Toxicity class
Toxicity class refers to a classification system for pesticides that has been created by a national or international government-related or -sponsored organization. It addresses the acute toxicity of agents such as soil fumigants, fungicides, herbicides, insecticides, miticides, molluscicides, nematicides, or rodenticides.
General considerations
Assignment to a toxicity class is based typically on results of acute toxicity studies such as the determination of values in animal experiments, notably rodents, via oral, inhaled, or external application. The experimental design measures the acute death rate of an agent. The toxicity class generally does not address issues of other potential harm of the agent, such as bioaccumulation, issues of carcinogenicity, teratogenicity, mutagenic effects, or the impact on reproduction.Regulating agencies may require that packaging of the agent be labeled with a signal word, a specific warning label to indicate the level of toxicity.
By jurisdiction
World Health Organization
The World Health Organization names four toxicity classes:- Class I – a: extremely hazardous
- Class I – b: highly hazardous
- Class II: moderately hazardous
- Class III: slightly hazardous
European Union
There are eight toxicity classes in the European Union's classification system, which is regulated by Directive 67/548/EEC:- Class I: very toxic
- Class II: toxic
- Class III: harmful
- Class IV : corrosive
- Class V : irritant
- Class VI : sensitizing
- Class VII : carcinogenic
- Class VIII : mutagenic
India
The Indian standardized system of toxicity labels for pesticides uses a 4-color system to plainly label containers with the toxicity class of the contents.United States
The United States Environmental Protection Agency uses four toxicity classes in its toxicity category rating. Classes I to III are required to carry a signal word on the label. Pesticides are regulated in the United States primarily by the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act.Toxicity class I
- most toxic;
- requires signal word: "Danger-Poison", with skull and crossbones symbol, possibly followed by:
Toxicity class II
- moderately toxic
- signal word: "Warning", possibly followed by:
Toxicity class III
- slightly toxic
- Signal word: Caution, possibly followed by:
Toxicity class IV
- practically nontoxic
- no signal word required since 2002
General versus restricted use