Tralomethrin

Coalition status

Fairtrade Yellow Fairtrade Yellow
This list contains 110 pesticides. The list is valid as of January 2018. Pesticides which are flagged as being hazardous and should be only used with…
FSC highly restricted HHPs FSC highly restricted HHPs
Chemical pesticide presenting two or three out of the following hazards: acute toxicity, chronic toxicity and environmental toxicity.
GCP Phase out 2026 GCP-Phase-Out 2026
Use of pesticides in the Phase-out List are reduced through use of Integrated Pest Management and phased out by 2030, if feasible. This includes…

Details

Type: Pesticide
Use: Insecticide, Veterinary substance
Example applications: Cotton;Non-crop situations including houses, commercial buildings, offices and industrial sites
Example pests controlled: Ants;Cockroaches;Fleas;Termites
Mode of action: Non-systemic with contact and stomach action. Sodium channel modulator.
Source: PPDB

Toxicty

Mammal toxicity
Acute oral LD50 for most sensitive mammal species (LD50 < 200mg/kg bw).

Identifiers

Cas-RN: 66841-25-6
Chebi: 39400
CiPac: 8335
EC: -
PubChem: 48132
US EPA: 121501

GHS safety labels

About Globally Harmonized System of Classification and Labelling of Chemicals (GHS)
From Wikipedia: The Globally Harmonized System of Classification and Labelling of Chemicals (GHS) is an internationally agreed-upon standard managed by the United Nations that was set up to replace the assortment of hazardous material classification and labelling schemes previously used around the world. Core elements of the GHS include standardized hazard testing criteria, universal warning pictograms, and harmonized safety data sheets which provide users of dangerous goods with a host of information. The system acts as a complement to the UN Numbered system of regulated hazardous material transport. Implementation is managed through the UN Secretariat. Although adoption has taken time, as of 2017, the system has been enacted to significant extents in most major countries of the world.[1] This includes the European Union, which has implemented the United Nations' GHS into EU law as the CLP Regulation, and United States Occupational Safety and Health Administration standards.

Tralomethrin

Search on compound, trade name or registration number (CAS, Beilstein, Chebi)

Coalition status

Fairtrade Yellow Fairtrade Yellow
This list contains 110 pesticides. The list is valid as of January 2018. Pesticides which are flagged as being hazardous and should be only used with…
FSC highly restricted HHPs FSC highly restricted HHPs
Chemical pesticide presenting two or three out of the following hazards: acute toxicity, chronic toxicity and environmental toxicity.
GCP Phase out 2026 GCP-Phase-Out 2026
Use of pesticides in the Phase-out List are reduced through use of Integrated Pest Management and phased out by 2030, if feasible. This includes…

Details

Type: Pesticide
Use: Insecticide, Veterinary substance
Example applications: Cotton;Non-crop situations including houses, commercial buildings, offices and industrial sites
Example pests controlled: Ants;Cockroaches;Fleas;Termites
Mode of action: Non-systemic with contact and stomach action. Sodium channel modulator.
Source: PPDB

Toxicty

Mammal toxicity
Acute oral LD50 for most sensitive mammal species (LD50 < 200mg/kg bw).

Identifiers

Cas-RN: 66841-25-6
Chebi: 39400
CiPac: 8335
EC: -
PubChem: 48132
US EPA: 121501

GHS safety labels

About Globally Harmonized System of Classification and Labelling of Chemicals (GHS)
From Wikipedia: The Globally Harmonized System of Classification and Labelling of Chemicals (GHS) is an internationally agreed-upon standard managed by the United Nations that was set up to replace the assortment of hazardous material classification and labelling schemes previously used around the world. Core elements of the GHS include standardized hazard testing criteria, universal warning pictograms, and harmonized safety data sheets which provide users of dangerous goods with a host of information. The system acts as a complement to the UN Numbered system of regulated hazardous material transport. Implementation is managed through the UN Secretariat. Although adoption has taken time, as of 2017, the system has been enacted to significant extents in most major countries of the world.[1] This includes the European Union, which has implemented the United Nations' GHS into EU law as the CLP Regulation, and United States Occupational Safety and Health Administration standards.

Toxicity filters