Chlorpyrifos is a kind of crystalline organophosphate insecticide, acaricide and miticide used primarily for the control of foliage and soil-borne insect pests in many kinds of food and feed crops. Chlorpyrifos is widely used around the world to control pest insects in agricultural, residential and commercial settings. Its largest usage amount is consumed in corn. It can also be used on other crops or vegetables including soybeans, fruit and nut trees, cranberries, broccoli, and cauliflower. The non-agricultural applications include golf courses, turf, green houses, and no-structural wood treatment. It can also be used as a mosquito adulticide, and used in roach and anti bait stations in child resistant packaging. Its mechanism of action is through suppressing the nervous system of insects via inhibiting acetylcholinesterase.
Chlorpyrifos (diethyl 3,5,6-trichloro-2-pyridyl phosphorothionate) is a white crystal-like solid with a strong odor. It does not mix well with water, so it is usually mixed with oily liquids before it is applied to crops or animals (ATSDR, 1997).
Chlorpyrifos is a broad-spectrum organophosphate insecticide sold under the trade names of Dursban, Empire 20, Equity, and Whitmire PT 270. First registered in 1965 to control foliage- and soil-borne insect pests on a variety of food and feed crops, it is one of the most widely used and one of the major insecticides used residentially (U.S. EPA, 2000).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chlorpyrifos
https://www.epa.gov/ingredients-used-pesticide-products/chlorpyrifos
Chlorpyrifos is a chlorinated organophosphorus (OP) ester
manufactured as an insecticide, acaricide, and miticide. Like the
other OP insecticides, the most prominent toxicity of chlorpyrifos
is associated with binding and inhibition of the enzyme
acetylcholinesterase (AChE) in insects and mammals. Chlorpyrifos
requires metabolic activation to chlorpyrifos oxon to
yield anticholinesterase activity.
First sold in 1965, chlorpyrifos is used globally to control
agricultural and structural pests and mosquitos. In the 1990s,
chlorpyrifos ranked as one of the top selling pesticides in the
world, for the most part, replacing the persistent organochlorine
insecticides. Over the last decade, concerns regarding
toxicity to the developing nervous system have limited its use.
By 2001, residential uses and uses in schools and parks were
prohibited, and many agricultural uses were restricted and the
US Residential use limitations were also imposed in Canada,
Australia, and the European Union (EU). It continues to be
used in large quantities to control crop damage worldwide. In the developing countries, excessive agricultural application
and lack of protective devices result in hundreds of thousands
of deaths yearly.
Chlorpyrifos is an organophosphate insecticide. It is lethal to A. melinus, G. ashmeadi, E. eremicus, and E. formosa adults (LC50s = 0.8, 6, 12, and 17 ng/ml, respectively). Chlorpyrifos induces mortality in O. insidiosus adults when applied to corn, sorghum, and alfalfa plants. It is toxic to mice (LD50 = 155 mg/kg). Postnatal day 11 to 14 exposure to chlorpyrifos (3 mg/kg) decreases nest building and defense behaviors in adult female mice. Formulations containing chlorpyrifos have been used in the control of insects in agriculture.
Chlorpyrifos belongs to the class of insecticides known as organophosphates. Technical
chlorpyrifos is an amber to white crystalline solid with a mild sulfur odor. It is insoluble in
water, but soluble in benzene, acetone, chloroform, carbon disulfi de, diethyl ether, xylene,
methylene chloride, and methanol. Formulations of chlorpyrifos include emulsifi able concentrate, dust, granular wettable powder, microcapsule, pellet, and sprays. Chlorpyrifos
is widely used as an active ingredient in many commercial insecticides, such as Dursban
and Lorsban, to control household pests, mosquitoes, and pests. Formulations of chlorpyrifos include emulsifi able concentrates, granules, wettable powders, dust, microcapsules,
pellets, and sprays. The US EPA has classifi ed chlorpyrifos as a GUP
Chlorpyrifos is a white crystalline or irregularly flaked solid. Chlorpyrifos has a very faint mercaptan-type odor. Chlorpyrifos is not soluble in water. Chlorpyrifos can cause slight irritation to the eye and skin.
Chlorpyrifos belongs to a class of insecticides known as organophosphates. Technical chlorpyrifos is amber to white crystalline solid with a mild sulphur odour. Formulations of chlorpyrifos include emulsifiable concentrate, dust, granular wettable powder, microcapsule, pellet, and sprays. Chlorpyrifos is widely used as an active ingredient in many commercial insecticides such as Dursban and Lorsban to control household pests, mosquitoes, and pests in animal houses. The U.S. EPA classified chlorpyrifos as GUP.
Chlorpyrifos is used to control many types of insect pests in a wide
range of crops and ornamentals. It is also used to control household pests,
including termites.
Chlorpyrifos is an organophosphorus insecticide used to control insects on a wide
variety of crops including fruits, vegetables, ornamentals and forestry
ChEBI: An organic thiophosphate that is O,O-diethyl hydrogen phosphorothioate in which the hydrogen of the hydroxy group has been replaced by a 3,5,6-trichloropyridin-2-yl group.
Insoluble in water. Chlorpyrifos reacts with water and most reactive hydrogen compounds. The rate of hydrolysis in water increases with pH, with temperature and with the presence of copper and possibly other metals that can form chelates.
Chlorpyrifos is sensitive to heat and is decomposed by moisture. Chlorpyrifos is hydrolyzed by strong alkalis. Chlorpyrifos is corrosive to copper and brass. Chlorpyrifos is also corrosive to copper alloys. Chlorpyrifos reacts with water and most reactive hydrogen compounds. The rate of hydrolysis in water increases with pH, with temperature and with the presence of copper and possibly other metals that can form chelates.
Exposures to chlorpyrifos cause adverse health effects and poisoning. The symptoms
include, but are not limited to, headache, dizziness, respiratory problems, muscular and
joint pains, numbness, tingling sensations, incoordination, tremor, nausea, abdominal
cramps, vomiting, sweating, blurred vision, respiratory depression, slow heart beat, nervousness, weakness, cramps, diarrhea, chest pain, pin-point pupils, tearing, salivation,
clear nasal discharge and sputum, muscle twitching, and in severe poisonings convulsions, coma, and death. Exposures to chlorpyrifos cause adverse effects to the nervous
system. The effects include phosphorylation of the active site, disturbance in the activity of the acetylcholinesterase (AChE) enzyme (inactivity). AChE enzyme is necessary to stop
the transmission of the chemical neurotransmitter.
In occupational workers, high concentrations of chlorpyrifos cause poisoning with
symptoms of unconsciousness, convulsions and/or fatal injury. Persons with respiratory ailments and disturbed liver function are known to be at increased health risk.
Also, repeated exposures to chlorpyrifos have been reported to cause disturbances in
the process of brain development.
Cholinesterase inhibitor; heavy exposurecan produce acute, delayed, and chroniceffect; exhibits low to moderate toxicity inexperimental animals when administered byoral and dermal routes; however, severity ofeffects varies with species; highly toxic tobirds; ingestion of 1.5–2 g would probablyresult in onset of cholinergic effects in adulthumans.
LD50 oral (rat): ~150 mg/kg
LD50 oral (rabbit): 1000 mg/kg
LD50 oral (wild bird): 5 mg/kg
LD50 oral (chicken): 25 mg/kg
LD50 skin (rat): ~200 mg/kg
LD50 skin (rabbit): 2000 mg/kg.
Combustible material: may burn but does not ignite readily. Containers may explode when heated. Runoff may pollute waterways. Substance may be transported in a molten form.
Flammability and Explosibility
Not classified
Insecticide, Nematicide: A U.S. EPA restricted Use Pesticide (RUP).
Chlorpyrifos is one of the most widely used insecticides
in the U.S., both around the home and in agriculture. A
broad-spectrum insecticide, originally used primarily
to kill mosquitoes but no longer registered for that use.
Chlorpyrifos is effective in controlling cutworms, corn
rootworms, cockroaches, grubs, flea beetles, flies, termites,
fire ants, and lice. It is used as an insecticide on grain,
cotton, field, fruit, nut and vegetable crops, as well as on
lawns and ornamental plants. It is also registered for direct use on sheep and turkeys, for horse site treatment, dog
kennels, domestic dwellings, farm buildings, storage bins,
and commercial establishments. Chlorpyrifos acts on pests
primarily as a contact poison, with some action as a stomach poison. It is available as granules, wettable powder, dustable powder and emulsifiable concentrate. Top crop uses
in California include cotton, alfalfa, almonds, and oranges.
(Note: EPA Office of Pesticide Programs
lists 2135 products, both active and past-registered)
ALUDOR®; BAR 500 EC®; BRODAN®; CHLORBAN®;
CHLORPIRIFOS 480 CE MILENIA®; CHOIR®;
COROBAN®; CURIGNA®; CYREN®; DETMOL U. A. ®;
DORSAN®; DORSAN®-C; DOWCO® 179; DURSBAN®;
EF 121®; EMPIRE®; ERADEX®; GLOBAL CRAWLING
INSECT BAIT®; KENSBAN®; LORSBAN®; MURPHY
SUPER ROOT GUARD®; PAQEANT®; PILOT®;
PYRINEX®); SCOUT®; SPANNIT®; STIPEND;
TALON®; TAFABAN®; TERIAL®; TWINSPAN®
Poison by ingestion,
intraperitoneal, skin contact, and inhalation
routes. Human systemic effects by ingestion:
paresthesia, muscle weakness, coma.
Experimental reproductive effects:
developmental toxicity. Mutation data
reported. When heated to decomposition it
emits very toxic fumes of Cl-, NOx POx
and SOx
A potential danger to those involved in the manufacture, formulation, and application of this insecticide.
If this chemical gets into the eyes, remove anycontact lenses at once and irrigate immediately for at least15 min, occasionally lifting upper and lower lids. Seek medical attention immediately. If this chemical contacts theskin, remove contaminated clothing and wash immediatelywith soap and water. Speed in removing material from skinis of extreme importance. Shampoo hair promptly if contaminated. Seek medical attention immediately. If thischemical has been inhaled, remove from exposure, beginrescue breathing (using universal precautions, includingresuscitation mask) if breathing has stopped and CPR ifheart action has stopped. Transfer promptly to a medicalfacility. When this chemical has been swallowed, get medical attention. Give large quantities of water and inducevomiting. Do not make an unconscious person vomit.Medical observation is recommended.
Some recent studies have
reported associations between chlorpyrifos exposure and
increased risk for cancer for farm workers participating in
the Agricultural Health Study. Specifically, increased risk for
glioma and rectal cancer has been associated with chlorpyrifos
exposure . Chlorpyrifos was also one pesticide
associated with trends toward higher incidence of lung
cancer through 2001 . For all cancers though, follow-
up periods are short and exposures are based on recall so
results may be unreliable.
Biological. From the first-order biotic and abiotic rate constants of chlorpyrifos in
estuarine water and sediment/water systems, the estimated biodegradation half-lives were
3.5–41 and 11.9–51.4 days, respectively (Walker et al., 1988)
Soil. Hydrolyzes in soil to 3,5,6-trichloro-2-pyridinol (Somasundaram et al., 1991).
The half-lives in a silt loam and clay loam were 12 and 4 weeks, respectively (Getzin,
1981). In another study, Getzin (1981a) reported the hydrolysis half-lives
Leoni et al. (1981) reported that the major degradation product of chlorpyrifos in soil
is 3,5,6-trichloro-2-pyridinol. The major factors affecting the rate of degradation include
chemical hydrolysis in moist soils, clay-catalyzed hydrolysis on dry soil s
Plant. The half-life of chlorpyrifos in Bermuda grasses was 2.9 days (Leuck et al.,
1975). The concentration and the formulation of application of chlorpyrifos will determine
the rate of evaporation from leaf surfaces. Reported foliar half-lives on tomato, orange and
cotton leaves were 15–139, 1.4–96 and 5.5–57 hours, respectively (Veierov et al., 1988).
Dislodgable residues of chlorpyrifos on cotton leaf 0, 24, 48, 72 and 96 hours after
application (1.1 kg/ha) were 3.64, 0.13, 0.071, 0.055 and 0.034 μg/m2, respectively (Buck
et al., 1980)
Surface Water. In an estuary, the half-life of chlorpyrifos was 24 days (Schimmel et
al., 1983).
The metaboic fate of chlorpyrifos in soil, plants and animals is similar,
with oxidative dealkylation or hydrolysis to diethyl phosphorothioate
and 3,5,6-trichloro-2-pyridinol being the major route of detoxification.
The latter metabolite is conjugated as the glycosides or glucuronides in
plants and animals. De-ethylation is not a major route of detoxification in
mammals. Activation by desulfuration to the active acetylcholinesterase
inhibitor, chlorpyrifos oxon, occurs in both animals and plants but the
compound is often not detected owing to its rapid rate of hydrolysis.
Dechlorination of the chloropyridine ring also occurs in the environment,
principally by photolysis.
Color Code—Blue: Health Hazard/Poison: Storein a secure poison location. Prior to working with chlorpyrifos you should be trained on its proper handling and storage. Chlorpyrifos must be stored to avoid contact withstrong bases, or acids, or acid fumes since violent reactionsoccur. Store in tightly closed containers in a cool, well-ventilated area away from sources of heat.
UN2783 Organo phosphorus pesticides, solid, toxic, Hazard Class: 6.1; Labels: 6.1-Poisonous materials. UN3018 Organophosphorus pesticides, liquid, toxic, Hazard Class: 6.1; Labels: 6.1-Poisonous materials.
Chlorpyrifos is hydrolysed in acid, neutral and alkaline solution (PM).
In neutral solution (approximately pH 7 and 25 °C) the DT50 for decomposition
was variously reported as between 29 and 72 days. DT50s in
buffered solutions at pH 4.7,6.9 and 8.1 were reported as being 62.7,35.3
and 22.9 days respectively (Racke, 1993). Hydrolysis is much faster
in alkaline solutions and the DT50 at pH 11 was reported as 0.5 day
(Macalady and Wolfe, 1983). The mechanisms of hydrolysis and nature of
the products are pH-dependent. As has been found with many organophosphates,
O-dealkylation predominates at acid and neutral pH values
and in alkaline solution the main mechanism is cleavage of the P-O-aryl
bond. Macalady and Wolfe (1983) showed that in buffered aqueous polar
solvent mixtures at pH 9.7 to 12.9 the only products were 3,5,6-trichloro-
2-pyridinol(2) and diethyl phosphorothioate (3). In near neutral solution
(pH 7.68) the main products were desethylchlorpyrifos (4) and ethanol
with lesser amounts of 2 and 3. The mechanism for base-catalysed
hydrolysis is via SN2 hydroxide attack on phosphorus, whereas under
acid and neutral conditions the nucleophile is water and the rate is pH-independent
with a half-life of 72.1 days and 72.9 days being reported at
pH 5 and 7 respectively. Chlorpyrifos oxon (10, Scheme 2) was much
more easily hydrolysed (Kenaga, 1971). Pathways for the hydrolytic
degradation of chlorpyrifos in acid and base solution are shown in
Scheme 1.
Chlorpyrifos undergoes abiotic hydrolysis, photodegradation,
and biotic degradation in soil and water. Depending on
the soil type and climate, its soil persistence varies from 2 weeks
to over 1 year. Microbial degradation is indicated by the shorter
half-lives in natural soils than sterile soils. Chemical hydrolysis
produces O-ethyl-O-3,5,6-trichloro-2-pyridyl phosphorothioate
or 3,5,6-trichloro-2-pyridinol (TCP) and phosphorthioic acid
at alkaline conditions. Half-lives in river and well waters vary
from 4.8 to 38 days, with the rate of hydrolysis increasing
with temperature and alkalinity. The estimated Log Koc of
3.73 predicts strong adsorption to soil and resist leaching
to groundwater. Chlorpyrifos can persist indoors for several
months.
Oxidation of chlorpyrifos to its more toxic metabolite chlorpyrifos
oxon could occur through photolysis, aerobic metabolism,
and chlorination. Water chlorination is the major route
of chlorpyrifos oxon formation. It is subsequently rapidly hydrolyzed toTCP.TCP and its glucuronide conjugates have been
detected in fish tissues. The measured Kow of 4.8 indicates
a potential for bioaccumulation in aquatic and terrestrial food
chains.
Above 130°C this chemical may undergo violent exothermic decomposition. The substance decomposes on heating at approximately 160°C and on burning, producing toxic and corrosive fumes including hydrogen chloride, nitrogen oxides; phosphorous oxides, sulfur oxides. Reacts with strong acids; strong bases; causing hydrolysis. Attacks copper and brass. Contact with oxidizers may cause the release of phosphorous oxides. Contact with strong reducing agents, such as hydrides, may cause the formation of flammable and toxic phosphine gas.
This compound is 50% hydrolyzed in aqueous MeOH solution at pH 6 in 1930 days; and in 7.2 days at pH 9.96. Spray mixtures of <1% concentration are destroyed with an excess of 5.25% sodium hypochlorite in <30 minutes @ 100°C; and in 24 hours @ 30°C. Concentrated (61.5%) mixtures are essentially destroyed by treatment with 100:1 volumes of the above sodium hypochlorite solution and steam in 10 minutes. In accordance with 40CFR165, follow recommendations for the disposal of pesticides and pesticide containers. Must be disposed properly by following package label directions or by contacting your local or federal environmental control agency, or by contacting your regional EPA office.
Occupational workers should be careful during handling and use of chlorpyrifos. The
workplace should have adequate washing facilities at all times and close to the site of
handling and use. Eating, drinking, and smoking should be prohibited during handling
and before washing after handling. Containers should be kept away from foodstuffs,
animal feed and their containers, and out of reach of children.