Pentachlorophenol (penta, CAS #87-86-5) is primarily used as a wood preservative. As part of the USEPA pesticide reregistration process, the developmental toxicity (embryo-fetal toxicity and teratogenic potential) of commercially available penta was studied following oral gavage to presumed pregnant female Sprague-Dawley rats (Crl:CD BR VAF/Plus Subdivision F, 83-3). Both study design and penta purity met the requirements of the USEPA. Doses of 0 (corn oil), 10, 30, and 80 mg/kg/day were administered to the rats at concentrations of 0, 2, 6, and 16 mg/ml, respectively from day 6 to day 15 of presumed gestation. The dosage volume was 5 ml/kg, adjusted on each day of dosage based on individual body weights recorded immediately before intubation. The rats were sacrificed on day 20 of presumed gestation and necropsied. The number of corpora lutea in each ovary was recorded. The uterus was examined for pregnancy, number and distribution of implantations, early and late resorptions and live and dead fetuses. Each fetus was weighed, sexed, and examined for gross external, soft tissue and skeletal alterations. The no-observable-adverse-effect-level (NOAEL) for maternal toxicity in rats was determined to be 30 mg/kg/day of penta. The developmental NOAEL for penta in rats was also found to be 30 mg/kg/day. The lowest-observable-adverse-effect-level (LOAEL) for penta developmental toxicity (80 mg/kg/day) was associated with increased resorptions, reduced live litter size and fetal body weights, and caused increased malformations and variations. These NOAELs, derived using USEPA approved study designs, are higher than those previously reported using penta that is no longer commercially available in studies with non-approved experimental designs. Penta should not be identified as a selective developmental toxicant in the rat because adverse effects on development of rat conceptuses occurred only at maternally toxic dosages.