a97107de46
Image rebuild (skip scrape) / build (push) Failing after 1h37m12s
Dockerfile: self-contained image with corpus + Chroma + BM25 baked in. Drawbar's compose pulls + runs without volume mounts. Built from sources.json (labels schema), PRODUCT_NAME=crop_chem by default, HYBRID_SEARCH=true (always-on for production quality). RERANK_URL + OLLAMA_URL get set at compose time. .gitea/workflows/refresh.yml: monthly cron (1st @ 06:00 UTC) does full scrape → reindex → image push. Scrapes Bayer (~30 min) + EPA PPLS row-crop filtered (~7h). Skips reindex+push if no corpus diff. Tags pushed: :latest, :<sha12>, :corpus-<YYYY.MM.DD>. .gitea/workflows/image-only.yml: on-demand or auto on code-only pushes to main (paths: docs_mcp/, rag/, scrape/, requirements.txt, Dockerfile, sources.json). Reindexes from committed corpus, builds image, pushes. ~10 min vs ~9h full refresh. .gitignore: corpus/ now COMMITTED (4,159 labels, 265 MB of .md + sidecars). Lets image-only.yml rebuild indexes without re-scraping. chroma/ + bm25/ still gitignored (regenerable binary indexes). .dockerignore: drops venv, eval results, PLAN/README/CLAUDE.md, deploy/, .git/ — keeps the image lean. corpus + chroma + bm25 explicitly NOT in dockerignore (those go INTO the image). Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
1944 lines
81 KiB
Markdown
1944 lines
81 KiB
Markdown
# TERRANIL 6L
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- EPA Reg No: **9779-320**
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- Registrant: WINFIELD SOLUTIONS, LLC
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- Signal word: Warning
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- Active ingredients: Chlorothalonil (54%)
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- Label accepted: 2016-09-01
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- Source PDF: https://www3.epa.gov/pesticides/chem_search/ppls/009779-00320-20160901.pdf
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---
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UNITED STATES ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
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WASHINGTON, DC 20460
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Fast Track Label Acceptable v.20150320
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OFFICE OF CHEMICAL SAFETY
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AND POLLUTION PREVENTION
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September 1, 2016
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Lisa Mathias
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Product Registration Specialist
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Winfield Solutions LLC
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PO Box 64589
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St. Paul, MN 55164
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Subject: Label Amendment: Adds Me-Too crops: Napa cabbage, Chinese Mustard, Cavalo
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Broccoli, Kohlrabi, Cucurbit, Chinese waxgourd, Gourds, Balsam Apple, Bitter Melon; Eggplant,
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Groundcherry, Okra, Pepino, Pepper (includes bell pepper, chili pepper, cooking pepper, pimento,
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sweet pepper), Tomatillo, Ginseng, Horseradish, Lupine, Lentil; Persimmon (Florida and Hawaii
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only), Rhubarb, Yam, Boston Fern, Florida Ruffle Fern, Leatherleaf Fern. Other minor changes
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throughout the label
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Product Name: Terranil 6L
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EPA Registration Number: 9779-320
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Application Date: March 17, 2016
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Decision Number: 517622
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Dear Ms. Mathias:
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The amended label referred to above, submitted in connection with registration under the Federal
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Insecticide, Fungicide and Rodenticide Act, as amended, is acceptable. This approval does not
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affect any conditions that were previously imposed on this registration. You continue to be
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subject to existing conditions on your registration and any deadlines connected with them.
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A stamped copy of your labeling is enclosed for your records. This labeling supersedes all
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previously accepted labeling. You must submit one copy of the final printed labeling before you
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release the product for shipment with the new labeling. In accordance with 40 CFR 152.130(c),
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you may distribute or sell this product under the previously approved labeling for 18 months
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from the date of this letter. After 18 months, you may only distribute or sell this product if it
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bears this new revised labeling or subsequently approved labeling. “To distribute or sell” is
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defined under FIFRA section 2(gg) and its implementing regulation at 40 CFR 152.3.
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Should you wish to add/retain a reference to the company’s website on your label, then please be
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aware that the website becomes labeling under the Federal Insecticide Fungicide and Rodenticide
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Act and is subject to review by the Agency. If the website is false or misleading, the product
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would be misbranded and unlawful to sell or distribute under FIFRA section 12(a)(1)(E). 40
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CFR 156.10(a)(5) list examples of statements EPA may consider false or misleading. In addition,
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regardless of whether a website is referenced on your product’s label, claims made on the
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website may not substantially differ from those claims approved through the registration process.
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Therefore, should the Agency find or if it is brought to our attention that a website contains false
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Page 2 of 2
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EPA Reg. No. 9779-320
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Decision No. 517622
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or misleading statements or claims substantially differing from the EPA approved registration,
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the website will be referred to the EPA’s Office of Enforcement and Compliance.
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Your release for shipment of the product constitutes acceptance of these conditions. If these
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conditions are not complied with, the registration will be subject to cancellation in accordance
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with FIFRA section 6.
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If you have any questions, please contact Tony Kish by phone at 703 308-9443, or via email at
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kish.tony@epa.gov; or Craig Reeves by phone at 703 347-0486, or via email at
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reeves.craig@epa.gov
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Enclosure: Stamped Accepted Label
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Sincerely,
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Tony Kish, Product Manager 22
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Fungicide Branch
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Registration Division (7505P)
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Office of Pesticide Programs
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Page 1 of 27
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TERRANIL® 6L
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Flowable Agricultural Fungicide
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GROUP M5 FUNGICIDE
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ACTIVE INGREDIENT
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Chlorothalonil (tetrachloroisophthalonitrile)...................... 54.0%
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OTHER INGREDIENTS....................................................... 46.0%
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TOTAL ................................................................................. 100.0%
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Contains 6 pounds chlorothalonil per gallon.
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KEEP OUT OF REACH OF CHILDREN
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WARNING/AVISO
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Si usted no entiende la etiqueta, busque a alguien para que se la explique a usted en detalle.
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(If you do not understand this label, find someone to explain it to you in detail.)
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PRECAUTIONARY STATEMENTS
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HAZARDS TO HUMANS AND DOMESTIC ANIMALS
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WARNING
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Causes substantial but temporary eye injury. May be fatal if inhaled. Harmful if absorbed through
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skin. Avoid contact with skin, eyes, or clothing. Harmful if swallowed. Do not breathe vapor or
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spray mist.
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FIRST AID
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If inhaled x Move person to fresh air.
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x If person is not breathing, call 911 or an ambulance, then give artificial respiration, preferably
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mouth-to-mouth, if possible.
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x Call a poison control center or doctor for further treatment advice.
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If in eyes x Hold eye open and rinse slowly and gently with water for 15-20 minutes.
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x Remove contact lenses, if present, after the first 5 minutes, then continue rinsing eye.
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x Call a poison control center or doctor for treatment advice.
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If swallowed x Call a poison control center or doctor immediately for treatment advice.
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x Have person sip a glass of water if able to swallow.
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x Do not induce vomiting unless told to do so by the poison control center or doctor.
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x Do not give anything by mouth to an unconscious person.
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If on skin or
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clothing
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x Take off contaminated clothing.
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x Rinse skin immediately with plenty of water for 15-20 minutes.
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x Call a poison control center or doctor for treatment advice.
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Have the product container or label with you when calling a poison control center or doctor, or going for treatment. For
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additional information in case of medical emergency, call toll free 1-877-424-7452.
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SEE INSIDE PANEL FOR ADDITIONAL PRECAUTIONARY STATEMENTS
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EPA Reg. No. 9779-320 EPA Est. No. _____
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Distributed By:
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Winfield Solutions LLC
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P.O. Box 64589
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St. Paul, MN 55164-0589
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NET CONTENTS
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1/0517/6
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09/01/2016
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9779-320
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Page 2 of 27
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PERSONAL PROTECTIVE EQUIPMENT (PPE)
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WPS Uses
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Mixers, loaders, applicators and all other handlers must wear: - Long-sleeved shirt and long pants, - Chemical-
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resistant gloves made of any waterproof material – Category A (e.g., barrier laminate, butyl rubber, nitrile rubber,
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neoprene rubber, natural rubber, polyethylene, polyvinyl chloride (PVC) or viton)- Shoes plus socks,- Protective
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eyewear, and
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- A dust/mist filtering respirator (MSHA/NIOSH approval number prefix TC-21C), or a NIOSH approved respirator
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with any N, R, P or HE filter.
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Non-WPS Uses
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Applicators and other handlers who handle this pesticide for any use NOT covered by the Worker Protection Standard
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(40 CFR Part 170) – in general, only agricultural plant uses are covered – must wear:
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- Long-sleeved shirt and long pants,
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- Chemical-resistant gloves made of any waterproof material – Category A (e.g., barrier laminate, butyl rubber, nitrile
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rubber, neoprene rubber, natural rubber, polyethylene, polyvinyl chloride (PVC) or viton),
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- Shoes plus socks, and
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- Protective eyewear.
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Follow manufacturer's instructions for cleaning/maintaining PPE. If no such instructions for washables, use detergent
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and hot water. Keep and wash PPE separately from other laundry.
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Engineering Control Statements
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When handlers use closed systems, enclosed cabs, or aircraft in a manner that meets the requirements listed in the Worker
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Protection Standard (WPS) for agricultural pesticides [40 CFR 170.240 (d) (4-6)], the handler PPE requirements may be
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reduced or modified as specified in the WPS.
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USER SAFETY RECOMMENDATIONS
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Users should wash hands before eating, drinking, chewing gum, using tobacco or using the toilet. Remove clothing
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immediately if pesticide gets inside. Then wash thoroughly and put on clean clothing. Remove PPE immediately
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after handling this product. Wash the outside of gloves before removing. As soon as possible, wash thoroughly and
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change into clean clothing.
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ENVIRONMENTAL HAZARDS
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This pesticide is toxic to aquatic invertebrates and wildlife. Do not apply directly to water or to areas where surface
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water is present or to intertidal areas below the mean highw ater mark. Drift and runoff may be hazardous to aquatic
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organisms in neighboring areas. Do not contaminate water when disposing of equipment washwater or rinsate.
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This chemical is known to leach through soil into groundwater under certain conditions as a result of label use. Use
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of this chemical in areas where soils are permeable, par ticularly where the water table is shallow, may result in
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groundwater contamination.
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This chemical can contaminate surface water through spray drift. Under some conditions, it may also have a high
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potential for runoff into surface water for several days to weeks after application. These include poorly draining or
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wet soils with readily visible slopes toward adjacent surf ace waters, frequently flooded areas, areas overlaying
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extremely shallow groundwater, areas with in-field canals or ditches that drain to surface water, areas not separated
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from adjacent surface waters with vegetated filter strips, and areas overlying tile drainage systems that drain to surface
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water.
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DIRECTIONS FOR USE
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It is a violation of Federal law to use this product in a manner inconsistent with its labeling.
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Do not apply this product in a way that will contact workers or other persons, either directly or through drift. Only
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protected handlers may be in the area during application. For any requirements specific to your State or Tribe, consult
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the agency responsible for pesticide regulation.
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Do not apply when wind speed favors drift beyond the area intended for treatment.
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Page 3 of 27
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AGRICULTURAL USE REQUIREMENTS
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Use this product only in accordance with its labeling and with the Worker Protection Standard (WPS), 40 CFR part 170.
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This Standard contains requirements for the protection of agricultural workers on farms, forests, nurseries, and
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greenhouses, and handlers of agricultural pesticides. It contains requirements for training, decontamination, notification,
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and emergency assistance. It also contains specific instructions and exceptions pertaining to the statements on this label
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about personal protective equipment (PPE), and restricted-entry interval. The requirements in this box only apply to
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uses of this product that are covered by the Worker Protection Standard.
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Do not enter or allow worker entry into treated areas during the restricted entry interval (REI) of 12 hours.
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PPE required for early entry to treated areas that is permitted under the Worker Protection Standard and that involves
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contact with anything that has been treated, such as plants, soil, or water, is: coveralls, chemical-resistant gloves made
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of any waterproof material, shoes plus socks and protective eyewear.
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Special Eye Irritation Provisions: This product is a severe eye irritant. Although the restricted entry interval expires
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after 12 hours, for the next 6.5 days entry is permitted only when the following safety measures are provided:
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(1) At least one container designed specifically for flushing eyes must be available in operating condition at the WPS
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required decontamination site intended for workers entering the treated area.
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(2) Workers must be informed in a manner they can understand:
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x that residues in the treated area may be highly irritating to their eyes,
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x that they should take precautions, such as refraining from rubbing their eyes, to keep the residues out of their eyes,
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x that if they do get residues in their eyes, they should immediately flush their eyes using the eyeflush container that
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is located at the decontamination site or using other readily available clean water, and
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x how to operate the eyeflush container.
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NON-AGRICULTURAL USE REQUIREMENTS
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The requirements in this box apply to uses of this product that are NOT within the scope of the Worker Protection
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Standard for agricultural pesticides (40 CFR Part 170). The WPS applies when this product is used to produce agricultural
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plants on farms, forests, nurseries, or greenhouses.
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DO NOT enter or allow others to enter area until sprays have dried.
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STORAGE AND DISPOSAL
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DO NOT CONTAMINATE WATER, FOOD, OR FEED BY STORAGE OR DISPOSAL
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Pesticide Storage: Store in a cool place. Protect from excessive heat.
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Pesticide Disposal: Pesticide wastes are toxic. Improper disposal of excess pesticide, pesticide spray, or rinsate is a
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violation of Federal law. If these wastes cannot be disposed of by use according to label instructions, contact your State
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Pesticide or Environmental Control Agency, or the Hazardous Waste representative at the nearest EPA Regional Office
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for guidance.
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Container Disposal:Use label language appropriate for container size and type.
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Nonrefillable container. Do not reuse or refill this container. Clean container promptly after emptying.
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Nonrefillable container equal to or less than 5 gallons. Triple rinse as follows: Empty the remaining contents into
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application equipment or a mix tank and drain for 10 seconds after the flow begins to drip. Fill the container ¼ full
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with water and recap. Shake for 10 seconds. Pour rinsate into application equipment or a mix tank or store rinsate
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for later use or disposal. Drain for 10 seconds after the flow begins to drip. Repeat this procedure two more times.
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Then offer for recycling or reconditioning, or puncture and dispose of in a sanitary landfill or by incineration, or, if
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allowed by State and local authorities, by burning. If burned, stay out of smoke.
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Nonrefillable container greater than 5 gallons. Triple rinse as follows: Empty the remaining contents into
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application equipment or a mix tank. Fill the container ¼ full with water. Replace and tighten closures. Tip container
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on its side and roll it back and forth, ensuring at least one complete revolution, for 30 seconds. Stand the container
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on its end and tip it back and forth several times. Turn the container over onto its other end and tip it back and forth
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Page 4 of 27
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several times. Empty the rinsate into application equipment or a mix tank or store rinsate for later use or disposal.
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Repeat this procedure two more times. Then offer for recycling or reconditioning, or puncture and dispose of in a
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sanitary landfill or by incineration, or, if allowed by State and local authorities, by burning. If burned, stay out of smoke.
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Refillable container. Refill this container with pesticide only. Do not reuse this container for any other purpose.
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Cleaning the container before final disposal is the responsibility of the person disposing of the container. Cleaning
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before refilling is the responsibility of the refiller. To clean the container before final disposal, empty the remaining
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contents from this container into application equipment or mix tank. Fill the container about 10 percent full with
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water. Agitate vigorously or recirculate water with the pump for 2 minutes. Pour or pump rinsate into application
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equipment or rinsate collection system. Repeat this rinsin g procedure two more times. Then offer for recycling or
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reconditioning, or puncture and dispose of in a sanitary landfill or by incineration, or, if allowed by State and local
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authorities, by burning. If burned, stay out of smoke.
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FOR CHEMICAL EMERGENCY: Spill, leak, fire, exposure, or accident, call
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CHEMTREC 1-800-424-9300
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GENERAL INSTRUCTIONS AND INFORMATION
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Application and Calibration Techniques for Sprinkler Irrigation
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Apply this product only through the following types of irrigation systems. Do not apply this product through any other
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type of irrigation system. Crop injury, lack of effectiveness, or illegal pesticide residues in the crop can result from
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nonuniform distribution of treated water. If you have questions about calibration, you should contact State Experiment
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Station specialists, equipment manufacturers, or other experts. Do not connect an irrigation system (including greenhouse
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systems) used for pesticide application to a public water system unless the pesticide label-prescribed safety devices for
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public water systems are in place. A person knowledgeable of the chemigation system and responsible for its operation,
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or under the supervision of the responsible person, shall shut the system down and make necessary adjustments should
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the need arise.
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A. Center Pivot, Traveler, Big Gun, Motorized Lateral Move, End Tow, and Side (Wheel) Roll Irrigation Equipment:
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Operate system and injection equipment at normal pressures recommended by the manufacturer of injection equipment
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used. Fill tank of injection equipment with water. Operate system for one complete circle for center pivot or one complete
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run for the other recommended equipment, measuring time required, amount of water injected, and acreage contained in
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circle or run. Mix recommended amount of TERRANIL 6L for acreage to be covered into same amount of water used
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during calibration and inject into system continuously for one revolution or run, but continue to operate irrigation system
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until TERRANIL 6L has been cleared from last sprinkler head. Spray mixture in the chemical supply tank must be
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agitated at all times, otherwise settling and uneven application may occur.
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B. Solid Set and Hand Move Irrigation Equipment: Determine acreage covered by sprinkler. Fill tank of injection
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equipment with water and adjust flow to use contents over a thirty to forty-five minute period. Mix desired amount of
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TERRANIL 6L for acreage to be covered into quantity of water used during calibration and operate entire system at
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normal pressures recommended by the manufacturer of injection equipment used for amount of time established during
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calibration. Provide constant mechanical agitation in the mix tank to insure that TERRANIL 6L will remain in suspension
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during the injection cycle. TERRANIL 6L can be injected at the beginning or end of the irrigation cycle or as a separate
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application. Stop injection equipment after treatment is completed and continue to operate irrigation system until the
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product is cleared from last sprinkler head.
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Safety Devices
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(1) The systems designated above must contain a functional check valve, vacuum relief valve, and low pressure drain
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appropriately located on the irrigation pipeline to prevent water source contamination from backflow. (2) All pesticide
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injection pipelines must contain a functional, automatic, quick-closing check valve to prevent the flow of fluid back
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toward the injection pump. (3) The pesticide injection pipeline must also contain a functional, normally closed, solenoid-
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operated valve located on the intake side of the injection pump and connected to the system interlock to prevent fluid
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from being withdrawn from the supply tank when the irrigation system is either automatically or manually shut down.
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(4) The system must contain functional interlocking controls to automatically shut off the pesticide injection pump when
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the water pump motor stops. (5) The irrigation line or water pump must include a functional pressure switch which will
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stop the water pump motor when the water pressure decrease s to the point where pesticide distribution is adversely
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Page 5 of 27
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affected. (6) Systems must use a metering pump, such as a positive displacement injection pump (e.g., diaphragm pump)
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effectively designed and constructed of materials that are compatible with pesticides and capable of being fitted with a
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system interlock. (7) Do not apply when wind speed favors drift beyond the area intended for treatment.
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Systems Connected to Public Water Sources
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Public water system means a system for the provision to the public of piped water for human consumption if such system
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has at least 15 service connections or regularly serves an average of at least 25 individuals daily at least 60 days out of
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the year.
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Chemigation systems connected to public water systems must contain a functional, reduced-pressure zone, backflow
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preventer (RPZ) or the functional equivalent in the water supply line upstream from the point of pesticide introduction.
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As an option to the RPZ, the water from the public water system should be discharged into a reservoir tank prior to
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pesticide introduction. There shall be a complete physical break (air gap) between the outlet end of the fill pipe and the
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top or overflow rim of the reservoir tank of at least twice the inside diameter of the fill pipe. The system must contain
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functional interlocking controls to automatically shut off the pesticide injection pump when the water pump motor stops,
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or in cases where there is no water pump, when the water pressure decreases to the point where pesticide distribution is
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adversely affected.
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For additional instructions on safety precautions, refer to statements (2), (3), (4), (6), and (7) in the section on SAFETY
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DEVICES.
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Spray Drift Precautions
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Avoiding spray drift at the application site is the responsibility of the applicator. The interaction of many equipment-
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and-weather-related factors determine the potential for spray drift. The applicator and the grower are responsible for
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considering all these factors when making decisions. The following drift management requirements must be followed
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to avoid off-target drift movement from aerial applications to agricultural field crops. These requirements do not
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apply to forestry applications, public health uses or to applications using dry formulations.
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1. The distance of the outer most nozzles on the boom must not exceed ¾ the length of the wingspan or rotor.
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2. Nozzles must always point backward parallel with the air stream and never be pointed downwards more than
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45 degrees.
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Where states have more stringent regulations, they should be observed. The applicator should be familiar with and
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take into account the information covered in the Aerial Drift Reduction Advisory Information.
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Aerial Drift Reduction Advisory Information
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[This section is advisory in nature and does not supersede mandatory label requirements.]
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Information on Droplet Size : The most effective way to reduce drift potential is to apply large droplets. The best
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drift management strategy is to apply the largest droplets that provide sufficient coverage and control. Applying larger
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droplets reduces drift potential, but will not prevent drift if applications are made improperly, or under unfavorable
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environmental conditions (see Wind, Temperature and Humidity, and Temperature Inversions).
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Volume - Use high flow rate nozzles to apply the highest practical spray volume. Nozzles with higher rated flows
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produce larger droplets.
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Pressure - Do not exceed the nozzle manufacturer’s recommended pressures. For many nozzle types lower pressure
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produces larger droplets. When higher flow rates are needed, use higher flow rate nozzles instead of increasing
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pressure.
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Number of Nozzles - Use the minimum number of nozzles that provide uniform coverage.
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Nozzle Orientation - Orienting nozzles so that the spray is released parallel to the airstream produces larger droplets
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than other orientations and is the recommended practice. Significant deflection from horizontal will reduce droplet
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size and increase drift potential.
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Page 6 of 27
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Nozzle Type - Use nozzle type that is designed for the intended application. With most nozzle types, narrower spray
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angles produce larger droplets. Consider using low-drift nozzles. Solid stream nozzles oriented straight back produce
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the largest droplets and the lowest drift.
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Boom Length: For some use patterns, reducing the effective boom length to less than ¾ of the wingspan or rotor
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length may further reduce drift without reducing swath width.
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Application Height: Applications should not be made at a height greater than 10 feet above the top of the largest
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plants unless a greater height is required for aircraft safe ty. Making applications at the lowest height that is safe
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reduces exposure of droplets to evaporation and wind.
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Swath Adjustment : When applications are made with a crosswind, the swath will be displaced downwind.
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Therefore, on the up and downwind edges of the field, the applicator must compensate for this displacement by
|
||
adjusting the path of the aircraft upwind. Swath adjustme nt distance should increase, with increasing drift potential
|
||
(higher wind, smaller drops, etc.).
|
||
Wind: Drift potential is lowest between wind speeds of 2-10 mph. However, many factors, including droplet size
|
||
and equipment type determine drift potential at any given speed. Application should be avoided below 2 mph due to
|
||
variable wind direction and high inversion potential. NOTE: Local terrain can influence wind patterns. Every
|
||
applicator should be familiar with local wind patterns and how they affect spray drift.
|
||
Temperature and Humidity: When making applications in low relative humidity, set up equipment to produce
|
||
larger droplets to compensate for evaporation. Droplet evaporation is most severe when conditions are both hot and
|
||
dry.
|
||
Temperature Inversions: Applications should not occur during a temperature inversion because drift potential is
|
||
high. Temperature inversions restrict vertical air mixing, which causes small suspended droplets to remain in a
|
||
concentrated cloud. This cloud can move in unpredictabl e directions due to the light variable winds common during
|
||
inversions. Temperature inversions are characterized by increasing temperatures with altitude and are common on
|
||
nights with limited cloud cover and light to no wind. They begin to form as the sun sets and often continue into the
|
||
morning. Their presence can be indicated by ground fog; however, if fog is not present, inversions can also be
|
||
identified by the movement of smoke from a ground source or an aircraft smoke generator. Smoke that layers and
|
||
moves laterally in a concentrated cloud (under low wind conditions) indicates an inversion, while smoke that moves
|
||
upward and rapidly dissipates indicates good vertical air mixing.
|
||
Sensitive Areas: The pesticide should only be applied when the potential for drift to adjacent sensitive areas (e.g.
|
||
residential areas, bodies of water, known habitat for threat ened or endangered species, non-target crops ) is minimal
|
||
(e.g. when wind is blowing away from the sensitive areas).
|
||
General Information
|
||
TERRANIL 6L is an excellent fungicide when used according to label directions for control of a broad spectrum of plant
|
||
diseases. TERRANIL 6L can be used effectively in dilute or concentrate sprays. Thorough, uniform coverage is essential
|
||
for disease control.
|
||
Slowly invert container several times to assure uniform mixture. The required amount of TERRANIL 6L should be
|
||
added slowly into the spray tank during filling. With concentrate sprays, pre-mix the required amount of TERRANIL
|
||
6L in a clean container and add to the spray tank as it is being filled. Keep agitator running when filling spray tank and
|
||
during spray operations.
|
||
Dosage rates on this label indicate pints of TERRANIL 6L per acre unless otherwise stated. Under conditions favoring
|
||
disease development, the high rate specified and shortest application interval should be used. Applications should be
|
||
made in sufficient water to obtain adequate coverage of foliage. Gallonage to be used will vary with crop and amount of
|
||
plant growth. Spray volume usually will range from 20 to 150 gallons (approximately 80 to 600 liters) per acre for dilute
|
||
sprays and 5 to 10 gallons (approximately 20 to 40 liters) per acre for concentrate ground sprays and aircraft applications.
|
||
Both ground and aircraft methods of application are recommended unless specific directions for ground application only
|
||
are given for a crop. Application through sprinkler irrigation systems is not recommended unless specific directions are
|
||
given for a crop. See application and calibration instructions above.
|
||
|
||
Page 7 of 27
|
||
This product may be tank mixed with other products at specified rates as long as tank mixing is not prohibited by the
|
||
label(s) of the tank mix partner products, or as otherwise noted on this label, and the tank mix partner products are
|
||
labeled for the timing and method of application for the use site to be treated. Do not combine TERRANIL 6L in the
|
||
spray tank with pesticides, surfactants or fertilizers, unless prior use has shown the combination physically compatible,
|
||
effective and noninjurious to your conditions of use. If compatibility with another product is not known, perform a (jar)
|
||
test to determine compatibility. Follow all applicable directions, restrictions and precautions that appear on the
|
||
respective tank mix product labels.
|
||
General Precautions and Restrictions
|
||
This product must not be applied within 150 feet (for aerial and air-blast applications) or 25 feet (for ground
|
||
applications) of marine/estuarine water bodies unless there is an untreated buffer area of that width between the area
|
||
to be treated and the water body.
|
||
Do not combine TERRANIL 6L with Dipel® 4L, Latron® AG-98, or Latron B-1956 as phytotoxicity may result from
|
||
the combination when applied to some crops on this label.
|
||
Do not use on home lawns and turf sites associated with apartment buildings, daycare centers, playgrounds, playfields,
|
||
recreational park athletic fields, athletic fields located on or next to schools (i.e., elementary , middle and high schools),
|
||
campgrounds, churches, and theme parks.
|
||
Do not use on greenhouse grown food crops.
|
||
APPLICATION RATES
|
||
Dosage rates on this label indicate pints of TERRANIL 6L per acre, unless otherwise stated. Under conditions favoring
|
||
disease development, the high rate specified and the shortest application interval should be used.
|
||
For each listed crop, the maximum total amount chlorothalonil active ingredient (lbs. a.i./A) which may be applied
|
||
per acre of that crop (or crop group) during each growin g season is stated in the Specific Use Restrictions section
|
||
associated with each crop (or crop group). For each crop us e situation listed below, the listed maximum individual
|
||
and seasonal application rates must not be exceeded an d the listed minimum retreatment intervals must not be
|
||
decreased.
|
||
CROP DISEASES
|
||
(Pathogen)
|
||
PTS.
|
||
PRODUCT/ A
|
||
(lbs. a.i./A)
|
||
APPLICATION DIRECTIONS
|
||
Asparagus Rust
|
||
(Puccinia asparagi)
|
||
Purple Spot
|
||
(Pleospora herbarum)
|
||
Cercospora blight
|
||
(C. asparagi)
|
||
2 to 4
|
||
(1.5 to 3.0)
|
||
Use water volumes of 25-50 gallons per acre.
|
||
Begin applications following final harvest of
|
||
spears. Repeat applications at 14- 28 day
|
||
intervals (the minimum retreatment interval is
|
||
14 days), depending on disease pressure. Use
|
||
the higher rate and shorter interval if disease
|
||
severity begins to increase during the season or
|
||
weather conditions are conducive for severe
|
||
epidemics.
|
||
Apply by ground.
|
||
Specific Use Restrictions: Do not apply more than 12 pints TERRANIL 6L (9.0 lbs. a.i.) per acre during each growing season.
|
||
Do not apply within 190 days (120 days in CA and AZ) of the harvest of spears in the following season.
|
||
|
||
Page 8 of 27
|
||
CROP DISEASES
|
||
(Pathogen)
|
||
PTS.
|
||
PRODUCT/ A
|
||
(lbs. a.i./A)
|
||
APPLICATION DIRECTIONS
|
||
Bean (Snap) Rust (Uromyces
|
||
appendiculatus)
|
||
ǪWR
|
||
(1.0 to 2.25)
|
||
Use in sufficient water to obtain adequate
|
||
coverage. Begin applications during early
|
||
bloom stage or when disease first threatens and
|
||
repeat (the minimum retreatment interval is 7
|
||
days).
|
||
Botrytis blight
|
||
(gray mold)
|
||
(B. cinerea)
|
||
3
|
||
(2.25)
|
||
Specific Use Restrictions: Do not apply more than 12 pints TERRANIL 6L (9.0 lbs. a.i.) per acre during each growing season. Do
|
||
not apply within 7 days of harvest.
|
||
Dried shelled pea and bean
|
||
(except soybeans)
|
||
bean, adzuki
|
||
bean, broad
|
||
bean, dry
|
||
bean, lablab
|
||
bean, navy
|
||
bean, kidney
|
||
bean, lima
|
||
bean, moth
|
||
bean, mung
|
||
bean, pink
|
||
bean, pinto
|
||
bean, tepary
|
||
bean, urd
|
||
bean, yardlong
|
||
catjang
|
||
chickpea (garbanzo)
|
||
cowpea
|
||
lupin, grain
|
||
lupin
|
||
bean, rice
|
||
bean, runner
|
||
bean, jackbean
|
||
pea, blackeyed
|
||
pea, southern
|
||
Rust (Uromyces
|
||
appendiculatus)
|
||
Anthracnose
|
||
(Colletotrichum
|
||
lindemuthianum)
|
||
Downy mildew
|
||
(Phytophthora
|
||
nicotianae)
|
||
Cercospora leaf blotch
|
||
(C. cruenta)
|
||
Ascochyta blight
|
||
(A. phaseolorum)
|
||
ǪWR
|
||
(1.0 to 1.5)
|
||
Use in sufficient water to obtain adequate
|
||
coverage. Begin applications at first onset of
|
||
disease, which may occur as early as 2 to 4
|
||
weeks before flowering. Repeat applications at
|
||
7 to 10 day intervals (the minimum retreatment
|
||
interval is 7 days). For use only on beans to be
|
||
harvested dry with pods removed.
|
||
Apply by ground, air or chemigation.
|
||
Specific Use Restrictions: Do not apply more than 8 pints TERRANIL 6L (6 lbs. a.i.) per acre during each growing season. Do not
|
||
apply within 14 days before harvest.
|
||
|
||
Page 9 of 27
|
||
CROP DISEASES
|
||
(Pathogen)
|
||
PTS.
|
||
PRODUCT/ A
|
||
(lbs. a.i./A)
|
||
APPLICATION DIRECTIONS
|
||
Blueberries Suppression:
|
||
Anthracnose (ripe rot)
|
||
(C. gloeosporoides)
|
||
Mummy Berry
|
||
(M. vacciniicorymbosi)
|
||
3 to 4
|
||
(2.25 to 3.0)
|
||
TERRANIL 6L should be integrated into an
|
||
overall disease management strategy which
|
||
includes alternation with a fungicide with a
|
||
different mode of action. Diseases may only be
|
||
suppressed and russetting may occur under
|
||
heavy disease pressure or unfavorable
|
||
environmental conditions.
|
||
Apply in sufficient water to obtain adequate
|
||
coverage, normally 20-100 gallons per acre.
|
||
Begin applications at budbreak (green tip) and
|
||
repeat at 10-day intervals through early bloom
|
||
(the minimum retreatment interval is 10 days).
|
||
Under heavy disease pressure, use the higher
|
||
rate.
|
||
Apply by ground or air.
|
||
Septoria leaf spot
|
||
(Septoria albopunctata)
|
||
Rust
|
||
(Pucciniastrum
|
||
vaccinii)
|
||
3 to 4
|
||
(2.25 to 3.0)
|
||
Foliar Use After Harvest(after all berries are
|
||
harvested): To maintain healthy leaves for the
|
||
following season, apply in sufficient water to
|
||
obtain adequate coverage (normally 20-100
|
||
gallons per acre). Repeat at 10-14 day intervals
|
||
(the minimum retreatment interval is 10 days).
|
||
Apply by ground or air.
|
||
Specific Use Restrictions: Do not apply more than 12 pints TERRANIL 6L (9.0 lbs. a.i.) per acre during each growing season. Do
|
||
not apply after full bloom (except for foliar use after harvest) or within 42 days of harvest.
|
||
Brassica, head and Stem:
|
||
Broccoli
|
||
Broccoli, Chinese
|
||
Brussels Sprouts
|
||
Cabbage
|
||
Cabbage, Chinese (tight-
|
||
headed varieties and Napa)
|
||
Cabbage, Chinese Mustard
|
||
Cauliflower
|
||
Cavalo, broccoli
|
||
Kohlrabi
|
||
Alternaria leaf spot,
|
||
(Alternaria spp.)
|
||
Downy mildew
|
||
(Peronospora
|
||
parasitica)
|
||
1½
|
||
(1.125)
|
||
Use in sufficient water to obtain adequate
|
||
coverage. Begin applications after transplants
|
||
are set in field, or shortly after emergence of
|
||
field-seeded crop, or when conditions favor
|
||
disease development. Repeat at 7 to 10 day
|
||
intervals (the minimum retreatment interval is
|
||
7 days).
|
||
Apply by ground, air or chemigation.
|
||
Ring spot (California
|
||
only)
|
||
2
|
||
(1.5)
|
||
For field-seeded Brussels sprouts, begin
|
||
applications at time of early sprout
|
||
development or when conditions favor disease
|
||
development. Repeat at 7 to 10 day intervals
|
||
(the minimum retreatment interval is 7 days) to
|
||
maintain control.
|
||
Specific Use Restrictions: Do not apply more than 11.7 pints TERRANIL 6L (8.8 lbs. a.i.) per acre during each growing season.
|
||
Do not apply within 7 days of harvest.
|
||
|
||
Page 10 of 27
|
||
CROP DISEASES
|
||
(Pathogen)
|
||
PTS.
|
||
PRODUCT/ A
|
||
(lbs. a.i./A)
|
||
APPLICATION DIRECTIONS
|
||
Carrot Cercospora leaf spot
|
||
(C. carotae)
|
||
Alternaria leaf blight
|
||
(A. dauci)
|
||
1½ to 2
|
||
(1.125 to 1.5)
|
||
Use in sufficient water to obtain adequate
|
||
coverage. Start applications when disease
|
||
threatens and repeat at 7 to 10 day intervals (the
|
||
minimum retreatment interval is 7 days) to
|
||
maintain control.
|
||
Apply by ground, air or chemigation.
|
||
Specific Use Restrictions: Do not apply more than 20 pints TERRANIL 6L (15 lbs. a.i.) per acre during each growing season.
|
||
TERRANIL 6L may be applied the day of harvest.
|
||
Celery Early blight
|
||
(Cercospora apii)
|
||
Late blight (Septoria
|
||
apicola)
|
||
Basal stalk rot
|
||
(Rhizoctonia solani)
|
||
2 to 3
|
||
(1.5 to 2.25)
|
||
Use in sufficient water to obtain adequate
|
||
coverage. Start applications when transplants
|
||
are set in the field and repeat at a 7-day interval
|
||
as needed to maintain control (the minimum
|
||
retreatment interval is 7 days).
|
||
Apply by ground, air or chemigation.
|
||
Suppression
|
||
(7-day schedule):
|
||
Pink rot (Sclerotinia
|
||
sclerotiorum)
|
||
3
|
||
(2.25)
|
||
Early blight
|
||
(Cercospora apii)
|
||
Late blight (Septoria
|
||
apicola)
|
||
1½ to 2
|
||
(1.125 to 1.5)
|
||
per 100 gals.
|
||
For celery seedbeds, apply in a spray volume
|
||
of 125 gallons per acre twice weekly or as
|
||
needed to maintain control. Start applications
|
||
shortly after crop emergence. Use the higher
|
||
rate under severe disease conditions.
|
||
Specific Use Restrictions: Do not apply more than 24 pints TERRANIL 6L (18 lbs. a.i.) per acre during each growing season. Do
|
||
not apply within 7 days of harvest.
|
||
Corn (Sweet)
|
||
Corn (grown for seed)
|
||
Helminthosporium leaf
|
||
blights
|
||
Rust (Puccinia spp.)
|
||
¾ to 2
|
||
(0.6 to 1.5)
|
||
Use in sufficient water to obtain adequate
|
||
coverage. Begin applications when conditions
|
||
favor disease development and repeat at a 7
|
||
day interval as required to maintain control
|
||
(the minimum retreatment interval is 7 days).
|
||
Under severe disease conditions, use 1½ to 2
|
||
pints TERRANIL 6L per acre.
|
||
Apply by ground, air or chemigation.
|
||
Specific Use Restrictions: Do not apply more than 12 pints TERRANIL 6L (9 lbs. a.i.) per acre during each growing season. Do
|
||
not apply within 14 days of harvest. Do not apply to sweet corn to be processed. Do not allow livestock to graze in treated fields. Do
|
||
not ensile treated corn or use as livestock forage.
|
||
|
||
Page 11 of 27
|
||
CROP DISEASES (Pathogen) PTS.
|
||
PRODUCT/ A
|
||
(lbs. a.i./A)
|
||
APPLICATION DIRECTIONS
|
||
Cranberry Fruit rots
|
||
Lophodermium
|
||
leaf/twig blight
|
||
(L. hypophyllum)
|
||
4 to 6½
|
||
(3.0 to 4.9)
|
||
Apply at early bloom and repeat at 10 to 14 day
|
||
intervals (the minimum retreatment interval is 10
|
||
days). Under severe disease conditions, use the 6½
|
||
pint/acre rate on a 10 day schedule.
|
||
Apply by ground, air or chemigation. When applying
|
||
by chemigation, use 300 gallons of water per acre
|
||
through solid set systems only.
|
||
Upright Dieback
|
||
(Phomopsis vaccinii)
|
||
4 to 6½
|
||
(3.0 to 4.9)
|
||
Apply in sufficient water to obtain coverage of uprights
|
||
and runners. Make the first application before bloom,
|
||
at the time shoots begin growth in the spring. Make
|
||
additional applications at 10-14 day intervals.
|
||
Apply by ground, air or chemigation. When applying
|
||
by chemigation, use 300 gallons of water per acre
|
||
through solid set systems only.
|
||
Specific Use Restrictions: Do not apply more than 20 pints TERRANIL 6L (15 lbs. a.i.) per acre during each growing season. Do not apply within
|
||
50 days of harvest. Do not apply to beds when flooded or allow release of irrigation water from beds for at least 3 days following application.
|
||
Cucurbits:
|
||
Cantaloupe
|
||
Chinese waxgourd (Chinese
|
||
preserving melon)
|
||
Cucumber
|
||
Gourds
|
||
Honeydew melon
|
||
Momordica spp. (balsam apple, bitter
|
||
melon)
|
||
Muskmelon
|
||
Pumpkin
|
||
Squash
|
||
Watermelon
|
||
Zucchini
|
||
Anthracnose
|
||
(Colletotrichumspp.)
|
||
Downy mildew
|
||
(Pseudoperonospora
|
||
cubensis)
|
||
Target spot
|
||
(Corynespora cassiicola)
|
||
1½ to 2
|
||
(1.125 to 1.5)
|
||
Use in sufficient water to obtain adequate coverage.
|
||
Begin applications when plants are in first true leaf
|
||
stage or when conditions are favorable for disease
|
||
development. Repeat applications at 7 day intervals
|
||
(the minimum retreatment interval is 7 days).
|
||
Note: Spraying mature watermelons may result in
|
||
sunburn of the upper surface of the fruit. Do not apply
|
||
TERRANIL 6L to watermelons when any of the
|
||
following conditions are present:
|
||
1. Intense heat and sunlight
|
||
2. Drought conditions
|
||
3. Poor vine canopy
|
||
4. Other crop and environmental conditions
|
||
which may be conducive to increased natural
|
||
sunburn.
|
||
Do not combine TERRANIL 6L with anything except
|
||
water for application to watermelons unless your prior
|
||
use has shown the combination to be non-injurious to
|
||
watermelons under your conditions of use.
|
||
Apply by ground, air or chemigation.
|
||
Including cultivars and/or hybrids of
|
||
these. Cercospora leaf spot
|
||
(C. citrullina)
|
||
Gummy stem
|
||
blight/vine decline
|
||
(Didymella bryoniae)
|
||
Alternaria leaf blight
|
||
(A. cucumerina)
|
||
Alternaria leaf spot
|
||
(A. alternata)
|
||
Scab (Cladosporium
|
||
cucumerinum)
|
||
Powdery mildew
|
||
(Spaerotheca only)
|
||
2 to 3
|
||
(1.5 to 2.25)
|
||
Specific Use Restrictions: Do not apply more than 21 pints TERRANIL 6L (15.75 lbs. a.i.) per acre during each growing season. TERRANIL 6L
|
||
may be applied the day of harvest.
|
||
|
||
Page 12 of 27
|
||
CROP DISEASES
|
||
(Pathogen)
|
||
PTS.
|
||
PRODUCT/ A
|
||
(lbs. a.i./A)
|
||
APPLICATION DIRECTIONS
|
||
Fruiting Vegetables(except
|
||
tomatoes):
|
||
Eggplant
|
||
Groundcherry
|
||
Okra
|
||
Pepino
|
||
Pepper (includes bell pepper, chili
|
||
pepper, cooking pepper, pimento,
|
||
sweet pepper)
|
||
Tomatillo
|
||
Anthracnose
|
||
(Colletotrichumspp.)
|
||
Botrytis Leaf mold
|
||
(Botrytis cinera)
|
||
Cercospora leaf spot
|
||
(Cercospora spp)
|
||
Powdery mildew
|
||
(Leveillula taurica)
|
||
1½
|
||
(1.125) Use in sufficient water to obtain adequate coverage.
|
||
Begin application when disease first threatens, and
|
||
repeat at 7 to 10 day intervals as disease pressure
|
||
warrants.
|
||
Apply by ground, air or chemigation
|
||
Specific Use Restrictions: Do not apply more than 12 pints of TERRANIL 6L (9.0 lbs. a.i.) per acre during each growing season. Do not
|
||
apply within 3 days of harvest.
|
||
Ginseng Alternaria blight
|
||
(Alternaria panax)
|
||
Grey mold
|
||
(Botrytis cinerea)
|
||
2
|
||
(1.5)
|
||
Use in sufficient water to obtain adequate coverage.
|
||
Begin applications when disease first threatens, and
|
||
repeat at 7 to 10 day intervals as disease pressure
|
||
warrants.
|
||
Specific Use Restrictions: Do not apply more than 16 pints of TERRANIL 6L (12.0 lbs. a.i.) per acre during each growing season. Do not
|
||
apply within 14 days of harvest.
|
||
Grasses Grown for Seed Stem rust
|
||
Leaf rust
|
||
Stripe rust
|
||
Septoria leaf spot
|
||
Glume blotch
|
||
Bipolaris and
|
||
Drechslera leaf spots
|
||
1 to 1½
|
||
(0.75 to 1.125)
|
||
Use in sufficient water to obtain adequate coverage.
|
||
Begin applications during stem elongation when
|
||
conditions favor disease development. Re-apply at
|
||
flag (top) leaf emergence and repeat applications at
|
||
14 day intervals (the minimum retreatment interval
|
||
is 14 days).
|
||
Apply by ground, air or chemigation.
|
||
Selenophoma (eyespot) 1 to 2
|
||
(0.75 to 1.5)
|
||
Specific Use Restrictions: Do not apply more than 6 pints TERRANIL 6L (4.5 lbs. a.i.) per acre during each growing season. Do not apply
|
||
within 14 days of harvest. Do not allow livestock to graze in treated areas or feed hay produced before harvest. Feeding of treated plant parts
|
||
after harvest of seed is allowed.
|
||
Horseradish Ramularia stem and
|
||
leaf spot
|
||
(Ramularia
|
||
armoraciae)
|
||
3
|
||
(2.25)
|
||
Use is sufficient water to obtain adequate coverage.
|
||
Begin applications when disease first threatens, and
|
||
repeat at 7 to 10 day intervals as disease pressure
|
||
warrants.
|
||
Specific Use Restrictions: Do not apply more than 24 pints of TERRANIL 6L (18 lbs. a.i.) per acre during each growing season. Do not
|
||
apply within 14 days of harvest.
|
||
Lupine, Lentil Anthracnose
|
||
(Colletotrichum
|
||
gloeosporioides)
|
||
Ascochyta
|
||
(Ascochyta pisi)
|
||
1 to 1.5
|
||
(0.75 to 1.125)
|
||
Use in sufficient water to obtain adequate coverage.
|
||
Begin applications when disease first threatens, and
|
||
repeat at 7 to 10 day intervals as disease pressure
|
||
warrants.
|
||
Specific Use Restrictions: Do not apply more than 8 pints of TERRANIL 6L (6 lbs. a.i.) per acre during each growing season. Do not apply
|
||
within 14 days of harvest.
|
||
|
||
Page 13 of 27
|
||
CROP DISEASES
|
||
(Pathogen)
|
||
PTS.
|
||
PRODUCT/ A (lbs.
|
||
a.i./A)
|
||
APPLICATION DIRECTIONS
|
||
Mango Anthracnose
|
||
(Colletotrichumspp.)
|
||
2 to 3½
|
||
(1.5 to 2.6)
|
||
Use a water volume of 20 to 300 gallons per acre.
|
||
Begin applications at early bloom and repeat on a 7-
|
||
14 day interval until early fruit development. Begin
|
||
the season with the 2 pint rate on a 14-day interval
|
||
(the minimum retreatment interval is 7 days). If
|
||
disease pressure is severe, use the higher rate and
|
||
shorter interval.
|
||
Apply by ground or air.
|
||
Specific Use Restrictions: Do not apply more than 32 pints TERRANIL 6L (24 lbs. a.i.) per acre during each growing season. Do not apply
|
||
within 21 days of harvest.
|
||
Mint
|
||
(Indiana, Michigan and Wisconsin
|
||
only)
|
||
Rust (Puccinia
|
||
menthae)
|
||
Septoria leaf spot
|
||
(S. menthae)
|
||
Ǫ
|
||
(1.0)
|
||
Use in sufficient water to obtain adequate coverage,
|
||
normally 20 to 150 gallons per acre for dilute sprays
|
||
and 5 to 10 gallons per acre for concentrate ground
|
||
and aircraft applications. Begin applications when
|
||
emerging plants are 4- 8 inches high. Repeat
|
||
applications at 7 to 10 day intervals to maintain
|
||
control (the minimum retreatment interval is 7
|
||
days).
|
||
Specific Use Restrictions: Do not apply more than 4 pints TERRANIL 6L (3 lbs. a.i. ) per acre during each growing season. Do not apply
|
||
within 80 days of harvest. Do not feed fresh or extracted mint hay from treated fields to livestock.
|
||
Mushrooms Verticillium brown spot
|
||
and dry bubble
|
||
(Verticillium fungicola)
|
||
Rate per 1,000 sq. ft.
|
||
of bed surface
|
||
2.75 to 5.5 fl. oz.
|
||
Apply as a drench to the mushroom bed surface in
|
||
at least 12.5 gallons of water per 1000 sq. ft. of
|
||
mushroom bed. Make two applications as follows:
|
||
x First application- apply 5.5 fl. oz. of this
|
||
product within two days of top-dressing the
|
||
spawn-colonized mushroom compost with a
|
||
casing layer.
|
||
x Second application- apply 2.75 fl. oz. of this
|
||
product at pinning.
|
||
Specific Use Restrictions: Make no more than two applications per cropping cycle. Do not apply more than 8.25 fl. oz. of this product per
|
||
cropping cycle. Do not apply within 5 days of first harvest.
|
||
|
||
Page 14 of 27
|
||
CROP DISEASES
|
||
(Pathogen)
|
||
PTS.
|
||
PRODUCT/ A
|
||
(lbs. a.i./A)
|
||
APPLICATION DIRECTIONS
|
||
Onion (dry bulb) and
|
||
Garlic
|
||
Botrytis leaf
|
||
blight (Botrytis spp.)
|
||
Purple blotch
|
||
(Alternaria porri)
|
||
Suppression:
|
||
Botrytis neck rot
|
||
Downy mildew
|
||
(Peronospora
|
||
destructor)
|
||
1 to 3
|
||
(0.75 to 2.25)
|
||
Apply in sufficient water to obtain adequate
|
||
thorough coverage of tops. TERRANIL 6L is
|
||
recommended for use with disease monitoring
|
||
systems which adjust fungicide rates and
|
||
frequency of application according to disease
|
||
hazard. Apply as follows:
|
||
Low
|
||
Disease
|
||
Hazard &
|
||
Prior to
|
||
Infection
|
||
Low
|
||
Disease
|
||
Hazard
|
||
& Some
|
||
Disease
|
||
Present
|
||
|
||
High
|
||
Disease
|
||
Hazard
|
||
Rate/Acre 1 pt. ǪSWV3 pts.
|
||
Frequency 10 days 7-10
|
||
days
|
||
7 days
|
||
For suppression of neck rot ( Botrytis spp.)
|
||
during storage, a minimum of three weekly
|
||
DSSOLFDWLRQVSULRUWROLIWLQJXVLQJǪWRSLQWV
|
||
of TERRANIL 6L per acre, is recommended
|
||
The minimum retreatment interval is 7 days.
|
||
Apply by ground, air or chemigation.
|
||
Specific Use Restrictions:Do not apply more than 20 pints TERRANIL 6L (15 lbs. a.i.) per acre during each growing season. Do
|
||
not apply within 7 days of harvest.
|
||
Onion (green bunching)
|
||
Leek, Shallots,
|
||
Onion and Garlic
|
||
(grown for seed)
|
||
Botrytis leaf blight
|
||
(Botrytis spp.)
|
||
Purple blotch
|
||
(Alternaria porri)
|
||
Suppression:
|
||
Downy mildew
|
||
(Peronospora
|
||
destructor)
|
||
1½ to 3
|
||
(1.125 to 2.25)
|
||
Use in sufficient water to obtain thorough
|
||
coverage of tops. Begin applications prior to
|
||
favorable infection periods, and repeat at 7 to
|
||
10 day intervals for as long as conditions favor
|
||
disease (the minimum retreatment interval is 7
|
||
days). Use the high rate and a 7 day schedule
|
||
of applications when heavy dew or rain persist.
|
||
Apply by ground, air or chemigation.
|
||
Specific Use Restrictions: Do not apply more than 9 pints TERRANIL 6L (6.75 lbs. a.i.) per acre during each growing season. Do
|
||
not apply within 7 days of harvest on garlic. Do not apply within 14 days of harvest on green bunching onions, leeks or shallots.
|
||
Papaya Alternaria fruit spot
|
||
(A. alternata)
|
||
Anthracnose
|
||
(Colletotrichumspp.)
|
||
Stem end rot
|
||
(A. alternata,
|
||
Colletotrichumspp.)
|
||
1½ to 3
|
||
(1.125 to 2.25)
|
||
Apply with ground equipment only, in
|
||
sufficient water to obtain adequate coverage of
|
||
fruit and leaves. Begin treatment when
|
||
conditions favor development of disease and
|
||
continue treatments at 14 day intervals until
|
||
weather conditions no longer favor disease
|
||
development (the minimum retreatment
|
||
interval is 14 days.).
|
||
Specific Use Restrictions: Do not apply more than 9 pints TERRANIL 6L (6.75 lbs. a.i.) per acre during each growing season.
|
||
TERRANIL 6L may be applied the day of harvest.
|
||
|
||
Page 15 of 27
|
||
CROP DISEASES
|
||
(Pathogen)
|
||
PTS.
|
||
PRODUCT/ A
|
||
(lbs. a.i./A)
|
||
APPLICATION DIRECTIONS
|
||
Parsnip Alternaria leaf spot
|
||
(Alternaria spp.)
|
||
Downy mildew
|
||
(Plasmopara crustosa)
|
||
Anthracnose
|
||
(Colletotrichumspp.)
|
||
Botrytis blight (gray
|
||
mold) (B. cinerea)
|
||
Bottom rot
|
||
(Rhizoctonia)
|
||
1½ to 2
|
||
(1.125 to 1.5)
|
||
Apply in sufficient water to obtain adequate
|
||
coverage. Make the first application at the first
|
||
sign of disease or when conditions are favorable
|
||
for infection. Continue applications on a 7 to 10
|
||
day schedule (the minimum retreatment interval
|
||
is 7 days).
|
||
Specific Use Restrictions: Do not apply more than 8 pints TERRANIL 6L (6 lbs. a.i.) per acre during each growing season. Do not
|
||
apply within 10 days of harvest.
|
||
Passion Fruit
|
||
(Hawaii only)
|
||
Alternaria fruit and leaf
|
||
spot (Alternaria spp.)
|
||
Anthracnose
|
||
(Colletotrichumspp.)
|
||
Cercospora fruit spot
|
||
2
|
||
(1.5)
|
||
Apply with ground equipment in sufficient water
|
||
to obtain adequate coverage of fruit and leaves.
|
||
Begin applications during late bloom and repeat
|
||
at 14 day intervals until weather conditions no
|
||
longer favor disease development (the minimum
|
||
retreatment interval is 14 days).
|
||
Specific Use Restrictions: Do not apply more than 10 pints TERRANIL 6L (7.5 lbs. a.i.) per acre during each growing season. Do not
|
||
apply within 7 days of harvest.
|
||
Peanut Early leaf spot
|
||
(Cercospora
|
||
arachidicola)
|
||
Late leaf spot
|
||
(Cercosporidium
|
||
personatum)
|
||
Pepper spot
|
||
(Leptosphaerulina
|
||
crassiasca)
|
||
1 to 1½
|
||
(0.75 to 1.125)
|
||
Apply in sufficient water for coverage when leaf
|
||
wetness first occurs or 30 to 40 days after
|
||
planting. Repeat at 14 day intervals (the
|
||
minimum retreatment interval is 14 days). When
|
||
conditions favor late leaf spot or when rust or web
|
||
blotch occur, apply 1½ pints TERRANIL 6L per
|
||
acre at 14 day intervals for the remainder of the
|
||
season.
|
||
Apply by ground, air, or chemigation. If applying
|
||
by chemigation, use 1½ pints TERRANIL 6L per
|
||
acre. It is recommended to alternate chemigation
|
||
applications with ground or aerial applications.
|
||
Rust (Puccinia
|
||
arachidis)
|
||
Web blotch (Phoma
|
||
arachidicola)
|
||
1½
|
||
(1.125)
|
||
Specific Use Restrictions: Do not apply more than 12 pints TERRANIL 6L (9 lbs. a.i.) per acre during each growing season. Do not
|
||
apply within 14 days of harvest. Do not allow livestock to graze in treated areas. Do not feed hay or threshings from treated fields to
|
||
livestock.
|
||
Persimmon
|
||
(Florida and Hawaii only)
|
||
Cercospora leaf spot
|
||
(Cercospora fuliginosa)
|
||
1.25
|
||
(0.94)
|
||
Use in sufficient water to obtain adequate
|
||
coverage. Begin applications when disease first
|
||
threatens, and repeat at 14 day intervals as disease
|
||
pressure warrants. Aerial applications require the
|
||
use of a minimum of 10 gallons per acre.
|
||
Specific Use Restrictions: Do not apply more than 6.25 pints of TERRANIL 6L (4.7 lbs. a.i.) per acre during each growing season.
|
||
Do not apply within 14 days of harvest.
|
||
|
||
Page 16 of 27
|
||
CROP DISEASES
|
||
(Pathogen)
|
||
PTS.
|
||
PRODUCT/ A
|
||
(lbs. a.i./A)
|
||
APPLICATION DIRECTIONS
|
||
Potato Late blight
|
||
(Phytophthora
|
||
infestans)
|
||
Early blight
|
||
(Alternaria solani)
|
||
Botrytis vine rot
|
||
(B. cinerea)
|
||
Black dot
|
||
(Colletotrichum
|
||
coccodes)
|
||
¾
|
||
(0.6)
|
||
-then-
|
||
1 to 1½
|
||
(0.75 to 1.125)
|
||
Begin applications at the low rate when vines are
|
||
first exposed and leaf wetness occurs. Repeat
|
||
applications at 5 to 10 day intervals (the minimum
|
||
retreatment interval is 5 days).
|
||
Begin applying the higher label rates at 5 to 10
|
||
day intervals when any one of the following
|
||
events occurs:
|
||
- Vines close within the row;
|
||
- Late blight forecasting measures 18 disease
|
||
severity values (DSV);
|
||
- The crop reaches 300 P-days.
|
||
Increase water spray volume as canopy density
|
||
increases. Use the highest rate and shortest
|
||
interval when plants are rapidly growing and
|
||
disease conditions are severe.
|
||
Apply by ground, air, or chemigation. Do not
|
||
exceed a 10 day interval between applications
|
||
when using chemigation.
|
||
Specific Use Restrictions: Do not apply more than 15 pints of TERRANIL 6L (11.25 lbs. a.i.) per acre during each growing season.
|
||
Do not apply within 7 days of harvest.
|
||
Rhubarb Ramularia leaf spot
|
||
(Ramularia rhei)
|
||
Ascochyta blight
|
||
(Ascochyta rhei)
|
||
3
|
||
(2.25)
|
||
Use sufficient water to obtain adequate coverage.
|
||
Begin applications when disease first threatens,
|
||
and repeat at 7 to 10 day intervals as disease
|
||
pressure warrants.
|
||
Specific Use Restrictions:Do not apply more than 18 pints of TERRANIL 6L (13.5 lbs. a.i.) per acre during each growing season. Do
|
||
not apply within 30 days of harvest.
|
||
|
||
Page 17 of 27
|
||
CROP DISEASES
|
||
(Pathogen)
|
||
PTS.
|
||
PRODUCT/ A
|
||
(lbs. a.i./A)
|
||
APPLICATION DIRECTIONS
|
||
Soybean Anthracnose
|
||
(Colletotrichum
|
||
truncatum)
|
||
Diaporthe pod and
|
||
stem rot
|
||
(D. phaseolorum)
|
||
Frogeye leaf spot
|
||
(Cercospora sojina)
|
||
Purple seed stain
|
||
(C. kikuchii)
|
||
Cercospora leaf blight
|
||
(C. kikuchii),
|
||
Septoria brown spot
|
||
(S. glycines)
|
||
Suppression:
|
||
Rust (Phakopsora
|
||
pachyrhizi)
|
||
Apply in sufficient water to obtain complete
|
||
coverage, using at least five gallons water per acre
|
||
for aerial application. Use the three application
|
||
program in areas having a history of moderate to
|
||
severe disease intensity. The minimum
|
||
retreatment interval is 14 days.
|
||
Apply by ground, air, or chemigation.
|
||
1½ to 2¼
|
||
(1.125 to 1.7)
|
||
Two application program – For determinate
|
||
varieties, make the first application at R3 stage
|
||
(early pod set) and the second application at R5
|
||
(seed formation). For indeterminate varieties,
|
||
make the first application when largest pods are
|
||
1-1¼ inches in length. Make the second
|
||
application 14 days later.
|
||
1 to 2
|
||
(0.75 to 1.5)
|
||
Three application program: For determinate
|
||
varieties, make the first application at the
|
||
beginning of flowering (R1), the second at early
|
||
pod set (R3), and the third at beginning of seed
|
||
formation (R5). For indeterminate varieties, make
|
||
the first application one week after first flowering
|
||
and continue applications at 14 day intervals.
|
||
Stem canker
|
||
(Diaporthe
|
||
phaseolorum)
|
||
1
|
||
(0.75)
|
||
Apply in 10 to 20 gallons of water per acre, as a
|
||
band treatment directing spray to provide
|
||
coverage of entire plant. Make the first
|
||
application at time of emergence of the second
|
||
trifoliate leaves (V2). If conditions favor stem
|
||
canker disease, make a second and a third
|
||
application. Make all applications at 14 day
|
||
intervals.
|
||
Specific Use Restrictions: Do not apply more than 6 pints TERRANIL 6L (4.5 lbs. a.i.) per acre during each growing season. Do not
|
||
apply within 6 weeks of harvest. Do not feed hay or threshings from treated fields to livestock.
|
||
|
||
Page 18 of 27
|
||
CROP DISEASES
|
||
(Pathogen)
|
||
PTS.
|
||
PRODUCT/ A
|
||
(lbs. a.i./A)
|
||
APPLICATION DIRECTIONS
|
||
Tomato FOLIAGE:
|
||
Early blight
|
||
(Alternaria solani)
|
||
Late blight
|
||
(Phytophthora
|
||
infestans)
|
||
Gray leaf spot
|
||
(Stemphyllium
|
||
botryosum)
|
||
Gray leaf mold
|
||
(Fluvia fluva;
|
||
Cladosporium)
|
||
Septoria leaf spot
|
||
(S. lycopersici)
|
||
Target spot
|
||
(Corynespora
|
||
cassiicola)
|
||
ǪWR
|
||
(1.0 to 1.5)
|
||
Apply in sufficient water to obtain adequate
|
||
coverage. Begin applications when dew or rain
|
||
occur and disease threatens. Apply on a 7-10 day
|
||
interval for foliage diseases. For fruit diseases,
|
||
begin at fruit set and apply on a 7-14 day interval.
|
||
Use the highest rate and shortest interval specified
|
||
when disease condition s are severe. The
|
||
minimum retreatment interval is 7 days.
|
||
Apply by ground, air, or chemigation.
|
||
FRUIT:
|
||
Anthracnose
|
||
(Colletotrichumspp.)
|
||
Alternaria fruit rot
|
||
(black mold)
|
||
(A. alternata)
|
||
Botrytis gray mold
|
||
(B. cinerea)
|
||
Late blight fruit rot
|
||
(P. infestans)
|
||
Rhizoctonia fruit rot
|
||
(R. solani)
|
||
2 to 2¾
|
||
(1.5 to 2.1)
|
||
Specific Use Restrictions: Do not apply more than 20 pints TERRANIL 6L (15 lbs. a.i.) per acre during each growing season.
|
||
TERRANIL 6L may be applied the day of harvest.
|
||
Yam Anthracnose
|
||
(Colletotrichum
|
||
gloeosporioides)
|
||
1 to 1.25
|
||
(0.75 to 1.125)
|
||
Use in sufficient water to obtain adequate
|
||
coverage. Begin applications when disease first
|
||
threatens, and repeat at 10 to 14 day intervals as
|
||
disease pressure warrants.
|
||
Specific Use Restrictions: Do not apply more than 15 pints of TERRANIL 6L (11.25 lbs. a.i.) per acre during each growing season.
|
||
Do not apply within 7 days of harvest.
|
||
Tree and Orchard Crops
|
||
Apply TERRANIL 6L in sufficient water and with proper calibration to obtain uniform coverage of tree canopy. For fruit and
|
||
nut bearing crops, the maximum volume is 300 gallons per acre unless indicated otherwise in the specific use directions. For
|
||
conifers, the maximum volume is 100 gallons per acre.
|
||
Application with ground equipment is preferable to aerial application because ground applications generally give better
|
||
coverage of the tree canopy. If application with ground equipment is not feasible, TERRANIL 6L may be applied with aircraft
|
||
|
||
Page 19 of 27
|
||
using at least 20 gallons of spray per acre. The minimum volume for application by aircraft to conifer stands and Christmas
|
||
trees is 10 gallons per acre.
|
||
When concentrate sprays are used or when treating non-bearing or immature trees, the lower rate of TERRANIL 6L listed
|
||
may be used. Do not allow livestock to graze in treated areas.
|
||
PTS. PRODUCT PER
|
||
(lbs. a.i. per)
|
||
|
||
|
||
CROP
|
||
DISEASES
|
||
(Pathogen)
|
||
|
||
ACRE
|
||
100 GAL.*
|
||
APPLICATION DIRECTIONS
|
||
Almonds Anthracnose
|
||
(Colletotrichum acutatum)
|
||
Blossom blight/brown rot
|
||
(Monilinia spp.)
|
||
Shot hole
|
||
(Wilsonomyces
|
||
carpophilus)
|
||
Scab
|
||
(Venturia carpophila)
|
||
4
|
||
(3.0)
|
||
1.33
|
||
(1.0)
|
||
Use water volumes of 20-300 gallons per acre. For
|
||
blossom blight, begin application at popcorn (pink
|
||
bud) and follow with an application at full bloom.
|
||
If weather is still conducive for disease
|
||
development, another application may be made at
|
||
petal fall.
|
||
For control of shot hole, make an application in the
|
||
autumn at leaf fall. In the spring, make the first
|
||
application at budbreak, followed by an application
|
||
at shuck split to control nut infections and to control
|
||
scab.
|
||
Apply by ground or air.
|
||
Specific Use Restrictions: Do not apply more than 25 pints TERRANIL 6L (18.75 lbs. a.i.) per acre during each growing season
|
||
(leaf fall through shuck split). Do not apply within 150 days of harvest.
|
||
Filberts
|
||
(Hazel-
|
||
nuts)
|
||
Eastern filbert blight
|
||
(Anisogramma anomala)
|
||
4
|
||
(3.0)
|
||
1.33
|
||
(1.0)
|
||
Use a water volume of 20 to 300 gallons per acre.
|
||
Begin applications at the onset of disease or when
|
||
weather conditions favor disease development.
|
||
Make applications on a 14-28 day schedule, using
|
||
the shorter interval under heavy disease pressure
|
||
(the minimum retreatment interval is 14 days.)
|
||
Specific Use Restrictions: Do not apply more than 12 pints TERRANIL 6L (9 lbs. a.i.) per acre during each growing season. Do not
|
||
apply within 120 days of harvest. Do not apply through irrigation. Do not apply with oils, other pesticides, surfactants or fer tilizers.
|
||
Do not apply within one week of an oil-based pesticide application.
|
||
|
||
Page 20 of 27
|
||
PTS. PRODUCT PER
|
||
(lbs. a.i. per)
|
||
CROP DISEASES
|
||
(Pathogen)
|
||
ACRE 100 GAL.* APPLICATION DIRECTIONS
|
||
Peach
|
||
Nectarine
|
||
Apricot
|
||
Cherry
|
||
Plum
|
||
Prune
|
||
Leaf curl
|
||
(Taphrina deformans)
|
||
Shot hole (Wilsonomyces
|
||
carpophilus)
|
||
ǩWRǩ
|
||
(2.3 to 3.1)
|
||
WRǪ
|
||
(0.75 to 1.0)
|
||
For best control of both diseases apply at leaf fall
|
||
in late autumn, using sufficient water and proper
|
||
sprayer calibration to obtain uniform coverage.
|
||
When conditions favor high disease levels, use the
|
||
high rate of application and apply once or twice
|
||
more in mid to late winter before bud swell. If the
|
||
leaf fall application is not practical, application of
|
||
TERRANIL 6L for control of leaf curl may be made
|
||
at any time prior to bud swell the following spring.
|
||
Where shot hole occurs, also apply at budbreak to
|
||
protect newly emerging leaves and at shuck split to
|
||
prevent fruit infections.
|
||
Apply by ground or air.
|
||
Lacy (russet) scab
|
||
(plum/prune)
|
||
Brown rot blossom blight
|
||
(Monilinia spp.)
|
||
ǩWRǩ
|
||
(2.3 to 3.1)
|
||
WRǪ
|
||
(0.75 to 1.0)
|
||
Make one application at popcorn (pink, red, or early
|
||
white bud) and a second application at full bloom.
|
||
If weather conditions favor disease development,
|
||
make an additional application at petal fall.
|
||
Cherry leaf spot
|
||
(Blumeriella jaapii)
|
||
Scab (Cladosporium
|
||
carpophilum)
|
||
Black knot (cherry, plum)
|
||
(Apiosporina morbosa)
|
||
ǩWRǩ
|
||
(2.3 to 3.1)
|
||
WRǪ
|
||
(0.75 to 1.0)
|
||
In addition to the bloom applications listed above,
|
||
make one application at shuck-split. Do not apply
|
||
TERRANIL 6L after shuck- split and before
|
||
harvest. If additional disease control is needed
|
||
before harvest, use another registered fungicide.
|
||
For control of cherry leaf spot after harvest, make
|
||
one application to foliage within 7 days after fruit
|
||
is removed. In orchards with a history of high leaf
|
||
spot incidence, make a second application 10-14
|
||
days later.
|
||
Apply by ground or air.
|
||
Specific Use Restrictions: Do not apply more than 20½ pints TERRANIL 6L (15.4 lbs. a.i.) per acre during each growing season.
|
||
TERRANIL 6L may be applied the day of harvest. The minimum retreatment interval is 10 days.
|
||
Pistachio Botryosphaeria blight
|
||
(B. dothidea)
|
||
Suppression:
|
||
Alternaria late blight
|
||
(A. alternata)
|
||
6
|
||
(4.5)
|
||
3
|
||
(2.25)
|
||
Use a water volume of 20 to 200 gallons per acre.
|
||
Make the first application at the beginning of the
|
||
blossom period followed by an application at full
|
||
bloom. Make additional applications as required on
|
||
a 28- day schedule. (The minimum retreatment
|
||
interval is 28 days). For Septoria and Botrytis, use
|
||
the higher rate if disease pressure is severe.
|
||
NOTE: Use of this product may result in speckling
|
||
or reddening of the fruit hull (epicarp). This effect
|
||
is superficial and has not resulted in any change in
|
||
nut quality.
|
||
Apply by ground or air.
|
||
Septoria leaf spot
|
||
(S. pistacina)
|
||
Botrytis blight
|
||
(B. cinerea)
|
||
4 to 6
|
||
(3.0 to 4.5)
|
||
2 to 3
|
||
(1.50 to 2.25)
|
||
Specific Use Restrictions: Do not apply more than 30 pints TERRANIL 6L (22.5 lbs. a.i.) per acre during each growing season. Do
|
||
not apply within 14 days of harvest.
|
||
|
||
Page 21 of 27
|
||
PTS. PRODUCT PER
|
||
(lbs. a.i. per)
|
||
CROP DISEASES
|
||
(Pathogen)
|
||
ACRE 100 GAL.* APPLICATION DIRECTIONS
|
||
Conifers
|
||
(pines,
|
||
spruces)
|
||
Swiss needlecast
|
||
(Phaeocryptopus
|
||
gaeumannii)
|
||
2¾ to 5½
|
||
(2.1 to 4.125)
|
||
2¾ to 5½
|
||
(2.1 to 4.125)
|
||
Single application technique: In Christmas tree
|
||
plantations or conifer stands, make one application
|
||
in the spring when new shoot growth is ½ to 2
|
||
inches in length.
|
||
Scleroderris canker (pines)
|
||
(Gremmeniella abietina)
|
||
Swiss needlecast
|
||
(P. gaeumannii)
|
||
1½ to 2¾
|
||
(1.125 to 2.1)
|
||
1½ to 2¾
|
||
(1.125 to 2.1)
|
||
Make the first application in spring when new shoot
|
||
growth is ½ to 2 inches in length. Make additional
|
||
applications at 3 to 4 week intervals until conditions
|
||
no longer favor disease development. For use in
|
||
nursery beds, apply the highest rate specified on a
|
||
3 week schedule.Sirococcus tip blight
|
||
(S. conigenus)
|
||
2 to 3½
|
||
(1.5 to 2.6)
|
||
2 to 3½
|
||
(1.5 to 2.6)
|
||
Rhizosphaera needlecast
|
||
(spruces)
|
||
(Rhizosphaera spp.)
|
||
Scirrhia brown spot (pines)
|
||
(Mycosphaerella
|
||
dearnessii)
|
||
5½
|
||
(4.125)
|
||
5½
|
||
(4.125)
|
||
Cyclaneusma and
|
||
Lophodermium needlecast
|
||
(pines)
|
||
2¾ to 5½
|
||
(2.1 to 4.125)
|
||
2¾ to 5½
|
||
(2.1 to 4.125)
|
||
Apply in early spring prior to budbreak. Repeat
|
||
applications at approximately 6 to 8 week intervals,
|
||
until spore release ceases in late fall. Apply
|
||
monthly during periods of frequent rainfall, and
|
||
where Lophodermium infections occur during
|
||
dormancy (Pacific NW). During drought periods,
|
||
applications may be suspended, then resumed upon
|
||
next occurrence of needle wetness.
|
||
Rhabdocline needlecast
|
||
(Douglas fir)
|
||
1½ to 2¾
|
||
(1.125 to 2.1)
|
||
1½ to 2¾
|
||
(1.125 to 2.1)
|
||
Apply at budbreak and repeat at 3 to 4 week
|
||
intervals until needles are fully elongated and
|
||
conditions no longer favor disease development. In
|
||
plantations of mixed provenance, or when irregular
|
||
budbreak occurs, apply weekly until all trees have
|
||
broken bud, then every 3 to 4 weeks as specified
|
||
above. In nursery beds, use the high rate on a 3
|
||
week schedule.
|
||
Botrytis seedling blight
|
||
Phoma twig blight
|
||
1½ to 2¾
|
||
(1.125 to 2.1)
|
||
1½ to 2¾
|
||
(1.125 to 2.1)
|
||
Begin applications in nursery beds when seedlings
|
||
are 4 inches tall and when cool, moist conditions
|
||
favor disease development. Make additional
|
||
applications at 7 to 14 day intervals as long as
|
||
favorable disease conditions persist.
|
||
Autoecious needle rust
|
||
(Weir’s cushion) (spruce)
|
||
5½
|
||
(4.125)
|
||
5½
|
||
(4.125)
|
||
Begin applications when 10% of buds have broken
|
||
and twice thereafter at 7-10 day intervals.
|
||
Specific Use Restrictions: Do not apply more than 22 pints TERRANIL 6L (16.5 lbs. a.i.) per acre during each growing season. The
|
||
minimum retreatment interval for established trees is 21 days. The minimum retreatment interval in nursery beds is 7 days. Do not use
|
||
on forest.
|
||
*Volumetric rates to be used only with full dilute spray volume specified on this label for tree and orchard crops.
|
||
|
||
Page 22 of 27
|
||
DIRECTIONS FOR USE ON TURF AND ORNAMENTALS
|
||
Turf
|
||
Group A. Golf Course Fairways, Sod Farms, Lawns (around institutional, commercial and industrial buildings), and
|
||
Ornamental Turfgrass:
|
||
NOTE: Do not use on home lawns and turf sites associated with apartment buildings, daycare centers, playgrounds,
|
||
playfields, recreational park athletic fields, athletic fields located on or next to schools (ie., elementary , middle and high
|
||
schools), campgrounds, churches, and theme parks.
|
||
NOTE: Sod farm turf treated with chlorothalonil prior to harvest must be mechanically cut, rolled and harvested.
|
||
Do not use for sodfarms at application rates greater than 13 pounds of active ingredient, per acre, per year.
|
||
Do not apply more than 34.7 pints/acre (12.7 fl. ozs./1000 sq. ft.) of TERRANIL 6L per growing season (26 lbs.
|
||
a.i./acre/growing season. For sodfarms, do not apply more than 17.4 pints/acre (6.4 fl. ozs./1000 sq. ft) of TERRANIL 6L
|
||
per growing season (13 lbs. ai./acre/growing season. The minimum growing retreatment interval for single application
|
||
rates up to 9.75 pints/acre (3.6 fl. ozs./1000 sq. ft.) of TERRANIL 6L (7.3 lbs. a.i./acre) is 7 days. Do not apply more than
|
||
one application of a rate greater than 9.75 pints/acre (3.6 fl. oz./1000 sq. ft.) of TERRANIL 6L (7.3 lb. a.i./acre) per growing
|
||
season. The maximum single application rate is 15.1 pints/acre (5.5 fl. ozs./1000 sq. ft.) of TERRANIL 6L (11.3 lbs.
|
||
a.i./acre).
|
||
Apply TERRANIL 6L in 30 to 40 gallons of water per acre. Begin applications when conditions favor disease development
|
||
and repeat applications as long as these conditions persist. Under severe disease conditions use the highest rate and shortest
|
||
interval corresponding with the application schedule selected from the table below.
|
||
DO NOT mow or water after treatment until spray deposited on turfgrass is thoroughly dry; TERRANIL 6L should always
|
||
be used in conjunction with good turf management practices.
|
||
Group B. Golf Course Tees and Greens.
|
||
Golf Course Tees: Do not apply more than 69.3 pints/acre (25.4 fl. ozs./1000 sq. ft.) of TERRANIL 6L (52 lbs. a.i./acre)
|
||
per growing season. The minimum retreatment interval for single application rates up to 9.75 pints/acre (3.6 fl. ozs./1000
|
||
sq. ft.) of TERRANIL 6L (7.3 lbs. a.i./acre) is 7 days. Th e minimum retreatment interval after an application of a rate
|
||
greater than 9.75 pints/acre (3.6 fl. ozs./1000 sq. ft.) of TERRANIL 6L (7.3 lbs. a.i./acre) is 14 days. Do not apply more
|
||
than two applications of a rate greater than 9.75 pints/acre (3.6 fl. ozs./1000 sq. ft.) of TERRANIL 6L (7.3 lbs. a.i./acre)
|
||
per growing season. The maximum single application rate is 15.1 pints/acre (5.5 fl. ozs./1000 sq. ft.) of TERRANIL 6L
|
||
(11.3 lbs. a.i./acre).
|
||
Golf Course Greens: Do not apply more than 97.3 pints/acre (35.7 fl. ozs./1000 sq. ft.) of TERRANIL 6L (73 lbs.
|
||
a.i./acre) per growing season. The minimum retreatment interval for single application rates up to 9.75 pints/acre (3.6 fl.
|
||
ozs./1000 sq. ft.) of TERRANIL 6L (7.3 lbs. a.i./acre) is 7 days and the minimum retreatment interval after an application
|
||
of a rate greater than 9.75 pints/acre (3.6 fl. ozs.1000 sq. ft.) of TERRANIL 6L (7.3 lbs. a.i./acre) is 14 days. Do not
|
||
apply more than two applications of a rate greater than 9.75 pints/acre (3.6 fl. ozs./1000 sq. ft.) of TERRANIL 6L (7.3 lbs.
|
||
a.i./acre) per growing season. The maximum single application rate is 15.1 pints/acre (5.5 fl. ozs./1000 sq. ft.) of
|
||
TERRANIL 6L (11.3 lbs. a.i./acre).
|
||
Apply TERRANIL 6L in an adequate amount of water to provide complete coverage. This amount may vary from 90 to
|
||
450 gallons per acre. See table below for suggested rates and timing. Under severe disease conditions use the highest
|
||
rate and shortest interval corresponding with the application schedule selected from the table below.
|
||
DO NOT mow or water after treatment until spray deposited on turfgrass is thoroughly dry: TERRANIL 6L should
|
||
always be used in conjunction with good turf management practices.
|
||
|
||
Page 23 of 27
|
||
Diseases Controlled* Application
|
||
Interval
|
||
(days)
|
||
Pre-Disease Ratesa Post-Disease Ratesa
|
||
fl. oz.
|
||
product/1000
|
||
sq. ft.
|
||
pints
|
||
product/acre
|
||
lbs. a.i./acre fl. oz.
|
||
product/1000
|
||
sq. ft.
|
||
pints
|
||
product/acre
|
||
lbs. a.i./acre
|
||
Dollar Spot 7 to 10
|
||
7 to 21
|
||
14
|
||
1.0b to 2.0
|
||
2.0 to 3.6
|
||
-
|
||
2.8 b to 5.0
|
||
5.5 to 9.75
|
||
2.1 b to 4.1
|
||
4.1 to 7.3
|
||
-
|
||
-
|
||
-
|
||
4.0 to 5.5
|
||
-
|
||
-
|
||
11 to 15.1
|
||
-
|
||
-
|
||
8.25 to 11.3
|
||
Leafspot
|
||
Melting-out
|
||
Brown Blight
|
||
7 to 10
|
||
7 to 21
|
||
14
|
||
2.0
|
||
2.0 to 3.6
|
||
-
|
||
5.5
|
||
5.5 to 9.75
|
||
-
|
||
4.1
|
||
4.1 to 7.3
|
||
-
|
||
-
|
||
-
|
||
4.0 to 5.5
|
||
-
|
||
-
|
||
11 to 15.1
|
||
-
|
||
-
|
||
8.25 to 11.3
|
||
Brown patch 7 to 14
|
||
14
|
||
2.0 to 3.6 5.5 to 9.75
|
||
-
|
||
4.1 to 7.3 -
|
||
4.0 to 5.5
|
||
-
|
||
11 to 15.1
|
||
-
|
||
8.25 to 11.3
|
||
Gray Leafspot 7 to 10
|
||
14
|
||
2.0 to 3.6 5.5 to 9.75
|
||
-
|
||
4.1 to 7.3 -
|
||
4.0 to 5.5
|
||
-
|
||
11 to 15.1
|
||
-
|
||
8.25 to 11.3
|
||
Red Thread 7 to 10
|
||
14
|
||
2.0 to 3.6
|
||
3.6 to 5.5
|
||
5.5 to 9.75
|
||
9.9 to 15.1
|
||
4.1 to 7.3
|
||
7.4 to 11.3
|
||
-
|
||
5.5
|
||
-
|
||
15.1
|
||
-
|
||
11.3
|
||
Anthracnose 7 to 14
|
||
14
|
||
3.0 to 3.6
|
||
3.6 to 5.5
|
||
8.3 to 9.75
|
||
9.9 to 15.1
|
||
6.2 to 7.3
|
||
7.4 to 11.3
|
||
-
|
||
-
|
||
-
|
||
-
|
||
-
|
||
-
|
||
Copper Spot 14 4.0 to 5.5 11 to 15.1 8.25 to 11.3 5.5 15.1 11.3
|
||
Stem Rust (Bluegrass) 14 4.0 to 5.5 11 to 15.1 8.25 to 11.3 5.5 15.1 11.3
|
||
DICHONDRA:
|
||
Leafspot (CA Only)
|
||
14 4.0 to 5.5 11 to 15.1 8.25 to 11.3 5.5 15.1 11.3
|
||
Gray Snow Moldc 30 5.5 15.1 11.3 - - -
|
||
Fusarium (Gertlachia)
|
||
Patchc
|
||
21 to 28 5.5 15.1 11.3 - - -
|
||
Algaec 7 to 14
|
||
14
|
||
2.0 to 3.6 5.5 to 9.75 4.1 to 7.3 2.0 to 3.6
|
||
4.0 to 5.5
|
||
5.5 to 9.75
|
||
11 to 15.1
|
||
4.1 to 7.3
|
||
8.25 to 11.3
|
||
a Group A Turf: Limit of one application per season at rates greater than 7.3 lbs. a.i./acre (9.75 pints/acre or 3.6 fl.
|
||
oz./1000 sq. ft. of TERRANIL 6L ).
|
||
Group B Turf: Limit of two applications per season at rates greater than 7.3 lbs. a.i./acre (9.75 pints/acre or 3.6 fl.
|
||
oz./1000 sq. ft. of TERRANIL 6L ).
|
||
b Low rate is not effective on intensively mowed turfgrasses such as golf course tees and greens.
|
||
c See specific use directions below.
|
||
* Diseases listed are caused by fungi, some of which are named as follows:
|
||
x Dollar spot: Sclerontinia homeocarpa; Lanzia or Moellerodiscus spp.
|
||
x Leafspots, Melting-out, Brown blight: Drechslera spp. (including D. poae, D. siccans), Bipolaris
|
||
sorokiniana, Curvularia spp.
|
||
x Brown patch: Rhizoctonia solani, R. zeae, R. cerealis
|
||
x Gray leafspot: Pyricularia grisea, P. oryzae
|
||
x Red Thread: Laetisaria fuciformis
|
||
x Anthracnose: Colletotrichum graminicola
|
||
x Copper spot: Gloeocercospora sorghi
|
||
x Stem rust: Puccinia graminis
|
||
x Dichondra leaf spot: Alternaria spp.
|
||
x Gray Snow Mold: Typhula spp.
|
||
x Fusarium (Gerlachia) Patch
|
||
x Algae
|
||
Gray snow mold caused by Typhula spp. – Group A and B – Turf: Apply in sufficient water to obtain adequate
|
||
coverage (2 to 10 gallons per 1000 sq. ft.). Apply one application 15.1 pints/acre (5.5 fl. ozs./1000 sq. ft.) of
|
||
TERRANIL 6L (11.3 lbs. a.i./acre). Application must be made before snow cover in autumn. Group B Turf: If
|
||
snow cover is intermittent or lacking during the winter, a second application of TERRANIL 6L at 15.1 pints/acre
|
||
(5.5. fl. ozs./1000 sq. ft.) may be applied one month after the first application.
|
||
Fusarium (Gerlachia) Patch: Group A and B Turf: In areas where pink snow mold (Gerlachia or Fusarium patch) is
|
||
likely to occur, apply TERRANIL 6L at 15.1 pints/acre (5.5 fl. ozs./1000 sq. ft.)(11.3 lbs. a.i./acre) in combination
|
||
with products containing iprodione at 88 ozs. a.i./acre (2 ozs. a.i./1000 sq. ft.) of turf area. Read and observe all
|
||
label directions for products containing these active ingredients. For control of Fusarium patch only in areas where
|
||
snow cover is intermittent or lacking during the winter, apply 15.1 pints/acre of TERRANIL 6L (5.5 fl. ozs./1000 sq.
|
||
|
||
Page 24 of 27
|
||
ft.)(11.3 lbs. a.i./acre). Make application in late autumn. Group B Turf: Apply a second application of 15.1
|
||
pints/acre (5.5 fl. ozs./1000 sq. ft.) of TERRANIL 6L 21 to 28 days after the first application unless conditions
|
||
favorable for Fusarium patch no longer prevail.
|
||
Algae: Group A and B Turf: For prevention of algae on turfgrasses, apply TERRANIL 6L at the rate of 5.5 to 9.75
|
||
pints/acre (2.0 to 3.6 fl. ozs./1000 sq. ft.) (4.1 to 7.3 lbs. a.i./acre) on a 7 to 14 day schedule. Under severe algae
|
||
conditions use the 9.75 pints/acre (3.6 fl. oz./1000 sq. ft.) rate and apply on a 7 day schedule.
|
||
When algae is well established, every attempt should be made to dry out the afflicted area. Once dry, spiking or
|
||
verticutting should be done to enhance turfgrass recovery in conjunction with a TERRANIL 6L application at the
|
||
rate of 11 to 15.1 pints/acre (4.0 to 5.5 fl. ozs./1000 sq. ft.). Group B Turf: A second application at the 15.1
|
||
pints/acre (5.5 fl. ozs./1000 sq. ft.) rate may be made 14 days after the first application.
|
||
Group A and B Turf: Following applications of the 15.1 pints/acre (5.5 fl. ozs./1000 sq. ft.) rate, several
|
||
applications of TERRANIL 6L at a rate of 5.5 to 9.75 pints/acre (2.0 to 3.6 fl. ozs./1000 sq. ft.)(4.1 to 7.3 lbs.
|
||
a.i./acre) on a 7 to 14 day interval may be necessary for turfgrass recovery. Only a preventative spray program with
|
||
TERRANIL 6L will prevent a recurrence of the algae when environmental conditions are favorable.
|
||
Ornamental Plants
|
||
Apply TERRANIL 6L DWDUDWHRIǪSLQWVOEDLSHUJDOORQVRIZater unless other directions are given in
|
||
the tables below. DO NOT apply more than 48.5 pints of TERRANIL 6L (36.4 lbs. a.i./acre) per growing season to
|
||
field grown ornamentals. Apply in a spray to run-off, when conditions are favorable for disease development.
|
||
Repeat applications at 7 to 14 day intervals until conditions are no longer favorable. During periods when
|
||
conditions favor severe disease incidence, generally cloudy or wet weather, apply TERRANIL 6L at 7 day intervals.
|
||
The minimum retreatment interval is 7 days. TERRANIL 6L should be applied to plants when both foliage and
|
||
flowers are dry, or nearly dry.
|
||
DO NOT combine TERRANIL 6L in the spray tank with pesticides, surfactants or fertilizers, unless your prior use
|
||
has shown the combination to be physically compatible, effective and noninjurious under your conditions of use.
|
||
TERRANIL 6L may be used in greenhouses for ornamental plants. DO NOT use mistblowers or high pressure spray
|
||
equipment when making applications of TERRANIL 6L in greenhouses.
|
||
Use of TERRANIL 6L is recommended for control of fungal diseases referred to by numbers in parentheses
|
||
following each ornamental. Ornamentals listed on this label have been tested and found to tolerate applications of
|
||
TERRANIL 6L at the recommended rates. The user should test for possible phytotoxic response, using
|
||
recommended rates on ornamental plants on a small area prior to commercial use. Applications made during bloom
|
||
may damage flowers and/or fruits.
|
||
Fruits and other structures which may be borne on treated plants MUST NOT BE EATEN.
|
||
Ornamentals recommended for treatment with TERRANIL 6L
|
||
Broadleaf Shrubs and Trees:
|
||
Andromeda (Pieris) (4) Holly (1)
|
||
Ash (Fraxinus) (1) Lilac (5)
|
||
Aspen (1) Magnolia (1)
|
||
Azalea (1,2,4) Maple (1)
|
||
Buckeye, Horsechestnut (1) Mountain Laurel (1)
|
||
Cherry-Laurel (1) Oak (red group only) (1,7)
|
||
Crabapple (1,6,8) Oregon-Grape (Mahonia) (6)
|
||
Dogwood (1) Photinia (1)
|
||
Eucalyptus (3) Poplar (1)
|
||
Euonymus (1) Privet (Ligustrum) (1)
|
||
Firethorn (Pyracantha) (1) Rhododendron (1,2,4)
|
||
Flowering Almond (1,2) Sand Cherry (1,2)
|
||
Flowering Cherry (1,2) Sequoia (1)
|
||
Flowering Peach (1,2) Spiraea (1)
|
||
Flowering Plum (1,2) Sycamore, Planetree (1)
|
||
Flowering Quince (1,2) Viburnum (5)
|
||
Hawthorn (1,6) Walnut (Juglans) (1)
|
||
|
||
Page 25 of 27
|
||
Flowering Plantsa and Bulbs
|
||
Arabian Violet (2) Iris, bulbous (1)
|
||
Begonia (1) Lily (1)
|
||
Camellia (2) Lily, Asiatic (1)
|
||
Carnation (1,2) Marigold (1)
|
||
Chrysanthemum (1,2) Narcissus (1)
|
||
Crocus (1) Pansy (1)
|
||
Daffodil (1) Petunia (1,4)
|
||
Daisy (1) Phlox (1)
|
||
Geranium (1,6) Poinsettia
|
||
b (1)
|
||
Gladiolus (1,2) Rose c (1)
|
||
Hollyhock (6) Statice (1)
|
||
Hydrangea (foliage only) (1,6) Tulip (1)
|
||
Iris (1,2) Zinnia (1,5)
|
||
a Avoid applications during bloom period on plants where flower injury is unacceptable.
|
||
b Discontinue applications prior to bract formation; phytotoxicity is possible on the bracts.
|
||
c Use 1 pint TERRANIL 6L (.75 lbs. a.i.) per 100 gallons of water.
|
||
Foliage Plants
|
||
Aglaonema (1)
|
||
Areca palm (1)
|
||
Artemesia (1)
|
||
Boston Fern (Nephrolepis) (1)
|
||
Dumbcane (Diffenbachia) (1)
|
||
Dracaena (1)
|
||
Fatsia (Aralia) (1)
|
||
Ficus (1)
|
||
Florida ruffle fern (1)
|
||
Leatherleaf fern (1)
|
||
Lipstick plant (1)
|
||
Ming aralia (1)
|
||
Oyster plant (Rhoeo) (1)
|
||
Pachysandrad (1)
|
||
Parlor Palm (Chamaedorea) (1)
|
||
Peperomia (1)
|
||
Philodendron (1,4)
|
||
Prayer plant (Maranta) (1)
|
||
Syngonium (1)
|
||
Zebra plant (Aphelandra) (1)
|
||
d Use 2¾ pints TERRANIL 6L (2.1 lbs. a.i.) per 100 gallons of water.
|
||
Diseases controlled with TERRANIL 6L:
|
||
1. Leafspots/Foliar Blights:
|
||
Achtinopelte leafspot Fabraea (Entomosporium) leafspot
|
||
Alternaria leafspot/leaf blight Fusarium leafspot
|
||
Anthracnose leaf blotch, spot Gloeosporium black leafspot
|
||
Anthracnose (Discula) blight Ink spot (Dreschlera)
|
||
Ascochyta blight Marssonina leafspot
|
||
Bipolaris (Helminthosporium) leafspot Monilinia blossom blight, twig blight
|
||
Black spot on roses Mycosphaerella ray blight
|
||
Botrytis leafspot, leaf blight Myrothecium leafspot, brown rot
|
||
Cephalosporium leafspot Nematostoma leaf blight
|
||
Cercospora leafspot Phyllosticta leafspot
|
||
Cercosporidium leafspot Ramularia leafspot
|
||
Corynespora leafspot Rhizoctonia web blight
|
||
Coryneum blight (shothole) Septoria leafspot
|
||
Curvularia leafspot Sphaeropsis leafspot
|
||
Cylindrosporium leafspot Stagonospora leaf scorch
|
||
Dactylaria leafspot Tan leaf spot (Curvularia)
|
||
Didymellina leafspot Volutella leaf blight
|
||
Drechslera leafspot
|
||
2. Flower spots/blights:
|
||
Botrytis flower spot, flower blight
|
||
Curvularia flower spot
|
||
Monilinia blossom blight
|
||
Ovulinia flower blight
|
||
Rhizopus blossom blight
|
||
Sclerotinia flower blight
|
||
|
||
Page 26 of 27
|
||
3. Cylindrocladium stem canker
|
||
4. Phytophthora leaf blight, dieback
|
||
5. Powdery mildews
|
||
Erysiphe cichoracearum
|
||
Microsphaera spp.
|
||
6. Rusts
|
||
Gymnosporangium spp.
|
||
Pucciniastrum hydrangeae
|
||
Puccinia spp.
|
||
7. Taphrina blister
|
||
8. Scab (Venturia inaequalis)
|
||
The following ornamental plant species which have been tested with TERRANIL 6L at recommended rates did not exhibit phytotoxicity:
|
||
Botanical Name Common Name
|
||
Aechmea fasciata Aechmea
|
||
Araucaria heterophylla Norfolk Island Pine
|
||
Bougainvillea spp. Bougainvillea
|
||
Caladium spp. Caladium
|
||
Calathea makoyana Peacock Plant
|
||
Calistephus chinensis Aster
|
||
Carissa grandiflora Natal Plum
|
||
Clerodendron thomsonae Bleeding Heart
|
||
Codiaeum spp. Croton
|
||
Cordyline terminalis Ti Plant
|
||
Crassula argentea Jade Plant
|
||
Dionaea muscipula Venus Fly Trap
|
||
Dizygotheca elegantissima False Aralia
|
||
Epipremnum aureum Golden Pothos, Scindapsus
|
||
Episcia cupreata Flame Violet
|
||
Fittonia spp. Silver-nerve plant
|
||
Gerbera jamesonii Gerbera Daisy
|
||
Gynura sarmentosa Purple Passion Vine
|
||
Gypsophilia paniculata Baby’s Breath
|
||
Hoya spp. Wax Plant
|
||
Ilex cornuta Chinese Holly
|
||
Ilex crenata Japanese Holly
|
||
Impatiens spp. Impatiens
|
||
Pilea cadierei Aluminum Plant
|
||
Sansevieria trifasciata “Hahnii” Birdsnest Sansevieria
|
||
Tolmeia menziesii Piggy-back plant
|
||
Yucca elephantipes Spineless Yucca
|
||
Zygocactus truncatus Christmas Cactus
|
||
NOTE: DO NOT apply TERRANIL 6L to either green or variegated Pittosporum or to Schefflera, as multiple applications have been
|
||
demonstrated to cause phytotoxic responses.
|
||
TERRANIL 6L® is a registered trademark of Winfield Solutions, LLC.
|
||
WARRANTY DISCLAIMER
|
||
The directions for use of this product must be followed carefully. TO THE EXTENT CONSISTENT WITH
|
||
APPLICABLE LAW, (1) THE GOODS DELIVERED TO YOU ARE FURNISHED “AS IS” BY
|
||
MANUFACTURER OR SELLER AND (2) MANUFACTURER AND SELLER MAKE NO WARRANTIES,
|
||
GUARANTEES, OR REPRESENTATIONS OF ANY KIND TO BUYER OR USER, EITHER EXPRESS OR
|
||
IMPLIED, OR BY USAGE OF TRADE, STATUTORY OR OTHERWISE, WITH REGARD TO THE PRODUCT
|
||
SOLD, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR
|
||
PURPOSE, USE, OR ELIGIBILITY OF THE PRODUCT FOR ANY PARTICULAR TRADE USAGE.
|
||
UNINTENDED CONSEQUENCES, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO INEFFECTIVENESS, MAY
|
||
RESULT BECAUSE OF SUCH FACTORS AS THE PRESENCE OR ABSENCE OF OTHER MATERIALS
|
||
USED IN COMBINATION WITH THE GOODS, OR THE MANNER OF USE OR APPLICATION,
|
||
INCLUDING WEATHER, ALL OF WHICH ARE BEYOND THE CONTROL OF MANUFACTURER OR
|
||
SELLER AND ASSUMED BY BUYER OR USER. THIS WRITING CONTAINS ALL OF THE
|
||
|
||
Page 27 of 27
|
||
REPRESENTATIONS AND AGREEMENTS BETWEEN BUYER, MANUFACTURER AND SELLER, AND
|
||
NO PERSON OR AGENT OF MANUFACTURER OR SELLER HAS ANY AUTHORITY TO MAKE ANY
|
||
REPRESENTATION OR WARRANTY OR AGREEMENT RELATING IN ANY WAY TO THESE GOODS.
|
||
LIMITATION OF LIABILITY
|
||
TO THE EXTENT CONSISTENT WITH APPLICABLE LAW, IN NO EVENT SHALL MANUFACTURER OR
|
||
SELLER BE LIABLE FOR SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES, OR FOR
|
||
DAMAGES IN THE NATURE OF PENALTIES RELATING TO THE GOODS SOLD, INCLUDING USE,
|
||
APPLICATION, HANDLING, AND DISPOSAL. MANUFACTURER OR SELLER SHALL NOT BE LIABLE
|
||
TO BUYER OR USER BY WAY OF INDEMNIFICATION TO BUYER OR TO CUSTOMERS OF BUYER, IF
|
||
ANY, OR FOR ANY DAMAGES OR SUMS OF MONEY, CLAIMS OR DEMANDS WHATSOEVER,
|
||
RESULTING FROM OR BY REASON OF, OR RISING OUT OF THE MISUSE, OR FAILURE TO FOLLOW
|
||
LABEL WARNINGS OR INSTRUCTIONS FOR USE, OF THE GOODS SOLD BY MANUFACTURER OR
|
||
SELLER TO BUYER. ALL SUCH RISKS SHALL BE ASSUMED BY THE BUYER, USER, OR ITS
|
||
CUSTOMERS. BUYER’S OR USER’S EXCLUSIVE REMEDY, AND MANUFACTURER’S OR SELLER’S
|
||
TOTAL LIABILITY SHALL BE FOR DAMAGES NOT EXCEEDING THE COST OF THE PRODUCT.
|
||
If you do not agree with or do not accept any of directions for use, the warranty disclaimers, or limitations on
|
||
liability, do not use the product, and return it unopened to the Seller, and the purchase price will be refunded.
|