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Toxicity and repellency to rats of actidione

January 1, 1950

The antibiotic actidione was found to be highly repellent to laboratory rats and to significantly reduce gnawing attacks upon treated paperboards. Rats refused to accept food or water containing this material even under conditions of acute starvation and died of starvation and thirst,rather than accept water containing l.0 mg. of actidione per liter. The compound is highly toxic to .rats with the minimum .lethal dose by oral administration being approximately l.0 mg./Kg body weight. Paperboard treated with the compound resisted gnawing attacks by specially trained and motivated rats for periods of two hundred hours, although similar .untreated boards were pierced within thirty-to sixty minutes.

Publication Year 1950
Title Toxicity and repellency to rats of actidione
Authors R. Traub, J.B. DeWitt, J.F. Welch, D. Newman
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Journal of the American Pharmaceutical Association, Scientific Edition
Index ID 5220061
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Patuxent Wildlife Research Center