Ammonium Bicarbonate (073401) Fact sheet
Related Information
Information related to this page:Issued: 9/30/04
OPP Chemical Code: 073401; (CAS # 1066-33-7)
On This Page
- Description of the Active Ingredient
- Use Sites, Target Pests, and Application Methods
- Assessing Risks to Human Health
- Assessing Risks to the Environment
- Regulatory Information
- Registrant Information
- Additional Contact Information
Summary
Ammonium bicarbonate, a natural chemical, has a faint ammonia smell because it slowly decomposes to ammonia, carbon dioxide, and water. As a pesticide active ingredient, it acts as a feeding attractant for insects. In its first approved end use products, ammonium bicarbonate is combined with two other active ingredients to control olive flies in olive orchards. When used according to label directions on products, this active ingredient is not expected to harm people or the environment.
- Description of the Active Ingredient
- Use Sites, Target Pests, and Application Methods
- Use sites: Olive orchards, ornamental and commercial
- Target pest: Olive fly
- Application methods: See “Mechanism of Action” in I (above)
- Assessing Risks to Human Health
- Assessing Risks to the Environment
- Regulatory Information
- Registrant Information
- Additional Contact Information
Ammonium bicarbonate is a clear white crystalline solid with a faint ammonia smell. It slowly degrades in the environment into ammonia, carbon dioxide, and water. Because ammonia is naturally released during the decomposition of proteins and related substances, some insects, including the olive fly, use the smell of ammonia to guide them to food and to stimulate eating.
Mechanism of Action. The first pesticide end products containing ammonium bicarbonate as an active ingredient are traps that enclose a matrix containing three active ingredients: olive fly mating pheromone, which attracts male olive flies from a distance; ammonium bicarbonate as a source of ammonia, which attracts the flies and stimulates them to eat; and lambda cyhalothrin, which kills insects that ingest it. These traps are dispersed throughout the olive orchards.
No risks to humans are expected from approved uses of ammonium bicarbonate as a pesticide active ingredient. The substance is approved as a food additive by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), and as an inert pesticide ingredient by EPA. No toxic endpoints have been identified. Use of ammonium bicarbonate as a pesticide active ingredient will lead to negligible increases in human exposure to ammonium bicarbonate and ammonia based on current uses.
Risks to non-target organisms are not expected, given that no toxicological endpoints have been identified and exposure should be minimal except to olive flies. Ammonium bicarbonate has been used as a pesticide inert ingredient for many years with no adverse effects reported.
June 2004: Registration of two end products containing ammonium bicarbonate.
"Olive Fly Attract and Kill (A&K) Target Device for Commercial Olives" (OPP Registration # 70051-76);
"Olive Fly Attract and Kill (A&K) Target Device for Ornamental Olives" (70051-96)
Christine A. Dively
CERTIS USA LLC
9145 Guilford Road, Suite 175
Columbia, MD 21046
301-483-3806
cdively@certisusa.com
Ombudsman, Biopesticides and Pollution Prevention Division (7511P)
Office of Pesticide Programs
Environmental Protection Agency
1200 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Washington, D.C. 20460
![[logo] US EPA](http://www.epa.gov/epafiles/images/logo_epaseal.gif)