DuPont registers insecticide with Health Canada

Keyword:
Publish time: 8th April, 2013      Source: www.cnchemicals.com
Information collection and data processing:  CCM     For more information, please contact us
   


April 8, 2013

   

   

DuPont registers insecticide with Health Canada

   


   

   

   

DuPont Crop Protection announced that it has registered with Health Canada''s Pest Management Regulatory Agency for the insecticide, cyantraniliprole, which the company has branded as Cyazypyr.

   

   

The product comes from a relatively new insecticide chemistry group and can be used against a "cross-spectrum" of chewing and sucking insects. It will be applied specifically against Colorado potato beetles, among others.

   

   

According to DuPont, Cyazypyr will be the active ingredient in three new products for the 2013 growing season: Benevia, for use in potato crops; Verimark, a treatment for potato and brassica vegetable plots; and Exirel, for use in fruit and vegetable crops.

   

   

"When applied early in the crop life, Cyazypyr can increase the opportunity for improved marketable yield by reducing feeding damage and the impact of insect-vectored diseases," the company said.

   

   

Benevia is approved as a cross-spectrum potato crop product to control Colorado potato beetle (including neonicotinoid-resistant beetles) as well as European corn borer and aphids.

   

   

Verimark can be used in-furrow and as a seed treatment product for potatoes and as a soil-applied product for brassica vegetables, to control Colorado potato beetle, diamondback moth and swede midge.

   

   

Exirel, the fruit and vegetable crop product, is billed as a broad-spectrum control and "a new mode of action for thrips and sucking insects with no cross-resistance to other chemistries."

   

   

Cyazypyr comes from Group 28, the diamide group of chemistry, from which the first active ingredient -- Rynaxypyr, the active in DuPont''s Coragen and Altacor insecticides -- was launched in 2008.

   

   

Cyazypyr is billed as "an excellent option for growers to use in an early application to boost plant establishment and vigour, especially in vegetables," DuPont''s market segment manager for specialty products, Ray Janssen, said.

   

   

"Crops are responding really well and show exceptional plant health at the early stages of the crop life due to the reduction of crop stress," he added.

   

   

DuPont said its studies show that Cyazypyr has low toxicity to birds, fish, mammals, earthworms and microorganisms and "breaks down rapidly in the environment."