| Agrobacterium radiobacter strain K1026 |  Last updated: 18/10/2025
 |  | 
(Not known by any other names) | 
The following alerts are based on the data in the tables below. An absence of an alert does not imply the substance has no implications for human health, biodiversity or the environment but just that we do not have the data to form a judgement. These hazard alerts do not take account of usage patterns or exposure, thus do not represent risk.
| Environmental fate | Ecotoxicity | Human health | 
|  |   |  | 
|  | A microbial pesticide that can be used to manage crown gall disease in a variety of crops | 
|  | Bacteria that cause crown gall infections e.g. Agrobacterium tumefaciens & Agrobacterium rhizogenes | 
|  | Topfruit; Soft fruit; Nuts; Ornamentals | 
|  | - | 
|  | It is a rod-shaped, motile Gram-negative soil bacterium that forms organised biofilms in the tree roots it colonizes | 
|  | Class: Alphaproteobacteria; Order: Rhizobiales; Family: Rhizobiaceae | 
|  | Not approved | 
|  | Not applicable | 
|  | No UK approval for use as a plant protection agent | 
| EC Regulation 1107/2009 (repealing 91/414) | 
|  | Not approved | 
|  | Not applicable | 
|  | Not applicable | 
|  | Not applicable | 
|  | No | 
|  | 
| ATAustria | BEBelgium | BGBulgaria | CYCyprus | CZCzech Republic | DEGermany | DKDenmark | EEEstonia | ELGreece |  
|   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |  
| ESSpain | FIFinland | FRFrance | HRCroatia | HUHungary | IEIreland | ITItaly | LTLithuania | LULuxembourg |  
|   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |  
| LVLatvia | MTMalta | NLNetherlands | PLPoland | PTPortugal | RORomania | SESweden | SISlovenia | SKSlovakia |  
|   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |  | 
|  | 
| ISIceland | NONorway | 
 | 
 | 
 | 
 | 
 | 
 | 
 |  
|   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |  | 
|  | Australia, USA, South Africa, China, New Zealand | 
|  | Not applicable | 
|  | - | 
|  | - | 
|  | - | 
|  | - | 
|  | - | 
|  | No | 
|  | Fungicide | 
|  | Micro-organism | 
|  | - | 
|  | - | 
|  | Natural | 
|  | Competes with the crown gall organism for invasion sites and so prevents the bacterium from becoming established. | 
|  | A simple genetic modification of the naturally occurring and widespread bacterium Agrobacterium radiobacter strain K84 that is found in soil and near plant roots | 
|  | Crop production - germinating seeds, stems and roots, cuttings | 
|  | Bacteria that cause crown gall infections e.g. Agrobacterium tumefaciens & Agrobacterium rhizogenes | 
|  | Topfruit; Soft fruit; Nuts; Ornamentals | 
|  | Suitable for use in all farming systems where approved for use in that country | 
|  | - | 
|  | - | 
|  | - | 
|  | 006474 | 
|  | - | 
|  | - | 
|  | Agrobacterium radiobacter strain K1026 | 
|  | - | 
|  | - | 
|  | - | 
|  | 
| UK Poisons List Order 1972 | Rotterdam Convention | Montreal Protocol |  
|  |  |  |  
| Stockholm Convention | OSPAR | EU Water Framework Directive |  
|  |  |  |  | 
|  | - | 
|  | - | 
|  |  | - | 
|  | - | 
|  | - | 
|  | Not applicable | 
|  | Not applicable | 
|  | Not applicable | 
|  | BM02 | 
|  | - | 
|  | Bacterium | 
|  |  | 
|  |  | 
|  | Current | 
|  | 1999, introduced USA | 
|  | New Bioproducts Inc, USABecker Underwood Pty Ltd.
 | 
|  |  | 
|  | Supplied as a water dispersible powder containing bacterial cells. | 
|  | Agrobacterium radiobacter K1026 is produced commercially through a fermentation process.  The selected strain is cultured in large bioreactors, under controlled conditions, within a fermentation medium containing nutrients such as glucose, yeast extract, and other carbon and nitrogen sources. After the fermentation is complete, the bacterial cells are harvested from the fermentation broth. This is typically done through centrifugation or filtration to separate the cells from the liquid medium. The harvested bacterial cells are formulated into commercial products. | 
|  | As microbial-based products tend to use fermentation-based production processes rather than chemical synthesis, they typically have a lower fossil fuel input in formulation and active ingredient creation, and also have reduced downstream emissions due to biodegradability and minimal soil disruption, their life-cycle GHG emissions are expected to be low. Whilst hard and precise data is not available, broad estimates suggest that typically emissions are likely to be below 5 kg CO₂e/kg. | 
|  |   | 
|  |  |  |  | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  |  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  |  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
| - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  |  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  |  |  |  | 
|  | - | 
|  |  | 0.5 | L3 L = Pesticide manuals and hard copy reference books / other sources3 = Unverified data of known source
 | Non-persistent | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  | Literature reports DT₅₀ as around 10 hrs | 
|  |  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | 
|  |  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | 
|  |  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | 
|  |  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  | As this parameter is not normally measured directly, a surrogate measure is used: ‘Photochemical oxidative DT₅₀’. Where data is available, this can be found in the Fate Indices section below. | 
|  | - | 
| Soil adsorption and mobility |  | 
None
| Terrestrial ecotoxicology | 
|  |  |  |  | 
|  | - | Q3 Q = Miscellaneous data from online sourcesNo adverse effects identified or expected.3 = Unverified data of known source
 | - | 
|  |  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | Q3 Q = Miscellaneous data from online sourcesNo adverse effects identified or expected.3 = Unverified data of known source
 | - | 
|  | - | Q3 Q = Miscellaneous data from online sourcesNo adverse effects identified or expected.3 = Unverified data of known source
 | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  |  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  |  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  |  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | 
|  |  | - | - | - | 
| - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
| - | 
|  |  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  |  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | 
|  |  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  |  |  |  | 
|  | - | Q3 Q = Miscellaneous data from online sourcesNo adverse effects identified or expected.3 = Unverified data of known source
 | - | 
|  | - | Q3 Q = Miscellaneous data from online sourcesNo adverse effects identified or expected3 = Unverified data of known source
 | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | Q3 Q = Miscellaneous data from online sourcesNo adverse effects identified or expected3 = Unverified data of known source
 | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  |  | - | - | - | 
 | - | - | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
| 
| HUMAN HEALTH AND PROTECTION |  |   | 
|  |  |  |  | 
|  | Not applicable | - | - | 
|  | - | Q3 Q = Miscellaneous data from online sourcesNo adverse effects identified or expected.3 = Unverified data of known source
 | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  |  | - | 
|  | - | 
|  | - | - | - | 
|  | 
| Carcinogen |  | Endocrine disruptor |  
| XNo, known not to cause a problem | A0 A = Chromosome aberration (EFSA database);0 = No data
 B0 B = DNA damage/repair (EFSA database);0 = No data
 C0 C = Gene mutation (EFSA database);0 = No data
 D0 D = Genome mutation (EFSA database);0 = No data
 E0 E = Unspecified genotoxicity type (miscellaneous data source)0 = No data
 | XNo, known not to cause a problem |  
| Reproduction / development effects | Acetyl cholinesterase inhibitor | Neurotoxicant |  
| XNo, known not to cause a problem | XNo, known not to cause a problem | XNo, known not to cause a problem |  
| Respiratory tract irritant | Skin irritant | Skin sensitiser |  
| No data found | No data found | ?Possibly, status not identified |  
| Eye irritant | Phototoxicant |   |  
| No data found | No data found |   |  | 
|  | Not expected to be harmful to humans | 
|  |  | 
|  | No information available | 
|  | Not classified as hazardous | 
|  | Not listed (Not listed) | 
|  | - | 
|  | - | 
|  | - | 
|  |  | 
|  | Agrobacterium radiobacter strain K1026 | 
|  | - | 
|  | - | 
|  | - | 
|  | - | 
|  | - | 
|  | - | 
|  | - | 
|  | - | 
|  | - | 
|  | - | 
|  | - | 
| Record last updated: | 18/10/2025 | 
| Contact: | aeru@herts.ac.uk | 
| Please cite as: | Lewis, K.A., Tzilivakis, J., Warner, D. and Green, A. (2016) An international database for pesticide risk assessments and management. Human and Ecological Risk Assessment: An International Journal, 22(4), 1050-1064. DOI: 10.1080/10807039.2015.1133242 |