United States       Prevention, Pesticides     EPA712-C-96-303
          Environmental Protection    and Toxic Substances     February 1996
          Agency        (7101)
&EPA   Microbial Pesticide
          Test Guidelines
          OPPTS 885.2250
          Nature of the Residue in
          Animals

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                           INTRODUCTION
     This guideline is one  of a  series  of test  guidelines that have been
developed by the Office of Prevention, Pesticides and Toxic Substances,
United States Environmental  Protection Agency for use  in the testing of
pesticides and toxic substances, and the  development of test data that must
be submitted to the Agency  for review under Federal regulations.

     The Office of Prevention, Pesticides and Toxic Substances (OPPTS)
has  developed this guideline through  a process of harmonization that
blended the testing  guidance  and requirements that  existed in the Office
of Pollution Prevention and  Toxics  (OPPT) and appeared in Title  40,
Chapter I,  Subchapter R of the Code of Federal Regulations  (CFR),  the
Office of Pesticide Programs (OPP) which appeared in publications of the
National Technical  Information Service (NTIS) and the guidelines pub-
lished by the Organization  for Economic Cooperation and Development
(OECD).

     The purpose of harmonizing these  guidelines  into a single set of
OPPTS guidelines is to minimize  variations among the testing procedures
that must be performed to meet the data  requirements of the U. S. Environ-
mental Protection Agency  under  the Toxic  Substances  Control Act  (15
U.S.C. 2601) and the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide and Rodenticide Act
(7U.S.C. I36,etseq.).

     Final  Guideline Release: This guideline  is available from the U.S.
Government Printing Office, Washington, DC 20402 on The Federal Bul-
letin   Board.   By  modem  dial   202-512-1387,  telnet   and   ftp:
fedbbs.access.gpo.gov    (IP     162.140.64.19),    internet:     http://
fedbbs.access.gpo.gov, or call 202-512-0132 for disks  or paper copies.
This guideline is also available electronically in ASCII and PDF (portable
document format) from the EPA Public Access Gopher  (gopher.epa.gov)
under the heading "Environmental Test  Methods and Guidelines."

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OPPTS 885.2250   Nature of the residue in animals.
     (a) Scope—(1) Applicability. This guideline is intended to meet test-
ing requirements of the  Federal Insecticide,  Fungicide, and  Rodenticide
Act (FIFRA) (7 U.S.C. 136, et seq.}.

     (2) Background. The source material used in developing this har-
monized OPPTS test guideline is OPP guideline 153A-7.

     (b) Test procedures  and  reporting of data. (1) If microbial pest
control agents (MPCAs) have been determined to be of toxicological con-
cern, or if residues of concern will be present in or one feed items, animal
metabolism  studies  must be conducted utilizing ruminants and poultry. If
residues of toxicological concern occur in or on feed items,  animals gen-
erally must  be dosed orally for at least 3 days with the MPCA terminal
residues in feed items characterized to the extent possible. Note that, theo-
retically, a single MPCA propagule in or on a feed item could cause infec-
tion  or  allow replication in  livestock; obviously, this single viable unit
could be a residue of toxicological concern but would most likely not have
been detected in or on the feed item.  Therefore, if any potential for animal
pathogenicity exists,  animal  metabolism studies will  be  required in all
cases. If orally or dermally  administered direct animal treatments or animal
premise treatments are proposed, animals/premises must be treated accord-
ing to the proposed use directions or  at exaggerated  rates  (if necessary
for residue characterization) using a typical end-product.

     (2) If no replication of the MPCA occurs in or on the animal, at
least muscle, fat, kidney, and liver must be analyzed within 24 h of dosage
cessation.  If MPCA replication occurs  in the  animal, several longer inter-
vals may also be required and more extensive tissue sampling will be nec-
essary. Some MPCAs, notably fungi, may require weeks or months to es-
tablish a detectable infection. Eggs and milk, where applicable, must be
sampled at regular intervals,  preferably daily. It may be possible to com-
bine the animal metabolism and  animal magnitude  of residue studies
(OPPTS 885.2500), if required. These studies will allow the determination
of the major residues for which analytical methodology must be developed
and those which must be  sought in animal  feeding studies, if required.
The  efficiency and  sensitivity of the utilized methods  will also  be deter-
mined from  these animal metabolism studies.

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