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Date: | Fri, 4 Oct 1996 17:53:49 -0700 |
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I found some info on the net about Fluvalinate. I was surprised to read
that it is highly toxic to fish. After reading this I thought about all
the hives that were flooded last year in our area. One more cause of
declining fish populations.
Here are two addresses for info on Fluvalinate:
http://ace.orst.edu/cgi-bin/mfs/01/pips/fluvalin.p93
http://www.arsusda.gov/ppdb3/TAU-FLUVALINATE
This info was collected from one of the sites:
ECOLOGICAL EFFECTS
Effects on Birds
Fluvalinate is slightly toxic to birds. The acute oral LD50
for fluvalinate in bobwhite quail is > 2,510 mg/kg. The dietary
LC50 for fluvalinate in mallard ducks and bobwhite quail is >
5,620 ppm (5).
Effects on Aquatic Organisms
Fluvalinate is highly toxic to fish (1). The 96-hour LC50
for fluvalinate in bluegill sunfish is 0.09 ug/l, and in rainbow
trout is 2.9 ug/l. Its 48-hour LC50 in Daphnia magna, a small
freshwater crustacean, is 74 ug/l, and in mysid shrimp is 2.9
ug/l (5).
Pyrethroid insecticides are extremely toxic to fish with 96-
hour LC50 values generally below 10 ug/l. Corresponding LD50
values in mammals and birds are in the range of several hundred
to several thousand mg/kg. Fish sensitivity to the pyrethroids
may be explained by their relatively slow metabolism and
elimination of these compounds. The half-lives for elimination
of several pyrethroids by trout are all greater than 48 hours,
while elimination half-lives for birds and mammals range from 6
to 12 hours (8).
Generally, the lethality of pyrethroids to fish increases
with increasing octanol/water partition coefficients
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Paul Cauthorn [log in to unmask]
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More heinous crimes are committed in the name of obedience than in the
name of rebellion. -C.P. Snow
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