[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 7, Volume 5]

[Revised as of January 1, 2006]

From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access

[CITE: 7CFR319.37-8]



[Page 332-335]

 

                          TITLE 7--AGRICULTURE

 

 CHAPTER III--ANIMAL AND PLANT HEALTH INSPECTION SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF 

                               AGRICULTURE

 

PART 319_FOREIGN QUARANTINE NOTICES--Table of Contents



  Subpart_Nursery Stock, Plants, Roots, Bulbs, Seeds, and Other Plant 

                         Products 1 2

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Sec. 319.37-8  Growing media.



    (a) Any restricted article at the time of importation or offer for 

importation into the United States shall be free of sand, soil, earth, 

and other growing media, except as provided in paragraph (b), (c), (d) 

or (e) of this section.

    (b) A restricted article from Canada, other than from Newfoundland 

or from that portion of the Municipality of Central Saanich in the 

Province of British Columbia east of the West Saanich Road, may be 

imported in any growing medium.

    (c) A restricted article growing solely in agar or in other 

transparent or translucent tissue culture medium may be imported 

established in such growing media.

    (d) Epiphytic plants (including orchid plants) established solely on 

tree fern slabs, coconut husks, or coconut fiber may be imported on such 

growing media.

    (e) A restricted article of any of the following groups of plants 

may be imported established in an approved growing medium listed in this 

paragraph if the restricted article meets the conditions of this 

paragraph and is accompanied by a phytosanitary certificate issued by 

the plant protection service of the country in which the restricted 

article was grown that declares that the restricted article meets the 

conditions of this paragraph:



Alstroemeria

Ananas \10\

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    \10\ These articles are bromeliads, and if imported into Hawaii, 

bromeliads are subject to postentry quarantine in accordance with Sec. 

319.7-7.

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Anthurium

Artificially dwarfed (penjing) plants from the People's Republic of 

China of the following plant species: Buxus sinica, Ehretia microphylla, 

Podocarpus macrophyllus, Sageretia thea, and Serissa foetida.



Begonia

Gloxinia (=Sinningia)

Nidularium \11a\

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    \11a\ See footnote 11.

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Peperomia

Phalaenopsis spp. from Taiwan

Polypodiophyta (=Filicales) (ferns)

Rhododendron from Europe

Saintpaulia.

    (1) Approved growing media are baked expanded clay pellets, coal 

cinder, coir, cork, glass wool, organic and inorganic fibers, peat, 

perlite, phenol formaldehyde, plastic particles, polyethylene, polymer 

stabilized starch, polystyrene, polyurethane, rock wool, sphagnum moss, 

ureaformaldehyde, stockosorb superabsorbent polymer, vermiculite, 

volcanic rock, or zeolite, or any combination of these media. Growing 

media must not have been previously used.

    (2) Articles imported under this paragraph must be grown in 

compliance with a written agreement for enforcement of this section 

signed by the plant protection service of the country where grown and 

Plant Protection and Quarantine, must be developed from mother stock 

that was inspected and found free from evidence of disease and pests by 

an APHIS inspector or foreign plant protection service inspector no more 

than 60 days prior to the time the article is established in the 

greenhouse (except for articles developed from seeds germinated in the 

greenhouse), and must be:

    (i) Grown in compliance with a written agreement between the grower 

and the plant protection service of the country where the article is 

grown, in which the grower agrees to comply with the provisions of this 

section and to allow inspectors, and representatives of the plant 

protection service of the country where the article is grown, access to 

the growing facility as necessary to monitor compliance with the 

provisions of this section;

    (ii) Grown solely in a greenhouse in which sanitary procedures 

adequate to exclude plant pests and diseases are always employed, 

including cleaning and disinfection of floors, benches and tools, and 

the application of measures to protect against any injurious plant 

diseases, injurious insect pests, and other plant pests. The greenhouse 

must be free from sand and soil and must have screening with openings of 

not more than 0.6 mm (0.2 mm for greenhouses growing Rhododendron spp.) 

on all vents and openings except entryways. All entryways must be 

equipped with automatic closing doors;

    (iii) Rooted and grown in an active state of foliar growth for at 

least four consecutive months immediately prior to importation into the 

United States,



[[Page 333]]



in a greenhouse unit that is used solely for articles grown in 

compliance with this paragraph;

    (iv) Grown from seeds germinated in the greenhouse unit; or 

descended from a mother plant that was grown for at least 9 months in 

the exporting country prior to importation into the United States of the 

descendent plants, provided that if the mother plant was imported into 

the exporting country from another country, it must be:

    (A) Grown for at least 12 months in the exporting country prior to 

importation of the descendent plants into the United States, or

    (B) Treated at the time of importation into the exporting country 

with a treatment prescribed for pests of that plant by the plant 

protection service of the exporting country and then grown for at least 

9 months in the exporting country prior to importation of the descendent 

plants into the United States;

    (v) Watered only with rainwater that has been boiled or pasteurized, 

with clean well water, or with potable water;

    (vi) Rooted and grown in approved growing media listed in Sec. 

319.37-8(e)(1) on benches supported by legs and raised at least 46 cm 

above the floor;

    (vii) Stored and packaged only in areas free of sand, soil, earth, 

and plant pests;

    (viii) Inspected in the greenhouse and found free from evidence of 

plant pests and diseases by an APHIS inspector or an inspector of the 

plant protection service of the exporting country, no more than 30 days 

prior to the date of export to the United States;

    (ix) For Rhododendron species only, the plants must be propagated 

from mother plants that have been visually inspected by an APHIS 

inspector or an inspector of the plant protection service of the 

exporting country and found free of evidence of diseases caused by the 

following pathogens: Chrysomyxa ledi var. rhododendri, Erysiphe 

cruciferarum, Erysiphe rhododendri, Exobasidium vaccinnum and vaccinum 

var. japonicum, and Phomopsis theae;

    (x) For Rhododendron species only, the plants must be grown solely 

in a greenhouse equipped with automatic closing double doors of an 

airlock type, so that whenever one of the doors in an entryway is open 

the other is closed, and the plants must be introduced into the 

greenhouse as tissue cultures or as rootless stem cuttings from mother 

plants that:

    (A) Have received a pesticide dip prescribed by the plant protection 

service of the exporting country for mites, scale insects, and whitefly; 

and

    (B) Have been grown for at least the previous 6 months in a 

greenhouse that meets the requirements of Sec. 319.37-8(e)(2)(ii); and

    (xi) Plants of the species Buxus sinica, Ehretia microphylla, 

Podocarpus macrophyllus, Sageretia thea, and Serissa foetida from the 

People's Republic of China must also meet the following conditions:

    (A) Propagative cuttings. The propagative materials used to produce 

the artificially dwarfed (penjing) plants may enter an approved 

greenhouse only as seeds, tissue cultures, unrooted cuttings, or rooted 

cuttings with no growing media. Rooted cuttings may not be established 

or grown in soil at any time. Rooted cuttings may be established in a 

greenhouse or outside the greenhouse on raised benches (46 cm in height) 

in pots containing only APHIS approved growing media.

    (B) Inspection and treatment. When any cuttings are introduced into 

the greenhouse, they must be free of growing media, inspected, and found 

free of plant pests and then treated with a pesticide dip approved by 

the Animal and Plant Quarantine Service of the People's Republic of 

China that will control mites, scale insects, whiteflies, thrips, and 

fungi. The artificially dwarfed (penjing) plants must be propagated from 

mother plants that have been visually inspected by an APHIS inspector or 

an inspector of the Animal and Plant Quarantine Service of the People's 

Republic of China and found free of the following pests:

    (1) For Buxus sinica: Guignardia miribelii, Macrophoma ehretia, 

Meliola buxicola, and Puccinia buxi.

    (2) For Ehretia microphylla: Macrophoma ehretia, Phakopsora 

ehretiae, Pseudocercosporella ehretiae, Pseudocercospora ehretiae-

thyrsiflora, Uncinula ehretiae, Uredo ehretiae, and Uredo garanbiensis.



[[Page 334]]



    (3) For Podocarpus macrophyllus: Pestalosphaeria jinggangensis, 

Pestalotia diospyri, Phellinus noxius, and Sphaerella podocarpi.

    (4) For Sageretia thea: Aecidium sageretiae.

    (5) For Serissa foetida: Melampsora serissicola.

    (C) Growing. The artificially dwarfed (penjing) plants must be grown 

in an approved greenhouse for at least 6 months immediately prior to 

export.

    (D) Additional treatments. While in the greenhouse, plants must be 

treated with appropriate pesticides at least once every 10 days or as 

needed for three months before shipping to maintain a pest-free 

condition.

    (f) A restricted article of Hyacinthus spp. (hyacinth) may be 

imported established in unused peat, sphagnum moss, or vermiculite 

growing media, or in synthetic growing media or synthetic horticultural 

foams, i.e., plastic particles, glass wool, organic and inorganic 

fibers, polyurethane, polystyrene, polyethylene, phenol formaldehyde, or 

ureaformaldehyde:

    (1) If there is a written agreement between Plant Protection and 

Quarantine and the plant protection service of the country where the 

article is grown in which the plant protection service of the country 

where the article is grown agrees to implement a program in compliance 

with the provisions of this section;

    (2) If there is a written agreement between the grower of the 

article and the plant protection service of the country in which the 

article is grown wherein the grower agrees to comply with the provisions 

of this section, wherein the grower agrees to allow an inspector access 

to the growing facility as necessary to monitor compliance with the 

provisions of this section, and wherein the grower agrees to allow 

representatives of the plant protection service of the country in which 

the article is grown access to the growing facility as necessary to make 

determinations concerning compliance with the provisions of this 

section;

    (3) If: (i) Inspected immediately prior to the growing period by the 

plant protection service of the country in which the article is to be 

grown and found to be free of injurious plant diseases, injurious insect 

pests, and other plant pests;

    (ii) Grown throughout its growing period only in a coldroom (with 

temperatures not exceeding 9 [deg]C. (48 [deg]F.)) within an enclosed 

building;

    (iii) Grown only in a coldroom unit solely used for articles grown 

under all the criteria specified in this paragraph (f);

    (iv) Grown only in unused peat, sphagnum moss, or vermiculite 

growing media; or grown only in synthetic growing media or synthetic 

horticultural foams, i.e., plastic particles, glass wool, organic and 

inorganic fibers, polyurethane, polystyrene, polyethylene, phenol 

formaldehyde, ureaformaldehyde;

    (v) Watered only with clean rainwater that has been pasteurized, 

with clean well water, or with potable water;

    (vi) Grown in a coldroom free of sand, soil, or earth;

    (vii) Grown only in a coldroom where strict sanitary procedures are 

always practiced, i.e., cleaning and disinfection of floors and tools 

and the application of measures to protect against any injurious plant 

diseases, injurious insect pests, and other plant pests; and

    (viii) Stored only in areas found free of sand, soil, earth, 

injurious plant diseases, injurious insect pests, and other plant pests;

    (4) If appropriate measures have been taken to assure that the 

article is to be stored, packaged, and shipped free of injurious plant 

diseases, injurious insect pests, and other plant pests;

    (5) If accompanied by a phytosanitary certificate of inspection 

containing an accurate additional declaration from the plant protection 

service of the country in which grown that the article meets conditions 

of growing, storing, and shipping in compliance with 7 CFR 319.37-8(f); 

and

    (6) If the accompanying phytosanitary certificate of inspection is 

endorsed by a Plant Protection and Quarantine inspector in the country 

of origin or at the time of offer for importation, representing a 

finding based on monitoring inspections that the conditions listed above 

are being met.

    (g) Pest risk evaluation standards for plants established in growing 

media. The



[[Page 335]]



Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service will conduct a pest risk 

assessment based on pest risk analysis guidelines established by the 

International Plant Protection Convention of the United Nations' Food 

and Agriculture Organization in response to each request to allow the 

importation of additional taxa of plants in growing media. These 

guidelines are available upon request by writing to USDA, APHIS, PPQ, 

Center for Plant Health Science and Technology, Plant Epidemiology and 

Risk Assessment Laboratory, 1017 Main Campus Drive, Suite 2500, Raleigh, 

NC 27606.



[45 FR 31585, May 13, 1980, and 47 FR 3087, Jan. 22, 1982, as amended at 

57 FR 43151, Sept. 18, 1992; 60 FR 3077, Jan. 13, 1995; 61 FR 51210, 

Oct. 1, 1996; 64 FR 66716, Nov. 30, 1999; 68 FR 50047, Aug. 20, 2003; 68 

FR 60617, Oct. 23, 2003; 69 FR 2490, Jan. 16, 2004; 69 FR 24936, May 5, 

2004; 70 FR 33324, June 7, 2005]