Label & SDS
EPA Label:
link
Registration information
- U.S. EPA Registration number: 4816-569
- U.S. EPA Status:
CANCELLED
Description
'Pyrenone M.a.g.c. 20-2.5' is an insecticide and miticide. Its Federal EPA registration number is: 4816-569. It was originally approved by EPA on 16 Jul 1980. Its registration got cancelled on 09 Jul 1997. It has a 'Caution' signal word. It has the following active ingredients: Piperonyl butoxide and Pyrethrins. It's approved for 32 sites including beef cattle, cattle corrals, commercial/institutional/industrial areas, commercial/institutional/industrial buildings, dairy cattle, dogs, domestic dwellings, eating establishments, food handling establishments, and food marketing/storage/distribution facilities. It is also approved for 42 pests and pest groups including but not limited to angoumois grain moth, ants, bloodsucking lice, boxelder bug, cadelle, cheese mite, cheese skipper, cigarette beetle, clover mite, and cockroaches.
Original registration date:
Cancellation date:
Alternative names:
- PYRENONE M.A.G.C. 20-2.5Active
Registrant:
- AGREVO ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH
- Address:
95 Chestnut Ridge Rd
Montvale, NJ 07645
Active ingredients:
- Piperonyl butoxide 20%
- Pyrethrins 2.5%
- Other ingredients 77.5%
Signal word:
Product type:
Formulation:
Registered target pests:
- Angoumois grain moth
- Ants
- Bloodsucking lice
- Boxelder bug
- Cadelle
- Cheese mite
- Cheese skipper
- Cigarette beetle
- Clover mite
- Cockroaches
- Confused flour beetle
- Crickets
- Dark mealworm
- Deer flies
- Drugstore beetle
- Earwigs
- Flies
- Fruit flies
- Fungus gnats
- German cockroach
- Gnats
- Grain mite
- Granary weevil
- Horn fly
- Hornets
- Horse flies
- House fly
- Indian meal moth
- Lice
- Mediterranean flour moth
- Mosquitoes
- Mushroom flies
- Red flour beetle
- Rice weevil
- Sawtoothed grain beetle
- Silverfish
- Small flying moths
- Spider beetles
- Stable fly
- Tobacco moth
- Wasps
- Yellow mealworm
Registered target sites:
- Beef cattle (animal treatment)
- Cattle corrals (open premise treatment)
- Commercial/institutional/industrial areas (residual crack and crevice treatment)
- Commercial/institutional/industrial buildings (indoor inedible)
- Dairy cattle (animal treatment)
- Dogs (animal treatment)
- Domestic dwellings (indoor)
- Eating establishments (indoor inedible)
- Eating establishments (outdoor edible)
- Eating establishments (residual crack and crevice treatment)
- Food handling establishments (indoor edible)
- Food handling establishments (indoor inedible)
- Food handling establishments (residual crack and crevice treatment)
- Food marketing/storage/distribution facilities (residual crack and crevice treatment)
- Food processing plants (indoor edible)
- Food processing plants (indoor inedible)
- Food processing plants (residual crack and crevice treatment)
- Hog barns (open premise treatment)
- Horses (animal treatment)
- Horses (open premise treatment)
- Hospitals (indoor inedible)
- Hospitals (residual crack and crevice treatment)
- Hotels/motels/tourist courts (indoor)
- Mushroom processing plants (indoor-edible)
- Mushrooms (transportation vehicles)
- Poultry houses (open premise treatment)
- Railroad boxcars (feed/food-empty) (residual general treatment)
- Recreational areas (outdoor)
- Shipholds (feed/food-empty) (residual general treatment)
- Theaters (open-air) (outdoor edible)
- Trucks (feed/food-empty) (residual general treatment)
- Zoos (open premise treatment)