (alternaria)
- Elm leaf beetle
- European red mite
- Flea beetles
- Fly speck (microthyriella)
- Fruit rot (botrytis)
- Grape berry moth
- Japanese beetle
- Late blight (phytophthora)
- Leaf spot
- Leafhoppers
- Leaftiers
- Mapleworm
- Melon aphid
- Mimosa webworm
- Mites
- Oriental fruit moth
- Pickleworm
- Psyllids
- Red spider mites
- Redbanded leafroller
- Rose chafer
- Rose leafroller
- Rose midge
- Roseslug
- Scab of peach (cladosporium carpophilum)
- Sooty blotch (gloeodes)
- Sowbugs
- Spittlebugs
- Spotted cucumber beetle
- Squash vine borer
- Strawberry leaf beetles
- Strawberry leafroller
- Strawberry weevil
- Striped cucumber beetle
- Tent caterpillars
- Thrips
- Tomato hornworm
- Tussock moths
- Twospotted spider mite
- Whiteflies
- Yellow leaf spot (coryneum)
Registered target sites:
- Apples (delayed dormant application)
- Apples (foliar treatment)
- Cantaloupes (foliar treatment)
- Cherries (foliar treatment)
- Cherries (postharvest application)
- Grapes (delayed dormant application)
- Grapes (foliar treatment)
- Ornamental herbaceous plants (foliar treatment)
- Ornamental trees (foliar treatment)
- Ornamental woody shrubs (foliar treatment)
- Peaches (foliar treatment)
- Plums (foliar treatment)
- Roses (foliar treatment)
- Roses (soil treatment)
- Snapdragon (foliar treatment)
- Strawberries (foliar treatment)
- Tomatoes (foliar treatment)