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Information provided in the bulletins may be related to a specific geographic location and not apply in your area. See product label for directions specific to your state. | |
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| Name: |
Magus Miticide |
| Common Name: |
Fenazaquin |
| Class of Chemistry: |
Quinazoline |
| Formulation: |
Suspension concentrate, 200 g/L |
| Empirical Formula: |
C20H22N2O |
| CAS Number: |
120928-09-8 |
| Mode of Action: |
Fenazaquin affects metabolism, inhibiting the mitochondrial electon transport chain. (IRAC Group 21) Magus Miticide inhibits respiration in cells of target mites giving rapid control. Magus Miticide controls larval and adult stages with a good suppression effect on summer eggs. It is active by contact and ingestion and shows a knock-down effect after 4 to 6 hours. | |
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- Magus Miticide controls all mite growing stages. Nevertheless it should be applied at first sign of mites for optimal control (apply before mites build up). Mite populations are more susceptile at early stages of development.
- Use sufficient spray volume to ensure complete and uniform coverage.
- DO NOT use rates below the label recommendation.
- DO NOT make more than one application per cropping.
- Magus Miticide should be applied in a way to minimize the detrimental effect on beneficial insects and predatory mites. Beneficials play a key role in pest management and contribute to slowing down the selection of resistant populations.
DO NOT USE IN ROSES
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Application can be made with the following types of low or high volume spray equipment: machine ground spray application (open cab groundboom), ground spray application (open cab airblast sprayer), high pressure hand wand sprayer, backpack sprayer. |
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Practice resistance management. It will help preserve effectiveness of your miticides, including Magus Miticide. |
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