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s <br /> ;XTOXNET PIP - PERMETHRIN Page 2 0 <br /> a Reproductive effects: The fertility of female rats was affected when they received very high oral doses of 250 <br /> r mg/kg/day of permethrin during the 6th to 15th day of pregnancy [25]. It is not likely that reproductive effects <br /> will be seen in humans under normal circumstances. <br /> . Teratogenic effects: Permethrin is reported to show no teratogenic activity [9]. <br /> . Mutagenic effects: Permethrin is reported to show no mutagenic activity L91- <br /> * Carcinogenic effects: The evidence regarding the carcinogenicity of permethrin is inconclusive. <br /> . Organ toxicity: Permethrin is suspected of causing liver enlargement of the liver and nerve damage [9]. <br /> Effects on the immune system have been noted in animal studies. <br /> . Fate in humans and animals: Permethrin is efficiently metabolized by mammalian livers [40]. Breakdown <br /> ++ in body tissues <br /> ' 1 excreted and do not persist significantly iter of permethrin are quickly p g Y Y <br />� "metabolites," Y <br /> products, or p q <br /> orally to rats it is rapidly metabolized and almost completely <br /> When permethrin is administered y p Y <br /> [41]. p <br /> eliminated from the body in a few days. Only 3 to 6% of the original dose was excreted unchanged in the <br /> feces of experimental animals [411. Permethrin may persist in fatty tissues, with half-lives of 4 to 5 days in <br /> brain and body fat [9]. Permethrin does not block, or inhibit, cholinesterase enzymes [40]. <br /> Ecological Effects.- <br /> * <br /> ffects.. Effects on birds: Permethrin is practically non-toxic to birds [12]. The oral LD50 for the permethrin <br /> tion Pramex is greater than 9900 mg/kg in mallard ducks, greater than 13,500 mg/kg in pheasants, <br /> formula , <br /> > <br /> and greater than 15,500 mg/kg in Japanese quail [41]. <br /> . Effects on aquatic organisms: Aquatic ecosystems are particularly vulnerable to the impact of permethrin. A <br /> fragile balance exists between the quality and quantity of insects and other invertebrates that serve as fish food <br /> [41]. The 48-hour LC50 for rainbow trout is 0.0125 mg/L for 24 hours, and 0.0054 mg/L for 48 hours [12]. <br /> The 48-hour LC50 in bluegill sunfish and salmon is 0.0018 mg/L [12]. As a group, synthetic pyrethroids were <br /> toxic to all estuarine species tested. They had a 96-hour LC50 of less than or equal to 0.0078 mg/L for these <br /> species [42]. The bioconcentration factor for permethrin in bluefish is 715 times the concentrations in water <br /> i and is 703 in catfish. This indicates that the compound has a low to moderate potential to accumulate in these <br /> organisms. <br /> . Effects on other organisms: Permethrin is extremely toxic to bees. Severe losses may be expected if bees are <br />+' present at treatment time, or within a day thereafter [2,43]. Permethrin is also toxic to wildlife [9]. It should <br /> not be applied, or allowed to drift, to crops or weeds in which active foraging takes place [12]. <br /> Environmental Fate: 1 <br /> . Break 6wn in soil and,groundwater: Permethrin is of low to moderate persistence in the soil environment, <br /> with reported half-lives of 30 to 38 days [12,25]. Permethrin is readily broken down, or degraded, in most <br /> soils except organic types. Soil microorganisms play a large role in the degradation of permethrin in the soil. <br /> The addition of nutrients to soil may increase the degradation of permethrin. It has been observed that the <br /> 4 availability of sodium and phosphorous decreases when permethrin is added to the soil [44]. Permethrin is <br /> tightly bound by soils, especially by organic matter. Very little leaching of permethrin has been reported [45]. <br /> It is not very mobile in a wide range of soil types [41]. Because permethrin binds very strongly to soil <br /> particles and is nearly insoluble in water, it is not expected to leach or to contaminate groundwater. <br /> . Breakdown in water: The results of one study near estuarine areas showed that permethrin had a half-life of <br /> less than 2.5 days. When exposed to sunlight, the half-life was 4.6 days [44]. Permethrin degrades rapidly in <br /> water,'although it can persist in sediments [15,45]. There was a gradual loss of toxicity after permethrin aged <br /> for 48 hours in sunlight at 0.05 mg/L in water [45]. <br /> . Breakdown in vegetation: Permethrin is not phytotoxic, or poisonous, to most plants when it is used as <br /> directed. Some injury has occurred on certain ornamental plants.No incompatibility has been observed with <br /> permethrin on cultivated plants. Treated apples, grapes, and cereal grains contain less than one mg/kg of <br /> permethrin at harvest time [12]. <br /> Physical Properties: <br /> . Appearance: Permethrin is an odorless, colorless crystalline solid or a viscous liquid that is pale brown [12]. <br /> . Chemical Name: 3-phenoxybenzyl(1RS)-cis,trans-3-(2,2-dichlorovinyl)-2,2- <br /> dimethylcyclopropanecarboxylate [12] <br /> . CAS Number: 52645-53-1 <br /> . Molecular Weight: 391.30 <br />