United States Office of Water EPA 811-F-95-003 f-T Environmental Protection 4601 October 1995 Agency National Primary Drinking Water Regulations Carbofuran CHEMICAL/ PHYSICAL PROPERTIES OCTANOL/WATER PARTITION (Kow): Log Kow = 2.32 CAS NUMBER: 1563-66-2 DENSITY/SPEC. GRAV.: 1.18 at 20° C COLOR/ FORM/ODOR: White crystalline solid with a slightly phenolic odor. Available SOLUBILITY: 0.7 g/L of water at 25° C; as a flowable paste or wettable Slightly soluble in water powder. M.P.: 153-154°C B.P.: N/A VAPOR PRESSURE: 3.4x10-6 mm Hg at 26.1 ° C SOIL SORPTION COEFFICIENT: mean Koc of 29.4; significant mobility in soil ODOR/TASTE THRESHOLDS: N/A BlOCONCENTRATION FACTOR: 117. in one species of fish; not expected to bioconcentrate in aquatic organisms. HENRY'S LAW COEFFICIENT: 1.02x10-10 atm-cu m/mole; TRADE NAMES/SYNONYMS: Niagara 10242, Furadan 4F or3G, Brifur, Crisfuran, Chinufur, Curaterr, Yaltox, Pillarfuran, Kenofuran, DRINKING WATER STANDARDS MCLG: 0.04 mg/L MCL: 0.04 mg/L HAL(child): 1 day: 0.05 mg/L Longer-term: 0.05 mg/L HEALTH EFFECTS SUMMARY, USAGE PATTERNS A1984 report estimated that application on alfalfa and rice accounted for about 90% of carbofuran use, with turf and grapes making up most of the remainder. Earlier uses were primarily on com crops. This broad spectrum insecticide is sprayed directly onto soil and plants just after emergence to control beetles, nematodes and root- worm. Acute: EPA has found carbofuran to potentially cause After September 1994, carbofuran will be allowed for a variety of nervous system effects from acute expo- use on only five U.S. crops: bananas (in Hawaii); pump- sures, including: headache, sweating, nausea, diarrhea, kins, cucumbers, watermelons, cantaloupes and squash; chest pains, blurred vision, anxiety and general muscular dry harvested cranberries,; pine progeny tests; and spin- weakness. These effects are largely due to carbofuran's ach grown for seed..Carbofuran will soon be banned from rapid inhibition of cholinesterase activity, and is generally use on corn and sorghum in California. reversible once exposure ceases. Drinking water levels which are considered "safe" for RELEASE PATTERNS short-term exposures: For a 10-kg (22 Ib.) child consum- carbofuran enters surface water as a result of runoff ing 1 liter of water per day, upto a 7-year exposure to 0.05 from treated fie|ds and enters ground water by Caching mg/L. Of treated crops. Chronic: Available data on chronic toxic effects from EpA-s 1 g90 National Pesticide Survey did not detect oral exposures to carbofuran have shown that low doses carbofuran levels above the MCL in rural domestic wells of carbofuran appear to have little or no adverse health or Community Water System wells. EPA's Pesticides in effects. Higher doses have the potential to cause dam- Ground Water Database reports few detections of age to the nervous and reproductive systems. carbofuran in ground water between 1971 and 1991. Cancer: There is no evidence that carbofuran has the potential to cause cancer from lifetime exposures in ENVIRONMENTAL FATE •linking water. ,, , . . .. , . ,. . , . . . .. - If released to soil, chemical hydrolysis and microbial degradation appear to be the important degradation processes. Chemical hydrolysis is expected to occur more rapidly in alkaline soil as compared to neutral or October 1995 Technical Version Printed on Recycled Paper ------- acidic soils. Soil biodegradation may be important, with the rate of degradation of carbofuran in soil greatly increased by pretreatment with carbofuran. Experimentally measured Koc values ranging from 14 to 160 indicate that carbofuran may leach significantly in many soils, as has been seen in the detection of carbofuran in water table aquifers beneath sandy soils in NY and Wl. Leaching may not occur, however, in very high organic content soils (65% carbon). Volatilization from soil is not expected to be significant, although some evaporation from plants may occur. A review of literature reported the following half-lives for carbofuran disappearance in soil: 2-72 days in laboratory studies, 2-86 days for flooded soils and 26-110 days for field soil. If released to water, carbofuran will be subject to significant hydrolysis under alkaline conditions. The hy- drolysis half-lives in water at 25 deg C are 690, 8.2 and 1.0 weeks at pH 6.0, 7.0 and 8.0, respectively. Direct photolysis and photooxidation (via hydroxyl radicals) may contribute to carbofuran's removal from natural water and may become increasingly important as the acidity of the water increases and the hydrolytic half- life increases. Since carbofuran appears to be susceptible to degra- dation by soil microbes, aquatic microbes may also be able to degrade carbofuran. The half-lives for degrada- tion of carbofuran in different waters ranges from several hours to a few weeks. Aquatic volatilization, adsorption, and bioconcentra- tion are not expected to be important. If released to air, carbofuran will react in the vapor- phase with photochemically produced hydroxyl radicals at an estimated half-life of 7.8 hr. Direct photolysis may be important removal process for carbofuran in the atmo- sphere. OTHER REGULATORY INFORMATION MONITORING: FOR GROUND/SURFACE WATER SOURCES: INITIAL FREQUENCY- 4 quarterly samples every 3 years REPEAT FREQUENCY- If no detections during initial round: 2 quarterly per year if serving >3300 persons; 1 sample per 3 years for smaller systems TRIGGERS - Return to Initial Freq. if detect at > 0.0009 mg/L ANALYSIS: REFERENCE SOURCE METHOD NUMBERS EPA 600/4-88-039 531.1 Standard Methods 6610 TREATMENT: BEST AVAILABLE TECHNOLOGIES Granular Activated Charcoal FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION: * EPA can provide further regulatory and other general information: • EPA Safe Drinking Water Hotline - 800/426-4791 4 Other sources of toxicological and environmental fate data include: • Toxic Substance Control Act Information Line - 202/554-1404 • Toxics Release Inventory, National Library of Medicine - 301/496-6531 • Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry - 404/639-6000 • National Pesticide Hotline - 800/858-7378 October 1995 Technical Version Page 2 ------- |