97-24524. Imported Seed and Screenings  

  • [Federal Register Volume 62, Number 179 (Tuesday, September 16, 1997)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 48456-48471]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 97-24524]
    
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
    
    Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service
    
    7 CFR Parts 201 and 361
    
    [Docket No. 93-126-5]
    RIN 0579-AA64
    
    
    Imported Seed and Screenings
    
    AGENCY: Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, USDA.
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: We are amending the ``Imported Seed'' regulations by moving 
    the regulations to a different chapter in the Code of Federal 
    Regulations; establishing a seed analysis program with Canada; and 
    allowing U.S. companies that import seed for cleaning or screenings for 
    processing to enter into compliance agreements with the Animal and 
    Plant Health Inspection Service. These changes are being made to 
    reflect recent amendments to the Federal Seed Act and the transfer of 
    responsibility for the import provisions of the act from the 
    Agricultural Marketing Service to the Animal and Plant Health 
    Inspection Service. These changes will bring the imported seed 
    regulations into agreement with the amended Federal Seed Act, eliminate 
    the need for sampling shipments of Canadian-origin seed at the border, 
    and allow certain seed importers to clean seed without the direct 
    monitoring of an Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service inspector.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: October 16, 1997.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms. Polly Lehtonen, Botanist, 
    Biological Assessment and Taxonomic Support, PPQ, APHIS, 4700 River 
    Road Unit 133, Riverdale, MD 20737-1236, (301) 734-8896.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    Background
    
        Under the authority of the Federal Seed Act of 1939, as amended 
    (FSA), the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) regulates the 
    importation and interstate movement of certain agricultural and 
    vegetable seed and screenings. Title III of the FSA, ``Foreign 
    Commerce,'' requires shipments of imported agricultural and vegetable 
    seed to be labeled correctly and to be tested for the presence of the 
    seeds of certain noxious weeds as a condition of entry into the United 
    States. The USDA's regulations implementing the provisions of the FSA 
    are found at 7 CFR part 201; the regulations implementing the foreign 
    commerce provisions of the FSA are found in Secs. 201.101 through 
    201.230 (referred to below as the regulations).
        The responsibility for inspection of imported seeds under Title III 
    of the FSA was transferred from the Agricultural Marketing Service 
    (AMS) to the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) by a 
    final rule amending the delegations of authority from the Secretary of 
    Agriculture that was published in the Federal Register on September 22, 
    1982 (47 FR 41725), and effective October 1, 1982.
        In a proposed rule published in the Federal Register on October 4, 
    1996 (61 FR 51791-51810, Docket No. 93-126-4), we proposed to revise 
    the regulations to reflect amendments to the FSA and the transfer of 
    regulatory authority for Title III of the FSA from AMS to APHIS. To 
    reflect that change in authority, we proposed to move the regulations 
    from 7 CFR chapter I, which is one of the chapters in which AMS 
    regulations appear, to 7 CFR chapter III, where APHIS' plant-related 
    regulations appear. As part of that proposed move, we also proposed to 
    update the regulations to reflect amendments to the FSA and make 
    nonsubstantive editorial changes to the arrangement and wording of the 
    regulatory text to improve its clarity. We also announced that we would 
    host a public hearing on November 21, 1996, to provide interested 
    persons with an opportunity to present their views regarding the 
    proposed rule.
        We solicited comments concerning the proposed rule for 60 days 
    ending December 3, 1996. We received five comments by that date. The 
    November 21, 1996, hearing was held as scheduled, but no members of the 
    public attended to present comments (although one of the five comments 
    mentioned above was included in the record of the public hearing at the 
    request of the person who submitted the comment). The comments we 
    received were from U.S. and Canadian seed analysts associations, a seed 
    trade association, and two State departments of agriculture. Although 
    all of the commenters offered support for the proposed rule, each of 
    them offered suggestions or sought clarification regarding the changes 
    proposed in the proposed rule. Those comments are discussed below.
    
    Change in Responsible Canadian Agency
    
        On April 1, 1997, the Canadian Food Inspection Agency, a public 
    agency reporting to Canada's Minister of Agriculture and Agri-Food, was 
    established. The Canadian Food Inspection Agency's responsibilities 
    include plant health activities conducted at the Federal level, 
    including the seed analysis and laboratory accreditation activities we 
    had attributed to Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada in the proposed 
    rule. Therefore, for accuracy, we will refer to the Canadian Food 
    Inspection Agency, rather than to Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, 
    throughout this document. We have also updated the regulations in 
    Sec. 371.7(a) to reflect that change.
    
    Discussion of Comments
    
        Comment: The proposed regulations refer to an ``official seed 
    analyst,'' which is defined as a ``registered member of the Association 
    of Official Seed Analysts'' (AOSA). The AOSA does not have a category 
    of ``registered member,'' and the voting category of membership in AOSA 
    is entitled ``official laboratory.'' Therefore, the term ``official 
    seed laboratory,'' which would be defined as an official laboratory 
    member of AOSA, should be used instead of ``official seed analyst.''
        Response: We agree with the commenter and have made the suggested 
    changes. Specifically, we have changed the definition in Sec. 361.1 of 
    ``official seed analyst'' to ``official seed laboratory'' with the 
    suggested definition, and we have changed a reference in 
    Sec. 361.8(a)(1) from ``official seed analyst'' to ``official seed 
    laboratory.''
        Comment: Members of the Commercial Seed Analysts Association of 
    Canada (CSAAC) should be given the same recognition as the registered 
    seed technologists and official seed analysts mentioned in the proposed 
    rule.
        Response: The role of the registered seed technologist and official 
    seed analyst (now official seed laboratory, as noted above) in the 
    proposed regulations and in this final rule is limited to analyzing 
    representative samples of seed cleaned in the United States under a 
    compliance agreement as set forth in Sec. 361.8(a)(1). While it is 
    likely that members of CSAAC are working in laboratories associated 
    with or accredited by the Canadian Food Inspection Agency and will, 
    thus, be involved in the analysis and certification of seed in Canada 
    under Sec. 361.7, we do not foresee that they would be involved in the 
    analysis of seed after it has been imported into the United States and 
    cleaned. For that reason, we do not believe it is necessary to 
    explicitly mention CSAAC or its members in the regulations. Therefore, 
    we have made no changes in this final rule based on that comment.
    
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        Comment: The noxious weed seed tolerances set out in Sec. 361.6(b) 
    are too lenient. As it is currently written, the discovery of two seeds 
    in an initial examination triggers a second examination; if two or 
    fewer seeds are found in the second examination, the lot of seed may be 
    imported. Such a tolerance would allow approximately 100 noxious weed 
    seeds per 50 lb. bag for a crop seed the size of wheat. The discovery 
    of even one or two seeds in a second examination serves only to confirm 
    that prohibited noxious weed seeds are present in the lot of seed. The 
    regulations should be changed to require a second examination upon the 
    discovery of a single noxious weed seed; if the second examination 
    yields one or more noxious weed seeds, then the lot of seed should be 
    refused entry.
        Response: The tolerances established under the FSA are consistent 
    with those of the Association of Official Seed Analysts (AOSA) and the 
    Association of American Seed Control Officials' ``Recommended Uniform 
    State Seed Law'' (RUSSL), as amended in July 1996. The RUSSL recommends 
    that State seed laws recognize the tolerances in AOSA's ``Rules for 
    Testing Seeds.'' Also, within the framework of the General Agreement on 
    Tariffs and Trade and the North American Free Trade Agreement, a 
    quarantine action such as that recommended by the commenter, i.e. 
    prohibiting all weed seeds with no tolerances, is not appropriate for 
    pests that are widespread in the importing country. All of the weeds 
    for which we allow tolerances are already established and widespread in 
    the United States. Therefore, we have made no changes in this final 
    rule based on that comment.
        Comment: The list of noxious weeds in Sec. 361.6 does not include 
    many species of weeds that are prohibited in many States. This could 
    result in a State having to accept an imported lot of seed that 
    contains weed seeds that are prohibited by that State but not by 
    regulations. The list of noxious weeds in Sec. 361.6 should be expanded 
    to include noxious weed seed prohibited by States.
        Response: The commenter is correct in noting that many States 
    prohibit weeds that are not included on the list of noxious weeds in 
    Sec. 361.6; it is also true, however, that the list in Sec. 361.6 is 
    more restrictive than the noxious weed lists maintained by some other 
    States. Generally speaking, the weeds found in the list in Sec. 361.6 
    are those weeds prohibited most often by individual States. Any State 
    may inspect seed shipments sold within its borders and can issue a 
    ``stop sale'' if a State inspector finds weeds on the State's 
    prohibited list. Further, the AMS' regulations in 7 CFR 201.50 
    recognize each States' prohibited weed list in enforcing the interstate 
    provisions of the FSA. Because individual States have the authority to 
    prevent the sale within their borders of seed containing weed seeds 
    prohibited under State regulations, we do not believe it is necessary 
    to amend the imported seed regulations to reflect the noxious weed 
    lists of all the States. We have, therefore, made no changes in this 
    final rule based on that comment.
        Comment: As set forth in the proposed rule, the regulations in 
    Sec. 361.7 are unclear as to who in Canada will be doing the sampling 
    of seed intended for export to the United States. Sampling must be 
    performed by persons trained in proper sampling and who are in no way 
    biased as to test outcome.
        Response: The sampling in Canada will be performed in the manner 
    seen as necessary by the commenter. Seed samples drawn in Canada 
    pursuant to the regulations in Sec. 361.7 will be analyzed by the 
    Canadian Food Inspection Agency or by a private seed laboratory 
    accredited by the Canadian Food Inspection Agency, and the Canadian 
    Food Inspection Agency has informed APHIS that it will require those 
    laboratories testing seed for export to the United States to test only 
    ``officially recognized samples'' as defined by the Canada Seeds 
    Regulations. Thus, the seed will have to be drawn according to 
    recognized methods by an accredited grader, a person licensed to 
    operate an approved conditioner, or a person accredited by an official 
    certifying agency to sample seed.
        Comment: APHIS should require sampling for seed imported for 
    feeding purposes. Seed screenings are often used as a component of feed 
    and may contain a high percentage of viable noxious weed seeds. There 
    should be limitations on viable noxious weed seeds in feed and some 
    measure of sampling or monitoring.
        Response: As we noted in the proposed rule with regard to 
    screenings, the process usually used to produce animal feed--i.e., an 
    extrusion process that includes heating and pelletizing--is sufficient 
    to devitalize any live seed, which reduces to an insignificant level 
    any risk that the feed would contain any viable noxious weed seeds. We 
    do not, therefore, believe that it is necessary to require sampling or 
    monitoring for imported seed declared for feeding purposes.
        Comment: When seed intended for planting purposes is imported and 
    found to be adulterated with noxious weed seeds, the regulations would 
    allow the seed to enter the United States if the importer withdraws the 
    original declaration and files a new declaration stating that the seed 
    is being imported for feeding or manufacturing purposes. How can APHIS 
    be sure that the importer will not use the seed for planting purposes 
    once it reaches its final destination in the United States?
        Response: There are avenues that an importer can pursue to render 
    adulterated seed fit for planting purposes and penalties in place to 
    discourage the type of action envisioned by the commenter. If a lot of 
    seed is deemed to be adulterated, the importer of the seed would have 
    the option of sending the seed to a seed-cleaning facility. After the 
    noxious weed seeds are removed, the importer could sell the seed for 
    planting purposes. When an importer instead chooses to file a new 
    declaration for the seed, that new declaration must include a statement 
    that no part of the seed will be used for planting purposes, and the 
    importer will be bound to abide by the new declaration. Under Sec. 304 
    of the FSA (7 U.S.C. 1586), it is unlawful for any person to sell or 
    offer for sale any seed or screenings for seeding (planting) purposes 
    if the seed or screenings were imported for other than seeding 
    (planting) purposes. Any seed sold, delivered for transportation in 
    interstate commerce, or transported in interstate or foreign commerce 
    in violation of any of the provisions of the FSA would, under Sec. 405 
    of the FSA (7 U.S.C. 1595), be subject to seizure. Further, Sec. 406 of 
    the FSA (7 U.S.C. 1596) provides that any person who knowingly violates 
    any provision of the FSA or the regulations shall be deemed guilty of a 
    misdemeanor and, upon conviction thereof, shall pay a fine of $1,000 
    for the first offense and a fine of not more than $2,000 for each 
    subsequent offense. In addition, if the importer intends to sell the 
    adulterated seed for planting purposes but files a new declaration 
    stating that the seed is to be used for feed or manufacturing purposes 
    merely to secure the release of the seed, the importer could be subject 
    to the provisions of 18 U.S.C. 1001, which provides, in part, that 
    ``Whoever, in any matter within the jurisdiction of any department or 
    agency of the United States knowingly and willfully * * * makes any 
    false, fictitious or fraudulent statements or representations, or makes 
    or uses any false writing or document knowing the same to contain any 
    false, fictitious or fraudulent statement or entry, shall be fined 
    under this title or imprisoned not more than five years, or both.''
    
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        Comment: Section 361.3 contains references to seed treated with 
    mercurials. Is it not the case that mercurial seed treatments were 
    banned several years ago?
        Response: With regard to the treatment of seeds with mercurials or 
    similarly toxic substances, the scope of the FSA and the regulations is 
    limited to requiring that such treated seed be properly labeled. Those 
    labeling requirements, as noted by the commenter, are contained in 
    Sec. 361.3 of the regulations. However, because mercurials are harmful 
    to humans and vertebrate animals, they would be covered under the Food 
    and Drug Administration's (FDA's) regulations in 16 CFR 2.25(b), which 
    state, in part, that the FDA ``will regard as adulterated any 
    interstate shipment of the food seeds wheat, corn, oats, rye, barley, 
    and sorghum bearing a poisonous treatment in excess of a recognized 
    tolerance or treatment for which no tolerance or exemption from 
    tolerance is recognized in regulations promulgated pursuant to section 
    408 of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, unless such seeds have 
    been adequately denatured by a suitable color to prevent their 
    subsequent inadvertent use as food for man or feed for animals.'' Thus, 
    seeds deemed adulterated by the FDA would be subject to appropriate 
    action by the FDA under its authority.
        Comment: Will APHIS monitor the Canadian seed testing laboratories 
    that analyze the seed to be exported to the United States? What actions 
    will be taken if APHIS finds that one of those Canadian laboratories is 
    conducting incorrect or incomplete analyses on seed to be exported to 
    the United States?
        Response: APHIS will take samples of Canadian-origin seed for 
    monitoring purposes. If our test results do not agree with those of the 
    Canadian seed-testing laboratory that analyzed the seed, we will notify 
    the Canadian Food Inspection Agency of the discrepancy and cooperate 
    with the Canadian Food Inspection Agency in its investigation of the 
    cause of the discrepancy. If sampling or laboratory errors are found to 
    have occurred, corrective action will be initiated by the Canadian Food 
    Inspection Agency. Further, APHIS will increase its monitoring of seed 
    shipments that have been analyzed by the laboratory in question.
        Comment: Section 361.9 of the proposed rule states that seed 
    importers must retain a seed sample from each lot of imported seed for 
    at least 1 year. This requirement is too burdensome and should be 
    eliminated; such samples will not assist in the tracing or monitoring 
    of potential problems. In addition, it has traditionally been the role 
    of the seed exporter to maintain samples of seed from each lot shipped.
        Response: As we noted in the proposed rule, seed companies must 
    already retain records and samples to comply with the AMS' regulations 
    promulgated under the interstate provisions of the FSA, so we do not 
    believe that the recordkeeping requirements of this rule place an 
    additional burden on those companies. Further, even if exporters retain 
    samples from lots of seed shipped to this country, only the importer's 
    sample can be relied upon to accurately reflect the content of the seed 
    lot that was actually received in the United States. Therefore, we 
    continue to believe that it is necessary for importers to retain a seed 
    sample to provide a reference that would help APHIS to trace the source 
    of potential problems and monitor the efficacy of noxious weed 
    examinations and cleaning.
    
    Other Changes
    
        We have made a change to the wording of the introductory text of 
    paragraph (a) in Sec. 361.4, ``Inspection at the port of first 
    arrival.'' In the proposed rule, that paragraph stated that all 
    agricultural seed, vegetable seed, and screenings offered for entry 
    into the United States shall be ``subject to inspection'' at the port 
    of first arrival. Because the phrase ``subject to inspection'' does not 
    accurately represent what must occur at the port of first arrival prior 
    to seed and screenings, or any other agricultural commodity, being 
    released for entry into the United States, we have changed that 
    paragraph to make it clear that the seed or screenings must be made 
    available for examination by an inspector and must remain at the port 
    of first arrival until released by an inspector.
        Similarly, we have changed those sections of the regulations that 
    refer to an APHIS inspector's ``supervision'' of certain activities, 
    i.e., the destruction or cleaning of seed, the correction of the 
    labeling on a lot of seed, the removal of seed from containers, and the 
    enforcement of compliance agreements. To state that an APHIS inspector 
    will ``supervise'' such activities may imply that the inspector is in a 
    position of authority over the persons conducting such activities and 
    is, therefore, responsible for all issues associated with the conduct 
    of those activities, even issues unrelated to the inspector's authority 
    such as worker safety or compliance with labor laws. The actual role of 
    an APHIS inspector in such situations is to ensure that the 
    requirements of APHIS' regulations are being satisfied; therefore, we 
    have replaced references to ``supervision'' with references to 
    ``monitoring'' to more clearly represent the role of APHIS inspectors 
    participating in activities conducted in connection with the 
    regulations.
        Therefore, based on the rationale set forth in the proposed rule 
    and in this document, we are adopting the provisions of the proposal as 
    a final rule with the changes discussed in this document.
    
    Executive Order 12866 and Regulatory Flexibility Act
    
        This rule has been reviewed under Executive Order 12866. The rule 
    has been determined to be not significant for purposes of Executive 
    Order 12866 and, therefore, has not been reviewed by the Office of 
    Management and Budget.
        We are amending the ``Imported Seed'' regulations by moving the 
    regulations to a different chapter in the Code of Federal Regulations, 
    establishing a seed analysis program with Canada, and allowing U.S. 
    companies that import seed for cleaning or screenings for processing to 
    enter into compliance agreements with APHIS. With these changes, the 
    regulations will reflect recent amendments to the FSA and the transfer 
    of responsibility for the import provisions of the act from AMS to 
    APHIS, eliminate the need for sampling shipments of Canadian-origin 
    seed at the border, and allow certain seed importers to clean seed with 
    monitoring by an APHIS inspector.
        No economic impact will result from shifting the regulations to a 
    different chapter in the Code of Federal Regulations. However, the 
    elimination of the requirement that shipments of Canadian-origin seed 
    be sampled at the border will result in savings to APHIS. This rule 
    will require that all shipments of Canadian-origin agricultural or 
    vegetable seed be accompanied by a certificate of analysis issued by 
    the Canadian Food Inspection Agency or by a private seed laboratory 
    accredited by the Canadian Food Inspection Agency; that certificate of 
    analysis precludes the need for sampling and testing those shipments of 
    Canadian-origin seed. The certificate of analysis will confirm the seed 
    shipment meets the noxious weed tolerances and labeling requirements of 
    the FSA and the regulations. Therefore, APHIS will no longer have to 
    rely on U.S. Customs Service inspectors at the Canadian border to draw 
    samples from shipments of imported seed and mail the seed samples to 
    APHIS'' Seed Examination Facility (SEF) in Beltsville, MD, for testing. 
    Under the provisions of this rule, the cost of the analysis and
    
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    subsequent certification will be borne by the owner or exporter of the 
    seed, so there will be a reduction in the sampling and testing costs 
    currently borne by APHIS. We estimate that APHIS will save over 
    $103,000 annually in salary and related expenditures associated with 
    the testing of Canadian-origin seed.
        Imports of field and garden seeds from Canada represent 80 percent 
    of total U.S. seed imports; from 1992 to 1994, imports of the regulated 
    agricultural and vegetable seeds from Canada into the United States 
    averaged 107,270 tons per year, with an average value of $63.059 
    million. From fiscal year 1989 to fiscal year 1993, the number of seed 
    shipments sampled increased from 2,451 to 3,615 shipments per year, an 
    increase of 47.5 percent; over the same period, SEF tested an average 
    of 2,907 seed samples per year. In fiscal years 1994 and 1995, 
    approximately 5,000 Canadian seed samples were tested. Only 3 percent 
    of Canadian seed shipments were refused admission for noxious weed 
    content.
        This final rule's requirement that Canadian-origin seed be 
    certified prior to import into the United States will eliminate the 
    need for the routine testing of Canadian-origin seed and thus eliminate 
    the costs associated with that testing. Without the certificate 
    requirement, the SEF botanist spent approximately 90 percent of his 
    time testing Canadian-origin seed for noxious weed seeds, while his 
    assistant spent about 50 percent of his time on this task. In terms of 
    salaries and benefits, the costs associated with the SEF's testing of 
    Canadian seed are estimated to exceed $100,000 annually. With the 
    certificate requirement for Canadian seed in place, the time and costs 
    spent on testing Canadian seed may be shifted into the SEF's other 
    areas of responsibility.
        This rule will also result in savings in salary for the time spent 
    by APHIS or State inspectors monitoring the cleaning of seed lots 
    refused admission due to noxious weed seed content. In fiscal year 
    1995, 61 seed shipments were refused entry due to noxious weed seed 
    content above tolerances. An inspector spends an average of about 4 
    hours monitoring the cleaning of each refused shipment. The savings in 
    the inspector's monitoring time in this activity is estimated as 
    $1,262.
        This rule also allows companies that import uncleaned seed for 
    reconditioning and resale to enter into a compliance agreement with 
    APHIS, which will likely yield a savings to APHIS in inspection time 
    since only periodic inspections of these companies will be necessary to 
    ensure compliance with the conditions of the agreement. In fiscal year 
    1995, two companies in Idaho imported a total of 48 lots of seed that 
    required cleaning; APHIS employed a contractor to monitor the cleaning 
    of those adulterated seed lots. A company operating under a compliance 
    agreement will not require monitoring for every lot of seed imported 
    for cleaning, so we expect there will be an estimated $1,664 annual 
    savings in salary and benefits as a result of seed-cleaning companies 
    entering into compliance agreements with APHIS.
        In total, we expect an estimated annual reduction of approximately 
    $103,000 in the costs associated with the sampling and testing of 
    Canadian origin seed and the monitoring of seed cleaning.
        This rule is expected to impact exporters of Canadian-origin seed, 
    the majority of which--over 95 percent--are Canadian businesses. The 
    cost of obtaining a certificate of analysis from a Canadian government 
    or private laboratory is estimated to range from $13.00 to $58.00 per 
    lot, depending on the type of seed to be analyzed, or an average of $35 
    per lot. The cost is the same regardless of the size of the lot, which 
    can range from 50 to 50,000 pounds. Based upon fiscal year 1995 
    figures, there are approximately 6,000 seed shipments per year from 
    Canada that will require certification as a condition of importation 
    into the United States. For the majority of shipments, the cost of the 
    certification does not represent an additional expense because much of 
    the seed is likely to have been tested anyway to meet the requirements 
    of the exporting company's contracts with its importing customers. 
    Nevertheless, the cost of a certificate is small in comparison to the 
    average value of a seed shipment (which is typically worth thousands of 
    dollars) and will not, therefore, impose a significant economic burden 
    on Canadian seed exporters, large or small. For this reason, any cost 
    that is passed on to U.S. buyers of Canadian seed is likewise estimated 
    to be small.
        Less than 2 percent of the Canadian seed imported into the United 
    States is imported through transactions between Canadian seed exporters 
    and individual U.S. farms. (Individual farms located near the U.S.-
    Canadian border typically import small amounts of Canadian seed to be 
    used directly on farms.) While the exact number of these entities is 
    not known, it is expected that the impact to these individuals will be 
    small because seed sold in such small quantities is, in almost all 
    cases, already analyzed and certified prior to its entry into the 
    United States.
        Under these circumstances, the Administrator of the Animal and 
    Plant Health Inspection Service has determined that this action will 
    not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small 
    entities.
    
    Executive Order 12988
    
        This rule has been reviewed under Executive Order 12988, Civil 
    Justice Reform. This rule: (1) Preempts all State and local laws and 
    regulations that are inconsistent with this rule; (2) has no 
    retroactive effect; and (3) does not require administrative proceedings 
    before parties may file suit in court challenging this rule.
    
    Paperwork Reduction Act
    
        In accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 
    3501 et seq.), the information collection or recordkeeping requirements 
    included in this proposed rule have been approved by the Office of 
    Management and Budget (OMB) under OMB control number 0579-0124.
    
    Regulatory Reform
    
        This action is part of the President's Regulatory Reform 
    Initiative, which, among other things, directs agencies to remove 
    obsolete and unnecessary regulations and to find less burdensome ways 
    to achieve regulatory goals.
    
    List of Subjects
    
    7 CFR Part 201
    
        Advertising, Agricultural commodities, Imports, Labeling, Reporting 
    and recordkeeping requirements, Seeds, Vegetables.
    
    7 CFR Part 361
    
        Agricultural commodities, Imports, Labeling, Quarantine, Reporting 
    and recordkeeping requirements, Seeds, Vegetables, Weeds.
    
        Accordingly, title 7, chapters I and III, of the Code of Federal 
    Regulations are amended as follows:
    
    PART 201--FEDERAL SEED ACT REGULATIONS
    
        1. The authority citation for part 201 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1592.
    
    Sec. 201.38  [Amended]
    
        2. Section 201.38 is amended by removing the words ``Secs. 201.208 
    and 201.209'' and adding the words ``Sec. 361.4 of this title'' in 
    their place.
    
    [[Page 48460]]
    
    Secs. 201.101 through 201.230  [Removed]
    
        3. In 7 CFR part 201, Secs. 201.101 through 201.230 are removed.
        4. A new 7 CFR part 361 is added to read as follows:
    
    PART 361--IMPORTATION OF SEED AND SCREENINGS UNDER THE FEDERAL SEED 
    ACT
    
    Sec.
    361.1  Definitions.
    361.2  General restrictions on the importation of seed and 
    screenings.
    361.3  Declarations and labeling.
    361.4  Inspection at the port of first arrival.
    361.5  Sampling of seeds.
    361.6  Noxious weed seeds.
    361.7  Special provisions for Canadian-origin seed and screenings.
    361.8  Cleaning of imported seed and processing of certain Canadian-
    origin screenings.
    361.9  Recordkeeping.
    361.10  Costs and charges.
    
        Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1581-1610; 7 CFR 2.22, 2.80, and 371.2(c).
    
    Sec. 361.1  Definitions.
    
        Terms used in the singular form in this part shall be construed as 
    the plural, and vice versa, as the case may demand. The following 
    terms, when used in this part, shall be construed, respectively, to 
    mean:
        Administrator. The Administrator of the Animal and Plant Health 
    Inspection Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture, or any other 
    individual to whom the Administrator delegates authority to act in his 
    or her stead.
        Agricultural seed. The following kinds and varieties of grass, 
    forage, and field crop seed that are used for seeding purposes in the 
    United States:
    
    Agrotricum--x Agrotriticum Ciferri and Giacom.
    Alfalfa--Medicago sativa L.
    Alfilaria--Erodium cicutarium (L.) L'Her.
    Alyceclover--Alysicarpus vaginalis (L.) DC.
    Bahiagrass--Paspalum notatum Fluegge
    Barley--Hordeum vulgare L.
    Barrelclover--Medicago truncatula Gaertn.
    Bean, adzuki--Vigna angularis (Willd.) Ohwi and Ohashi
    Bean, field--Phaseolus vulgaris L.
    Bean, mung--Vigna radiata (L.) Wilczek
    Beet, field--Beta vulgaris L. subsp. vulgaris
    Beet, sugar--Beta vulgaris L. subsp. vulgaris 
    Beggarweed, Florida--Desmodium tortuosum (Sw.) DC.
    Bentgrass, colonial--Agrostis capillaris L.
    Bentgrass, creeping--Agrostis stolonifera L. var. palustris (Huds.) 
    Farw.
    Bentgrass, velvet--Agrostis canina L.
    Bermudagrass--Cynodon dactylon (L.) Pers. var. dactylon
    Bermudagrass, giant--Cynodon dactylon (L.) Pers. var. aridus Harlan 
    and de Wet
    Bluegrass, annual--Poa annua L.
    Bluegrass, bulbous--Poa bulbosa L.
    Bluegrass, Canada--Poa compressa L.
    Bluegrass, glaucantha--Poa glauca Vahl
    Bluegrass, Kentucky--Poa pratensis L.
    Bluegrass, Nevada--Poa secunda J.S. Presl
    Bluegrass, rough--Poa trivialis L.
    Bluegrass, Texas--Poa arachnifera Torr.
    Bluegrass, wood--Poa nemoralis L.
    Bluejoint--Calamagrostis canadensis (Michx.) P. Beauv.
    Bluestem, big--Andropogon gerardii Vitm. var. gerardii
    Bluestem, little--Schizachyrium scoparium (Michx.) Nash
    Bluestem, sand--Andropogon hallii Hack.
    Bluestem, yellow--Bothriochloa ischaemum (L.) Keng
    Bottlebrush-squirreltail--Elymus elymoides (Raf.) Swezey
    Brome, field--Bromus arvensis L.
    Brome, meadow--Bromus biebersteinii Roem. and Schult.
    Brome, mountain--Bromus marginatus Steud.
    Brome, smooth--Bromus inermis Leyss.
    Broomcorn--Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench
    Buckwheat--Fagopyrum esculentum Moench
    Buffalograss--Buchloe dactyloides (Nutt.) Engelm.
    Buffelgrass--Cenchrus ciliaris L.
    Burclover, California--Medicago polymorpha L.
    Burclover, spotted--Medicago arabica (L.) Huds.
    Burnet, little--Sanguisorba minor Scop.
    Buttonclover--Medicago orbicularis (L.) Bartal.
    Canarygrass--Phalaris canariensis L.
    Canarygrass, reed--Phalaris arundinacea L.
    Carpetgrass--Axonopus fissifolius (Raddi) Kuhlm.
    Castorbean--Ricinus communis L.
    Chess, soft--Bromus hordeaceus L.
    Chickpea--Cicer arietinum L.
    Clover, alsike--Trifolium hybridum L.
    Clover, arrowleaf--Trifolium vesiculosum Savi
    Clover, berseem--Trifolium alexandrinum L.
    Clover, cluster--Trifolium glomeratum L.
    Clover, crimson--Trifolium incarnatum L.
    Clover, Kenya--Trifolium semipilosum Fresen.
    Clover, ladino--Trifolium repens L.
    Clover, lappa--Trifolium lappaceum L.
    Clover, large hop--Trifolium campestre Schreb.
    Clover, Persian--Trifolium resupinatum L.
    Clover, red or
        Red clover, mammoth--Trifolium pratense L.
        Red clover, medium--Trifolium pratense L.
    Clover, rose--Trifolium hirtum All.
    Clover, small hop or suckling--Trifolium dubium Sibth.
    Clover, strawberry--Trifolium fragiferum L.
    Clover, sub or subterranean--Trifolium subterraneum L.
    Clover, white--Trifolium repens L. (also see Clover, ladino)
    Clover--(also see Alyceclover, Burclover, Buttonclover, Sourclover,
    Sweetclover)
    Corn, field--Zea mays L.
    Corn, pop--Zea mays L.
    Cotton--Gossypium spp.
    Cowpea--Vigna unguiculata (L.) Walp. subsp. unguiculata
    Crambe--Crambe abyssinica R.E. Fries
    Crested dogtail--Cynosurus cristatus L.
    Crotalaria, lance--Crotalaria lanceolata E. Mey.
    Crotalaria, showy--Crotalaria spectabilis Roth
    Crotalaria, slenderleaf--Crotalaria brevidens Benth. var. intermedia 
    (Kotschy) Polh.
    Crotalaria, striped or smooth--Crotalaria pallida Ait.
    Crotalaria, sunn--Crotalaria juncea L.
    Crownvetch--Coronilla varia L.
    Dallisgrass--Paspalum dilatatum Poir.
    Dichondra--Dichondra repens Forst. and Forst. f.
    Dropseed, sand--Sporobolus cryptandrus (Torr.) A. Gray
    Emmer--Triticum dicoccon Schrank
    Fescue, chewings--Festuca rubra L. subsp. commutata Gaud.
    Fescue, hair--Festuca tenuifolia Sibth.
    Fescue, hard--Festuca brevipila Tracey
    Fescue, meadow--Festuca pratensis Huds.
    Fescue, red--Festuca rubra L. subsp. rubra
    Fescue, sheep--Festuca ovina L. var. ovina
    Fescue, tall--Festuca arundinacea Schreb.
    Flax--Linum usitatissimum L.
    Galletagrass--Hilaria jamesii (Torr.) Benth.
    Grama, blue--Bouteloua gracilis (Kunth) Steud.
    Grama, side-oats--Bouteloua curtipendula (Michx.) Torr.
    Guar--Cyamopsis tetragonoloba (L.) Taub.
    Guineagrass--Panicum maximum Jacq. var. maximum
    Hardinggrass--Phalaris stenoptera Hack.
    Hemp--Cannabis sativa L.
    Indiangrass, yellow--Sorghastrum nutans (L.) Nash
    Indigo, hairy--Indigofera hirsuta L.
    Japanese lawngrass--Zoysia japonica Steud.
    Johnsongrass--Sorghum halepense (L.) Pers.
    Kenaf--Hibiscus cannabinus L.
    Kochia, forage--Kochia prostrata (L.) Schrad.
    Kudzu--Pueraria montana (Lour.) Merr. var. lobata (Willd.) Maesen 
    and S. Almeida
    Lentil--Lens culinaris Medik.
    Lespedeza, Korean--Kummerowia stipulacea (Maxim.) Makino
    Lespedeza, sericea or Chinese--Lespedeza cuneata (Dum.-Cours.) G. 
    Don
    Lespedeza, Siberian--Lespedeza juncea (L. f.) Pers.
    Lespedeza, striate--Kummerowia striata (Thunb.) Schindler
    Lovegrass, sand--Eragrostis trichodes (Nutt.) Wood
    Lovegrass, weeping--Eragrostis curvula (Schrad.) Nees
    Lupine, blue--Lupinus angustifolius L.
    Lupine, white--Lupinus albus L.
    Lupine, yellow--Lupinus luteus L.
    Manilagrass--Zoysia matrella (L.) Merr.
    Meadow foxtail--Alopecurus pratensis L.
    Medic, black--Medicago lupulina L.
    Milkvetch or cicer milkvetch--Astragalus cicer L.
    Millet, browntop--Brachiaria ramosa (L.) Stapf
    Millet, foxtail--Setaria italica (L.) Beauv.
    Millet, Japanese--Echinochloa frumentacea Link
    Millet, pearl--Pennisetum glaucum (L.) R. Br.
    Millet, proso--Panicum miliaceum L.
    Molassesgrass--Melinis minutiflora Beauv.
    Mustard, black--Brassica nigra (L.) Koch
    Mustard, India--Brassica juncea (L.) Czernj. and Coss.
    
    [[Page 48461]]
    
    Mustard, white--Sinapis alba L.
    Napiergrass--Pennisetum purpureum Schumach.
    Needlegrass, green--Stipa viridula Trin.
    Oat--Avena byzantina C. Koch, A. sativa L., A. nuda L.
    Oatgrass, tall--Arrhenatherum elatius (L.) J.S. Presl and K.B. Presl
    Orchardgrass--Dactylis glomerata L.
    Panicgrass, blue--Panicum antidotale Retz.
    Panicgrass, green--Panicum maximum Jacq. var. trichoglume Robyns
    Pea, field--Pisum sativum L.
    Peanut--Arachis hypogaea L.
    Poa trivialis--(see Bluegrass, rough)
    Rape, annual--Brassica napus L. var. annua Koch
    Rape, bird--Brassica rapa L. subsp. rapa
    Rape, turnip--Brassica rapa L. subsp. silvestris (Lam.) Janchen
    Rape, winter--Brassica napus L. var. biennis (Schubl. and Mart.) 
    Reichb.
    Redtop--Agrostis gigantea Roth
    Rescuegrass--Bromus catharticus Vahl
    Rhodesgrass--Chloris gayana Kunth
    Rice--Oryza sativa L.
    Ricegrass, Indian--Oryzopsis hymenoides (Roem. and Schult.) Ricker
    Roughpea--Lathyrus hirsutus L.
    Rye--Secale cereale L.
    Rye, mountain--Secale strictum (K.B. Presl) K.B. Presl subsp. 
    strictum
    Ryegrass, annual or Italian--Lolium multiflorum Lam.
    Ryegrass, intermediate--Lolium x hybridum Hausskn.
    Ryegrass, perennial--Lolium perenne L.
    Ryegrass, Wimmera--Lolium rigidum Gaud.
    Safflower--Carthamus tinctorius L.
    Sagewort, Louisiana--Artemisia ludoviciana Nutt.
    Sainfoin--Onobrychis viciifolia Scop.
    Saltbush, fourwing--Atriplex canescens (Pursh) Nutt.
    Sesame--Sesamum indicum L.
    Sesbania--Sesbania exaltata (Raf.) A.W. Hill
    Smilo--Piptatherum miliaceum (L.) Coss.
    Sorghum--Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench
    Sorghum almum--Sorghum x almum L. Parodi
    Sorghum-sudangrass--Sorghum x drummondii (Steud.) Millsp. and Chase
    Sorgrass--Rhizomatous derivatives of a johnsongrass x sorghum cross 
    or a johnsongrass x sudangrass cross Southernpea--(See Cowpea)
    Sourclover--Melilotus indicus (L.) All.
    Soybean--Glycine max (L.) Merr.
    Spelt--Triticum spelta L.
    Sudangrass--Sorghum x drummondii (Steud.) Millsp. and Chase
    Sunflower--Helianthus annuus L.
    Sweetclover, white--Melilotus albus Medik.
    Sweetclover, yellow--Melilotus officinalis Lam.
    Sweet vernalgrass--Anthoxanthum odoratum L.
    Sweetvetch, northern--Hedysarum boreale Nutt.
    Switchgrass--Panicum virgatum L.
    Timothy--Phleum pratense L.
    Timothy, turf--Phleum bertolonii DC.
    Tobacco--Nicotiana tabacum L.
    Trefoil, big--Lotus uliginosus Schk.
    Trefoil, birdsfoot--Lotus corniculatus L.
    Triticale--x Triticosecale Wittm. (Secale x Triticum)
    Vaseygrass--Paspalum urvillei Steud.
    Veldtgrass--Ehrharta calycina J.E. Smith
    Velvetbean--Mucuna pruriens (L.) DC. var. utilis (Wight) Burck
    Velvetgrass--Holcus lanatus L.
    Vetch, common--Vicia sativa L. subsp. sativa
    Vetch, hairy--Vicia villosa Roth subsp. villosa
    Vetch, Hungarian--Vicia pannonica Crantz
    Vetch, monantha--Vicia articulata Hornem.
    Vetch, narrowleaf or blackpod--Vicia sativa L. subsp. nigra (L.) 
    Ehrh.
    Vetch, purple--Vicia benghalensis L.
    Vetch, woollypod or winter--Vicia villosa Roth subsp. varia (Host) 
    Corb.
    Wheat, common--Triticum aestivum L.
    Wheat, club--Triticum compactum Host
    Wheat, durum--Triticum durum Desf.
    Wheat, Polish--Triticum polonicum L.
    Wheat, poulard--Triticum turgidum L.
    Wheat x Agrotricum--Triticum x Agrotriticum
    Wheatgrass, beardless--Pseudoroegneria spicata (Pursh) A. Love
    Wheatgrass, crested or fairway crested--Agropyron cristatum (L.) 
    Gaertn.
    Wheatgrass, crested or standard crested--Agropyron desertorum (Link) 
    Schult.
    Wheatgrass, intermediate--Elytrigia intermedia (Host) Nevski subsp. 
    intermedia
    Wheatgrass, pubescent--Elytrigia intermedia (Host) Nevski subsp. 
    intermedia
    Wheatgrass, Siberian--Agropyron fragile (Roth) Candargy subsp. 
    sibiricum (Willd.) Meld.
    Wheatgrass, slender--Elymus trachycaulus (Link) Shinn.
    Wheatgrass, streambank--Elymus lanceolatus (Scribn. and J.G. Smith) 
    Gould subsp. lanceolatus
    Wheatgrass, tall--Elytrigia elongata (Host) Nevski
    Wheatgrass, western--Pascopyrum smithii (Rydb.) A. Love
    Wildrye, basin--Leymus cinereus (Scribn. and Merr.) A. Love
    Wildrye, Canada--Elymus canadensis L.
    Wildrye, Russian--Psathyrostachys juncea (Fisch.) Nevski
    Zoysia japonica--(see Japanese lawngrass)
    Zoysia matrella--(see Manilagrass)
    
        Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS). The Animal and 
    Plant Health Inspection Service of the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
        APHIS inspector. Any employee of the Animal and Plant Health 
    Inspection Service or any other individual authorized by the 
    Administrator to enforce this part.
        Coated Seed. Any seed unit covered with any substance that changes 
    the size, shape, or weight of the original seed. Seeds coated with 
    ingredients such as, but not limited to, rhizobia, dyes, and pesticides 
    are excluded.
        Declaration. A written statement of a grower, shipper, processor, 
    dealer, or importer giving for any lot of seed the kind, variety, type, 
    origin, or the use for which the seed is intended.
        Hybrid. When applied to kinds or varieties of seed means the first 
    generation seed of a cross produced by controlling the pollination and 
    by combining two or more inbred lines; one inbred or a single cross 
    with an open-pollinated variety; or two selected clones, seed lines, 
    varieties, or species. ``Controlling the pollination'' means to use a 
    method of hybridization that will produce pure seed that is at least 75 
    percent hybrid seed. Hybrid designations shall be treated as variety 
    names.
        Import/importation. To bring into the territorial limits of the 
    United States.
        Kind. One or more related species or subspecies that singly or 
    collectively is known by one common name, e.g., soybean, flax, or 
    carrot.
        Lot of seed. A definite quantity of seed identified by a lot 
    number, every portion or bag of which is uniform, within permitted 
    tolerances, for the factors that appear in the labeling.
        Mixture. Seeds consisting of more than one kind or variety, each 
    present in excess of 5 percent of the whole.
        Official seed laboratory. An official laboratory member of the 
    Association of Official Seed Analysts.
        Pelleted seed. Any seed unit covered with a substance that changes 
    the size, shape, or weight of the original seed in order to improve the 
    plantability or singulation of the seed.
        Person. Any individual, partnership, corporation, company, society, 
    association, receiver, trustee, or other legal entity or organized 
    group.
        Port of first arrival. The land area (such as a seaport, airport, 
    or land border station) where a person, or a land, water, or air 
    vehicle, first arrives after entering the territorial limits of the 
    United States, and where inspection of articles is carried out by APHIS 
    inspectors.
        Registered seed technologist. A registered member of the Society of 
    Commercial Seed Technologists.
        Screenings. Chaff, sterile florets, immature seed, weed seed, inert 
    matter, and any other materials removed in any way from any seeds in 
    any kind of cleaning or processing and which contains less than 25 
    percent of live agricultural or vegetable seeds.
        State. Any State, the District of Columbia, American Samoa, Guam, 
    the Northern Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands of the 
    United States, and any other territory or possession of the United 
    States.
        United States. All of the States.
        Variety. A subdivision of a kind which is characterized by growth, 
    plant, fruit, seed, or other characteristics by which it can be 
    differentiated from other sorts of the same kind.
    
    [[Page 48462]]
    
        Vegetable seed. The seed of the following kinds and varieties that 
    are or may be grown in gardens or on truck farms and are or may be 
    generally known and sold under the name of vegetable seed:
    
    Artichoke--Cynara cardunculus L. subsp. cardunculus
    Asparagus--Asparagus officinalis Baker
    Asparagusbean or yard-long bean--Vigna unguiculata (L.) Walp. subsp. 
    sesquipedalis (L.) Verdc.
    Bean, garden--Phaseolus vulgaris L.
    Bean, lima--Phaseolus lunatus L.
    Bean, runner or scarlet runner--Phaseolus coccineus L.
    Beet--Beta vulgaris L. subsp. vulgaris
    Broadbean--Vicia faba L.
    Broccoli--Brassica oleracea L. var. botrytis L.
    Brussels sprouts--Brassica oleracea L. var. gemmifera DC.
    Burdock, great--Arctium lappa L.
    Cabbage--Brassica oleracea L. var. capitata L.
    Cabbage, Chinese--Brassica rapa L. subsp. pekinensis (Lour.) Hanelt
    Cabbage, tronchuda--Brassica oleracea L. var. costata DC.
    Cantaloupe--(see Melon)
    Cardoon--Cynara cardunculus L. subsp. cardunculus
    Carrot--Daucus carota L. subsp. sativus (Hoffm.) Arcang.
    Cauliflower--Brassica oleracea L. var. botrytis L.
    Celeriac--Apium graveolens L. var. rapaceum (Mill.) Gaud.
    Celery--Apium graveolens L. var. dulce (Mill.) Pers.
    Chard, Swiss--Beta vulgaris L. subsp. cicla (L.) Koch
    Chicory--Cichorium intybus L.
    Chives--Allium schoenoprasum L.
    Citron--Citrullus lanatus (Thunb.) Matsum. and Nakai var. citroides 
    (Bailey) Mansf.
    Collards--Brassica oleracea L. var. acephala DC.
    Corn, sweet--Zea mays L.
    Cornsalad--Valerianella locusta (L.) Laterrade
    Cowpea--Vigna unguiculata (L.) Walp. subsp. unguiculata
    Cress, garden--Lepidium sativum L.
    Cress, upland--Barbarea verna (Mill.) Asch.
    Cress, water--Rorippa nasturtium-aquaticum (L.) Hayek
    Cucumber--Cucumis sativus L.
    Dandelion--Taraxacum officinale Wigg.
    Dill--Anethum graveolens L.
    Eggplant--Solanum melongena L.
    Endive--Cichorium endivia L.
    Gherkin, West India--Cucumis anguria L.
    Kale--Brassica oleracea L. var. acephala DC.
    Kale, Chinese--Brassica oleracea L. var. alboglabra (Bailey) Musil
    Kale, Siberian--Brassica napus L. var. pabularia (DC.) Reichb.
    Kohlrabi--Brassica oleracea L. var. gongylodes L.
    Leek--Allium porrum L.
    Lettuce--Lactuca sativa L.
    Melon--Cucumis melo L.
    Muskmelon--(see Melon).
    Mustard, India--Brassica juncea (L.) Czernj. and Coss.
    Mustard, spinach--Brassica perviridis (Bailey) Bailey
    Okra--Abelmoschus esculentus (L.) Moench
    Onion--Allium cepa L.
    Onion, Welsh--Allium fistulosum L.
    Pak-choi--Brassica rapa L. subsp. chinensis (L.) Hanelt
    Parsley--Petroselinum crispum (Mill.) A.W. Hill
    Parsnip--Pastinaca sativa L.
    Pea--Pisum sativum L.
    Pepper--Capsicum spp.
    Pe-tsai--(see Chinese cabbage).
    Pumpkin--Cucurbita pepo L., C. moschata (Duchesne) Poiret, and C. 
    maxima Duchesne
    Radish--Raphanus sativus L.
    Rhubarb--Rheum rhabarbarum L.
    Rutabaga--Brassica napus L. var. napobrassica (L.) Reichb.
    Sage--Salvia officinalis L.
    Salsify--Tragopogon porrifolius L.
    Savory, summer--Satureja hortensis L.
    Sorrel--Rumex acetosa L.
    Southernpea--(see Cowpea).
    Soybean--Glycine max (L.) Merr.
    Spinach--Spinacia oleracea L.
    Spinach, New Zealand--Tetragonia tetragonioides (Pall.) Ktze.
    Squash--Cucurbita pepo L., C. moschata (Duchesne) Poiret, and C. 
    maxima Duchesne
    Tomato--Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.
    Tomato, husk--Physalis pubescens L.
    Turnip--Brassica rapa L. subsp. rapa
    Watermelon--Citrullus lanatus (Thunb.) Matsum. and Nakai var. 
    lanatus
    
    
    Sec. 361.2  General restrictions on the importation of seed and 
    screenings.
    
        (a) No person shall import any agricultural seed, vegetable seed, 
    or screenings into the United States unless the importation is in 
    compliance with this part.
        (b) Any agricultural seed, vegetable seed, or screenings imported 
    into the United States not in compliance with this part shall be 
    subject to exportation, destruction, disposal, or any remedial measures 
    that the Administrator determines are necessary to prevent the 
    dissemination into the United States of noxious weeds.
        (c) Except as provided in Sec. 361.7(b), coated or pelleted seed 
    may enter the United States only if each lot of seed is accompanied by 
    an officially drawn and sealed sample of seed drawn from the lot before 
    the seed was coated or pelleted. The sample must be drawn in a manner 
    consistent with that described in Sec. 361.5 of this part.
        (d) Except as provided in Secs. 361.4(a)(3) and 361.7(c), 
    screenings of all agricultural seed and vegetable seed are prohibited 
    entry into the United States.
    
    
    Sec. 361.3  Declarations and labeling.
    
        (a) All lots of agricultural seed, vegetable seed, and screenings 
    imported into the United States must be accompanied by a declaration 
    from the importer of the seed or screenings. The declaration must state 
    the kind, variety, and origin of each lot of seed or screenings and the 
    use for which the seed or screenings are being imported.
        (b) Each container of agricultural seed and vegetable seed imported 
    into the United States for seeding (planting) purposes must be labeled 
    to indicate the identification code or designation for the lot of seed; 
    the name of each kind or kind and variety of agricultural seed or the 
    name of each kind and variety of vegetable seed present in the lot in 
    excess of 5 percent of the whole; and the designation ``hybrid'' when 
    the lot contains hybrid seed. Kind and variety names used on the label 
    shall conform to the kind and variety names used in the definitions of 
    ``agricultural seed'' and ``vegetable seed'' in Sec. 361.1. If any seed 
    in the lot has been treated, each container must be further labeled, in 
    type no smaller than 8 point, as follows:
        (1) The label must indicate that the seed has been treated and 
    provide the name of the substance or process used to treat the seed. 
    Substance names used on the label shall be the commonly accepted 
    coined, chemical (generic), or abbreviated chemical name.
        (i) Commonly accepted coined names are commonly recognized as names 
    of particular substances, e.g., thiram, captan, lindane, and dichlone.
        (ii) Examples of commonly accepted chemical (generic) names are 
    blue-stone, calcium carbonate, cuprous oxide, zinc hydroxide, 
    hexachlorobenzene, and ethyl mercury acetate. The terms ``mercury'' or 
    ``mercurial'' may be used in labeling all types of mercurials.
        (iii) Examples of commonly accepted abbreviated chemical names are 
    BHC (1,2,3,4,5,6-Hexachlorocyclohexane) and DDT (dichloro diphenyl 
    trichloroethane).
        (2) If the seed has been treated with a mercurial or similarly 
    toxic substance harmful to humans and vertebrate animals, the label 
    must include a representation of a skull and crossbones and a statement 
    indicating that the seed has been treated with poison. The skull and 
    crossbones must be at least twice the size of the type used for the 
    information provided on the label, and the poison warning statement 
    must be written in red letters on a background of distinctly 
    contrasting color. Mercurials and similarly toxic substances include 
    the following:
    
    Aldrin, technical
    Demeton
    Dieldrin
    p-Dimethylaminobenzenediazo sodium sulfonate
    Endrin
    
    [[Page 48463]]
    
    Ethion
    Heptachlor
    Mercurials, all types
    Parathion
    Phorate
    Toxaphene
    O-O-Diethyl-O-(isopropyl-4-methyl-6-pyrimidyl) thiophosphate
    O,O-Diethyl-S-2-(ethylthio) ethyl phosphorodithioate
    
        (3) If the seed has been treated with a substance other than one 
    classified as a mercurial or similarly toxic substance under paragraph 
    (b)(2) of this section, and the amount remaining with the seed is 
    harmful to humans or other vertebrate animals, the label must indicate 
    that the seed is not to be used for food, feed, or oil purposes. Any 
    amount of any substance used to treat the seed that remains with the 
    seed will be considered harmful when the seed is in containers of more 
    than 4 ounces, except that the following substances will not be deemed 
    harmful when present at a rate less than the number of parts per 
    million (p/m) indicated:
    
    Allethrin--2 p/m
    Malathion--8 p/m
    Methoxyclor--2 p/m
    Piperonyl butoxide--20 p/m (8 p/m on oat and sorghum)
    Pyrethrins--3 p/m (1 p/m on oat and sorghum)
    
        (c) In the case of seed in bulk, the information required under 
    paragraph (b) of this section shall appear in the invoice or other 
    records accompanying and pertaining to such seed. If the seed is in 
    containers and in quantities of 20,000 pounds or more, regardless of 
    the number of lots included, the information required on each container 
    under paragraph (b) of this section need not be shown on each container 
    if each container has stenciled upon it or bears a label containing a 
    lot designation and the invoice or other records accompanying and 
    pertaining to such seed bear the various statements required for the 
    respective seeds.
        (d) Each container of agricultural seed and vegetable seed imported 
    into the United States for cleaning need not be labeled to show the 
    information required under paragraph (b) of this section if:
        (1) The seed is in bulk;
        (2) The seed is in containers and in quantities of 20,000 pounds or 
    more, regardless of the number of lots involved, and the invoice or 
    other records accompanying and pertaining to the seed show that the 
    seed is for cleaning; or
        (3) The seed is in containers and in quantities of less than 20,000 
    pounds, and each container carries a label that bears the words ``Seed 
    for cleaning.''
    
    
    Sec. 361.4  Inspection at the port of first arrival.
    
        (a) All agricultural seed, vegetable seed, and screenings imported 
    into the United States shall be made available for examination by an 
    APHIS inspector at the port of first arrival and shall remain at the 
    port of first arrival until released by an APHIS inspector. Lots of 
    agricultural seed, vegetable seed, or screenings may enter the United 
    States without meeting the sampling requirements of paragraph (b) of 
    this section if the lot is:
        (1) Seed that is not being imported for seeding (planting) purposes 
    and the declaration required by Sec. 361.3(a) states the purpose for 
    which the seed is being imported;
        (2) Seed that is being shipped in bond through the United States;
        (3) Screenings from seeds of wheat, oats, barley, rye, buckwheat, 
    field corn, sorghum, broomcorn, flax, millet, proso, soybeans, cowpeas, 
    field peas, or field beans that are not being imported for seeding 
    (planting) purposes and the declaration accompanying the screenings as 
    required under Sec. 361.2(a) indicates that the screenings are being 
    imported for processing or manufacturing purposes;
        (4) Seed that is being imported for sowing for experimental or 
    breeding purposes, is not for sale, is limited in quantity to the 
    amount indicated in column 3 of table 1 of Sec. 361.5, and is 
    accompanied by a declaration stating the purpose for which it is being 
    imported (seed imported for increase purposes only will not be 
    considered as being imported for experimental or breeding purposes); or
        (5) Seed that was grown in the United States, exported, and is now 
    returning to the United States, provided that the person importing the 
    seed into the United States furnishes APHIS with the following 
    documentation:
        (i) Export documents indicating the quantity of seed and number of 
    containers, the date of exportation from the United States, the 
    distinguishing marks on the containers at the time of exportation, and 
    the name and address of the United States exporter;
        (ii) A document issued by a Customs or other government official of 
    the country to which the seed was exported indicating that the seed was 
    not admitted into the commerce of that country; and
        (iii) A document issued by a Customs or other government official 
    of the country to which the seed was exported indicating that the seed 
    was not commingled with other seed after being exported to that 
    country.
        (b) Except as provided in Secs. 361.5(a)(2) and 361.7, samples will 
    be taken from all agricultural seed and vegetable seed imported into 
    the United States for seeding (planting) purposes prior to being 
    released into the commerce of the United States.
        (1) Samples of seed will be taken from each lot of seed in 
    accordance with Sec. 361.5 to determine whether any seeds of noxious 
    weeds listed in Sec. 361.6(a) are present. If seeds of noxious weeds 
    are present at a level higher than the tolerances set forth in 
    Sec. 361.6(b), the lot of seed will be deemed to be adulterated and 
    will be rejected for entry into the United States for seeding 
    (planting) purposes. Once deemed adulterated, the lot of seed must be:
        (i) Exported from the United States;
        (ii) Destroyed under the monitoring of an APHIS inspector;
        (iii) Cleaned under APHIS monitoring at a seed-cleaning facility 
    that is operated in accordance with Sec. 361.8(a); or
        (iv) If the lot of seed is adulterated with the seeds of a noxious 
    weed listed in Sec. 361.6(a)(2), the seed may be allowed entry into the 
    United States for feeding or manufacturing purposes, provided the 
    importer withdraws the original declaration and files a new declaration 
    stating that the seed is being imported for feeding or manufacturing 
    purposes and that no part of the seed will be used for seeding 
    (planting) purposes.
        (2) Seed deemed adulterated may not be mixed with any other seed 
    unless the Administrator determines that two or more lots of seed 
    deemed adulterated are of substantially the same quality and origin. In 
    such cases, the Administrator may allow the adulterated lots of seed to 
    be mixed for cleaning as provided in paragraph (b)(1)(iii) of this 
    section.
        (3) If the labeling of a lot of seed is false or misleading in any 
    respect, the seed will be rejected for entry into the United States. A 
    falsely labeled lot of seed must be:
        (i) Exported from the United States;
        (ii) Destroyed under the monitoring of an APHIS inspector; or
        (iii) The seed may be allowed entry into the United States if the 
    labeling is corrected under the monitoring of an APHIS inspector to 
    accurately reflect the character of the lot of seed.
    
    
    Sec. 361.5  Sampling of seeds.
    
        (a) Sample sizes. As provided in Sec. 361.4(b), samples of seed 
    will be taken from each lot of seed being imported for seeding 
    (planting) purposes to determine whether any seeds of noxious weeds 
    listed in Sec. 361.6(a) are present. The samples shall be drawn in the 
    manner described in paragraphs (b) and
    
    [[Page 48464]]
    
    (c) of this section. Unused portions of samples of rare or expensive 
    seeds will be returned by APHIS upon request of the importer.
        (1) A minimum sample of not less than 1 quart shall be drawn from 
    each lot of agricultural seed; a minimum sample of not less than 1 pint 
    shall be drawn from each lot of vegetable seed, except that a sample of 
    \1/4\ pint will be sufficient for a vegetable seed importation of 5 
    pounds or less. The minimum sample shall be divided repeatedly until a 
    working sample of proper weight has been obtained. If a mechanical 
    divider cannot be used or is not available, the sample shall be 
    thoroughly mixed, then placed in a pile; the pile shall be divided 
    repeatedly into halves until a working sample of the proper weight 
    remains. The weights of the working samples for noxious weed 
    examination for each lot of seed are shown in column 1 of table 1 of 
    this section. If the lot of seed is a mixture, the following methods 
    shall be used to determine the weight of the working sample:
        (i) If the lot of seed is a mixture consisting of one predominant 
    kind of seed or a group of kinds of similar size, the weight of the 
    working sample shall be the weight shown in column 1 of table 1 of this 
    section for the kind or group of kinds that comprises more than 50 
    percent of the sample.
        (ii) If the lot of seed is a mixture consisting of two or more 
    kinds or groups of kinds of different sizes, none of which comprises 
    over 50 percent of the sample, the weight of the working sample shall 
    be the weighted average (to the nearest half gram) of the weight shown 
    in column 1 of table 1 of this section for each of the kinds that 
    comprise the sample, as determined by the following method:
        (A) Multiply the percentage of each component of the mixture 
    (rounded off to the nearest whole number) by the sample sizes shown in 
    column 1 of table 1 of this section;
        (B) add all these products;
        (C) total the percentages of all components of the mixtures; and
        (D) divide the sum in paragraph (a)(1)(ii)(B) of this section by 
    the total in paragraph (a)(1)(ii)(C) of this section.
        (2) It is not ordinarily practical to sample and test small lots of 
    seed offered for entry. The maximum sizes of lots of each kind of seed 
    not ordinarily sampled are shown in column 2 of table 1 of this 
    section.
        (3) The maximum sizes of lots of each kind of seed allowed entry 
    without sampling for sowing for experimental or breeding purposes as 
    provided in Sec. 361.4(a)(4) are shown in column 3 of table 1 of this 
    section.
    
                                                         Table 1                                                    
                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                   Maximum weight of
                                                                                                        seed lot    
                                                               Working weight   Maximum weight of   permitted entry 
                                                              for noxious weed     seed lot not     for experimental
                          Name of seed                          examination         ordinarily        or breeding   
                                                                  (grams)       sampled  (pounds)   purposes without
                                                                                                        sampling    
                                                                                                        (pounds)    
                                                                           (1)                (2)                (3)
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    VEGETABLE SEED:                                                                                                 
        Artichoke..........................................                500                 25                 50
        Asparagus..........................................                500                 25                 50
        Asparagusbean......................................                500                 25                 50
        Bean...............................................                                    25                200
            Garden.........................................                500                100                500
            Lima...........................................                500                 25                200
            Runner.........................................                500                 25                200
        Beet...............................................                300                 25                 50
        Broadbean..........................................                500                 25                200
        Broccoli...........................................                 50                  5                 10
        Brussels sprouts...................................                 50                  5                 10
        Burdock, great.....................................                150                 10                 50
        Cabbage............................................                 50                  5                 10
        Cabbage, Chinese...................................                 50                  5                 10
        Cabbage, tronchuda.................................                100                  5                 10
        Cantaloupe (see Melon).............................                                                         
        Cardoon............................................                500                 25                 50
        Carrot.............................................                 50                  5                 10
        Cauliflower........................................                 50                  5                 10
        Celeriac...........................................                 25                  5                 10
        Celery.............................................                 25                  5                 10
        Chard, Swiss.......................................                300                 25                 50
        Chicory............................................                 50                  5                 10
        Chives.............................................                 50                  5                 10
        Citron.............................................                500                 25                 50
        Collards...........................................                 50                  5                 10
        Corn, sweet........................................                500                 25                200
        Cornsalad..........................................                 50                  5                 10
        Cowpea.............................................                500                 25                200
        Cress, garden......................................                 50                  5                 10
        Cress, upland......................................                 35                  5                 10
        Cress, water.......................................                 25                  5                 10
        Cucumber...........................................                500                 25                 50
        Dandelion..........................................                 35                  5                 10
        Dill...............................................                 50                  5                 10
        Eggplant...........................................                 50                  5                 10
        Endive.............................................                 50                  5                 10
    
    [[Page 48465]]
    
                                                                                                                    
        Gherkin, West India................................                160                 25                 50
        Kale...............................................                 50                  5                 10
        Kale, Chinese......................................                 50                  5                 10
        Kale, Siberian.....................................                 80                  5                 10
        Kohlrabi...........................................                 50                  5                 10
        Leek...............................................                 50                  5                 10
        Lettuce............................................                 50                  5                 10
        Melon..............................................                500                 25                 50
        Mustard, India.....................................                 50                 25                100
        Mustard, spinach...................................                 50                  5                 10
        Okra...............................................                500                 25                 50
        Onion..............................................                 50                  5                 10
        Onion, Welsh.......................................                 50                  5                 10
        Pak-choi...........................................                 50                  5                 10
        Parsley............................................                 50                  5                 10
        Parsnip............................................                 50                  5                 10
        Pea................................................                500                 25                200
        Pepper.............................................                150                  5                 10
                                                                                                                    
        Pumpkin............................................                500                 25                 50
        Radish.............................................                300                 25                 50
        Rhubarb............................................                300                  5                 10
        Rutabaga...........................................                 50                  5                 10
        Sage...............................................                150                 25                 50
        Salsify............................................                300                 25                 50
        Savory, summer.....................................                 35                  5                 10
        Sorrel.............................................                 35                  5                 10
        Soybean............................................                500                 25                200
        Spinach............................................                150                 25                 50
        Spinach, New Zealand...............................                500                 25                 50
        Squash.............................................                500                 25                 50
        Tomato.............................................                 50                  5                 10
        Tomato, husk.......................................                 35                  5                 10
        Turnip.............................................                 50                  5                 10
        Watermelon.........................................                500                 25                 50
    AGRICULTURAL SEED:                                                                                              
        Agrotricum.........................................                500                100                500
        Alfalfa............................................                 50                 25                100
        Alfilaria..........................................                 50                 25                100
        Alyceclover........................................                 50                 25                100
        Bahiagrass.........................................                 50                 25                100
        Barrelclover.......................................                100                 25                100
        Barley.............................................                500                100                500
        Bean, adzuki.......................................                500                100                500
        Bean, field........................................                500                100                500
        Bean, mung.........................................                500                100                500
        Bean (see Velvetbean)..............................                                                         
        Beet, field........................................                500                100                500
        Beet, sugar........................................                500                100              1,000
        Beggarweed.........................................                 50                 25                100
        Bentgrass, colonial................................                2.5                 25                100
        Bentgrass, creeping................................                2.5                 25                100
        Bentgrass, velvet..................................                2.5                 25                100
        Bermudagrass.......................................                 10                 25                100
        Bermudagrass, giant................................                 10                 25                100
        Bluegrass, annual..................................                 10                 25                100
        Bluegrass, bulbous.................................                 40                 25                100
        Bluegrass, Canada..................................                  5                 25                100
        Bluegrass, glaucantha..............................                 10                 25                100
        Bluegrass, Kentucky................................                 10                 25                100
        Bluegrass, Nevada..................................                 10                 25                100
        Bluegrass, rough...................................                  5                 25                100
        Bluegrass, Texas...................................                 10                 25                100
        Bluegrass, wood....................................                  5                 25                100
        Bluejoint..........................................                  5                 25                100
    
    [[Page 48466]]
    
                                                                                                                    
        Bluestem, big......................................                 70                 25                100
        Bluestem, little...................................                 50                 25                100
        Bluestem, sand.....................................                100                 25                100
        Bluestem, yellow...................................                 10                 25                100
        Bottlebrush-squirreltail...........................                 90                 25                100
        Brome, field.......................................                 50                 25                100
        Brome, meadow......................................                130                 25                100
        Brome, mountain....................................                200                 25                100
        Brome, smooth......................................                 70                 25                100
        Broomcorn..........................................                400                100                500
        Buckwheat..........................................                500                100                500
        Buffalograss:                                                                                               
            (Burs).........................................                200                 25                100
            (Caryopses)....................................                 30                 25                100
        Buffelgrass:                                                                                                
            (Fascicles)....................................                 66                 25                100
            (Caryopses)....................................                 20                 25                100
        Burclover, California:                                                                                      
            (In bur).......................................                500                100                500
            (Out of bur)...................................                 70                 25                100
        Burclover, spotted:                                                                                         
            (In bur).......................................                500                100                500
            (Out of bur)...................................                 50                 25                100
        Burnet, little.....................................                250                 25                100
        Buttonclover.......................................                 70                 25                100
        Canarygrass........................................                200                 25                100
        Canarygrass, reed..................................                 20                 25                100
        Carpetgrass........................................                 10                 25                100
        Castorbean.........................................                500                100                500
        Chess, soft........................................                 50                 25                100
        Chickpea...........................................                500                100                500
        Clover, alsike.....................................                 20                 25                100
        Clover, arrowleaf..................................                 40                 25                100
        Clover, berseem....................................                 50                 25                100
        Clover, cluster....................................                 10                 25                100
        Clover, crimson....................................                100                 25                100
        Clover, Kenya......................................                 20                 25                100
        Clover, Ladino.....................................                 20                 25                100
        Clover, Lappa......................................                 20                 25                100
        Clover, large hop..................................                 10                 25                100
        Clover, Persian....................................                 20                 25                100
        Clover, red........................................                 50                 25                100
        Clover, rose.......................................                 70                 25                100
        Clover, small hop (suckling).......................                 20                 25                100
        Clover, strawberry.................................                 50                 25                100
        Clover, sub (subterranean).........................                250                 25                100
        Clover, white......................................                 20                 25                100
        Corn, field........................................                500                100              1,000
        Corn, pop..........................................                500                100              1,000
        Cotton.............................................                500                100                500
        Cowpea.............................................                500                100                500
        Crambe.............................................                250                 25                100
        Crested dogtail....................................                 20                 25                100
        Crotalaria, lance..................................                 70                 25                100
        Crotalaria, showy..................................                250                 25                100
        Crotalaria, slenderleaf............................                100                 25                100
        Crotalaria, striped................................                100                 25                100
        Crotalaria, Sunn...................................                500                 25                100
        Crownvetch.........................................                100                 25                100
        Dallisgrass........................................                 40                 25                100
        Dichondra..........................................                 50                 25                100
        Dropseed, sand.....................................                2.5                 25                100
        Emmer..............................................                500                100                500
        Fescue, Chewings...................................                 30                 25                100
        Fescue, hair.......................................                 10                 25                100
    
    [[Page 48467]]
    
                                                                                                                    
        Fescue, hard.......................................                 20                 25                100
        Fescue, meadow.....................................                 50                 25                100
        Fescue, red........................................                 30                 25                100
        Fescue, sheep......................................                 20                 25                100
        Fescue, tall.......................................                 50                 25                100
        Flax...............................................                150                 25                100
        Galletagrass:                                                                                               
            (Other than caryopses).........................                100                 25                100
            (Caryopses)....................................                 50                 25                100
        Grama, blue........................................                 20                 25                100
        Grama, side-oats:                                                                                           
            (Other than caryopses).........................                 60                 25                100
            (Caryopses)....................................                 20                 25                100
        Guar...............................................                500                 25                100
        Guineagrass........................................                 20                 25                100
        Hardinggrass.......................................                 30                 25                100
        Hemp...............................................                500                100                500
        Indiangrass, yellow................................                 70                 25                100
        Indigo, hairy......................................                 70                 25                100
        Japanese lawngrass.................................                 20                 25                100
        Johnsongrass.......................................                100                 25                100
        Kenaf..............................................                500                100                500
        Kochia, forage.....................................                 20                 25                100
        Kudzu..............................................                250                 25                100
        Lentil.............................................                500                 25                100
        Lespedeza, Korean..................................                 50                 25                100
        Lespedeza, sericea or Chinese......................                 30                 25                100
        Lespedeza, Siberian................................                 30                 25                100
        Lespedeza, striate.................................                 50                 25                100
        Lovegrass, sand....................................                 10                 25                100
        Lovegrass, weeping.................................                 10                 25                100
        Lupine, blue.......................................                500                100                500
        Lupine, white......................................                500                100                500
        Lupine, yellow.....................................                500                100                500
        Manilagrass........................................                 20                 25                100
        Meadow foxtail.....................................                 30                 25                100
        Medick, black......................................                 50                 25                100
        Milkvetch..........................................                 90                 25                100
        Millet, browntop...................................                 80                 25                100
        Millet, foxtail....................................                 50                 25                100
        Millet, Japanese...................................                 90                 25                100
        Millet, pearl......................................                150                 25                100
        Millet, proso......................................                150                 25                100
        Molassesgrass......................................                  5                 25                100
        Mustard, black.....................................                 20                 25                100
        Mustard, India.....................................                 50                 25                100
        Mustard, white.....................................                150                 25                100
        Napiergrass........................................                 50                 25                100
        Needlegrass, green.................................                 70                 25                100
        Oat................................................                500                100                500
        Oatgrass, tall.....................................                 60                 25                100
        Orchardgrass.......................................                 30                 25                100
        Panicgrass, blue...................................                 20                 25                100
        Panicgrass, green..................................                 20                 25                100
        Pea, field.........................................                500                100                500
        Peanut.............................................                500                100                500
        Poa trivialis (see bluegrass, rough)                                                                        
        Rape, annual.......................................                 70                 25                100
        Rape, bird.........................................                 70                 25                100
        Rape, turnip.......................................                 50                 25                100
        Rape, winter.......................................                100                 25                100
        Redtop.............................................                2.5                 25                100
        Rescuegrass........................................                200                 25                100
        Rhodesgrass........................................                 10                 25                100
        Rice...............................................                500                100                500
    
    [[Page 48468]]
    
                                                                                                                    
        Ricegrass, Indian..................................                 70                 25                100
        Roughpea...........................................                500                100                500
        Rye................................................                500                100                500
        Rye, mountain......................................                280                 25                100
        Ryegrass, annual...................................                 50                 25                100
        Ryegrass, intermediate.............................                 80                 25                100
        Ryegrass, perennial................................                 50                 25                100
        Ryegrass, Wimmera..................................                 50                 25                100
        Safflower..........................................                500                100                500
        Sagewort, Louisiana................................                  5                 25                100
        Sainfoin...........................................                500                100                500
        Saltbush, fourwing.................................                150                 25                100
        Seasame............................................                 70                 25                100
        Sesbania...........................................                250                 25                100
        Smilo..............................................                 20                 25                100
        Sorghum............................................                500                100              1,000
        Sorghum almum......................................                150                 25                100
        Sorghum-sudangrass hybrid..........................                500                100              1,000
        Sorgrass...........................................                150                 25                100
        Sourclover.........................................                 50                 25                100
        Soybean............................................                500                100                500
        Spelt..............................................                500                100                500
        Sudangrass.........................................                250                 25                100
        Sunflower..........................................                500                100                500
        Sweetclover, white.................................                 50                 25                100
        Sweetclover, yellow................................                 50                 25                100
        Sweet vernalgrass..................................                 20                 25                100
        Sweetvetch, northern...............................                190                 25                100
        Switchgrass........................................                 40                 25                100
        Timothy............................................                 10                 25                100
        Timothy, turf......................................                 10                 25                100
        Tobacco............................................                  5                  1                  1
        Trefoil, big.......................................                 20                 25                100
        Trefoil, birdsfoot.................................                 30                 25                100
        Triticale..........................................                500                100                500
        Vaseygrass.........................................                 30                 25                100
        Veldtgrass.........................................                 40                 25                100
        Velvetbean.........................................                500                100                500
        Velvetgrass........................................                 10                 25                100
        Vetch, common......................................                500                100                500
        Vetch, hairy.......................................                500                100                500
        Vetch, Hungarian...................................                500                100                500
        Vetch, Monantha....................................                500                100                500
        Vetch, narrowleaf..................................                500                100                500
        Vetch, purple......................................                500                100                500
        Vetch, woolypod....................................                500                100                500
        Wheat, common......................................                500                100                500
        Wheat, club........................................                500                100                500
        Wheat, durum.......................................                500                100                500
        Wheat, Polish......................................                500                100                500
        Wheat, poulard.....................................                500                100                500
        Wheat x Agrotricum.................................                500                100                500
        Wheatgrass, beardless..............................                 80                 25                100
        Wheatgrass, fairway crested........................                 40                 25                100
        Wheatgrass, standard crested.......................                 50                 25                100
        Wheatgrass, intermediate...........................                150                 25                100
        Wheatgrass, pubescent..............................                150                 25                100
        Wheatgrass, Siberian...............................                 50                 25                100
        Wheatgrass, slender................................                 70                 25                100
        Wheatgrass, streambank.............................                 50                 25                100
        Wheatgrass, tall...................................                150                 25                100
        Wheatgrass, western................................                100                 25                100
        Wildrye, basin.....................................                 80                 25                100
        Wild-rye, Canada...................................                110                 25                100
        Wild-rye, Russian..................................                 60                 25                100
    
    [[Page 48469]]
    
                                                                                                                    
        Zoysia Japonica (see Japanese lawngrass)                                                                    
        Zoysia matrella (see Manilagrass)                                                                           
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        (b) Method of sampling. (1) When an importation consists of more 
    than one lot, each lot shall be sampled separately.
        (2) For lots of six or fewer bags, each bag shall be sampled. A 
    total of at least five trierfuls shall be taken from the lot.
        (3) For lots of more than six bags, five bags plus at least 10 
    percent of the number of bags in the lot shall be sampled. (Round off 
    numbers with decimals to the nearest whole number, raising 0.5 to the 
    next whole number.) Regardless of the lot size, it is not necessary to 
    sample more than 30 bags.
        (4) When the lot of seed to be sampled is comprised of seed in 
    small containers that cannot practically be sampled as described in 
    paragraph (b)(2) or (b)(3) of this section, entire unopened containers 
    may be taken in sufficient number to supply a sample that meets the 
    minimum size requirements of paragraph (a)(1) of this section.
        (c) Drawing samples. Samples will not be drawn unless each 
    container is labeled to show the lot designation and the name of the 
    kind and variety of each agricultural seed, or kind and variety of each 
    vegetable seed, appearing on the invoice and other entry papers, and a 
    declaration has been filed by the importer as required under 
    Sec. 361.2(a). In order to secure a representative sample, an APHIS 
    inspector will draw equal portions from evenly distributed parts of the 
    quantity of seed to be sampled; the APHIS inspector, therefore, must be 
    given access to all parts of that quantity.
        (1) For free-flowing seed in bags or in bulk, a probe or trier 
    shall be used. For small free-flowing seed in bags, a probe or trier 
    long enough to sample all portions of the bag shall be used. When 
    drawing more than one trierful of seed from a bag, a different path 
    through the seed shall be used when drawing each sample.
        (2) For non-free-flowing seed in bags or bulk that may be difficult 
    to sample with a probe or trier, samples shall be obtained by thrusting 
    one's hand into the seed and withdrawing representative portions. The 
    hand shall be inserted in an open position with the fingers held 
    closely together while the hand is being inserted and the portion 
    withdrawn. When more than one handful is taken from a bag, the handfuls 
    shall be taken from well-separated points.
        (3) When more than one sample is drawn from a single lot, the 
    samples may be combined into a composite sample unless it appears that 
    the quantity of seed represented as a lot is not of uniform quality, in 
    which case the separate samples shall be forwarded together, but 
    without being combined into a composite sample.
        (d) In most cases, samples will be drawn and examined by an APHIS 
    inspector at the port of first arrival. The APHIS inspector may release 
    a shipment if no contaminants are found and the labeling is sufficient. 
    If contaminants are found or the labeling of the seed is insufficient, 
    the APHIS inspector may forward the sample to the USDA Seed Examination 
    Facility (SEF), Beltsville, MD, for analysis, testing, or examination. 
    APHIS will notify the owner or consignee of the seed that samples have 
    been drawn and forwarded to the SEF and that the shipment must be held 
    intact pending a decision by APHIS as to whether the seed is within the 
    noxious weed seed tolerances of Sec. 361.6 and is accurately labeled. 
    If the decision pending is with regard to the noxious weed seed content 
    of the seed and the seed has been determined to be accurately labeled, 
    the seed may be released for delivery to the owner or consignee under 
    the following conditions:
        (1) The owner or consignee executes with Customs either a Customs 
    single-entry bond or a Customs term bond, as appropriate, in such 
    amount as is prescribed by applicable Customs regulations;
        (2) The bond must contain a condition for the redelivery of the 
    seed or any part thereof upon demand of the Port Director of Customs at 
    any time;
        (3) Until the seed is approved for entry upon completion of APHIS' 
    examination, the seed must be kept intact and not tampered with in any 
    way, or removed from the containers except under the monitoring of an 
    APHIS inspector; and
        (4) The owner or consignee must keep APHIS informed as to the 
    location of the seed until it is finally entered into the commerce of 
    the United States.
    
    
    Sec. 361.6  Noxious weed seeds.
    
        (a) Seeds of the plants listed in paragraphs (a)(1) and (a)(2) of 
    this section shall be considered noxious weed seeds.
        (1) Seeds with no tolerances applicable to their introduction:
    
    Aeginetia spp.
    Ageratina adenophora (Sprengel) King & Robinson
    Alectra spp.
    Alternanthera sessilis (L.) R. Brown ex de Candolle
    Asphodelus fistulosus L.
    Avena sterilis L. (including Avena ludoviciana Durieu)
    Azolla pinnata R. Brown
    Borreria alata (Aublet) de Candolle
    Carthamus oxyacantha M. Bieberstein
    Chrysopogon aciculatus (Retzius) Trinius
    Commelina benghalensis L.
    Crupina vulgaris Cassini
    Cuscuta spp.
    Digitaria abyssinica (=D. scalarum)
    Digitaria velutina (Forsskal) Palisot de Beauvois
    Drymaria arenarioides Humboldt & Bonpland ex Roemer & Schultes
    Eichhornia azurea (Swartz) Kunth
    Emex australis Steinheil
    Emex spinosa (L.) Campdera
    Galega officinalis L.
    Heracleum mantegazzianum Sommier & Levier
    Hydrilla verticillata (Linnaeus f.) Royle
    Hygrophila polysperma T. Anderson
    Imperata brasiliensis Trinius
    Imperata cylindrica (L.) Raeuschel
    Ipomoea aquatica Forsskal
    Ipomoea triloba L.
    Ischaemum rugosum Salisbury
    Lagarosiphon major (Ridley) Moss
    Leptochloa chinensis (L.) Nees
    Limnophila sessiliflora (Vahl) Blume
    Lycium ferocissimum Miers
    Melaleuca quinquenervia (Cav.) Blake
    Melastoma malabathricum L.
    Mikania cordata (Burman f.) B. L. Robinson
    
    [[Page 48470]]
    
    Mikania micrantha Humboldt, Bonpland, & Kunth
    Mimosa invisa Martius
    Mimosa pigra L. var. pigra
    Monochoria hastata (L.) Solms-Laubach
    Monochoria vaginalis (Burman f.) C. Presl
    Nassella trichotoma (Nees) Hackel ex Arechavaleta
    Opuntia aurantiaca Lindley
    Orobanche spp.
    Oryza longistaminata A. Chevalier & Roehrich
    Oryza punctata Kotschy ex Steudel
    Oryza rufipogon Griffith
    Ottelia alismoides (L.) Pers.
    Paspalum scrobiculatum L.
    Pennisetum clandestinum Hochstetter ex Chiovenda
    Pennisetum macrourum Trinius
    Pennisetum pedicellatum Trinius
    Pennisetum polystachion (L.) Schultes
    Prosopis alapataco R. A. Philippi
    Prosopis argentina Burkart
    Prosopis articulata S. Watson
    Prosopis burkartii Munoz
    Prosopis caldenia Burkart
    Prosopis calingastana Burkart
    Prosopis campestris Grisebach
    Prosopis castellanosii Burkart
    Prosopis denudans Bentham
    Prosopis elata (Burkart) Burkart
    Prosopis farcta (Solander ex Russell) Macbride
    Prosopis ferox Grisebach
    Prosopis fiebrigii Harms
    Prosopis hassleri Harms
    Prosopis humilis Gillies ex Hooker & Arnott
    Prosopis kuntzei Harms
    Prosopis pallida (Humboldt & Bonpland ex Willdenow) Humboldt, 
    Bonpland, & Kunth
    Prosopis palmeri S. Watson
    Prosopis reptans Bentham var. reptans
    Prosopis rojasiana Burkart
    Prosopis ruizlealii Burkart
    Prosopis ruscifolia Grisebach
    Prosopis sericantha Gillies ex Hooker & Arnott
    Prosopis strombulifera (Lamarck) Bentham
    Prosopis torquata (Cavanilles ex Lagasca y Segura) de Candolle
    Rottboellia cochinchinensis (Lour.) Clayon (=R. exaltata (L.) L. f.)
    Rubus fruticosus L. (complex)
    Rubus moluccanus L.
    Saccharum spontaneum L.
    Sagittaria sagittifolia L.
    Salsola vermiculata L.
    Salvinia auriculata Aublet
    Salvinia biloba Raddi
    Salvinia herzogii de la Sota
    Salvinia molesta D.S. Mitchell
    Setaria pallide-fusca (Schumacher) Stapf & Hubbard
    Solanum torvum Swartz
    Solanum viarum Dunal
    Sparganium erectum L.
    Striga spp.
    Tridax procumbens L.
    Urochloa panicoides Beauvois
    
        (2) Seeds with tolerances applicable to their introduction:
    
    Acroptilon repens (L.) DC. (=Centaurea repens L.) (=Centaurea 
    picris)
    Cardaria draba (L.) Desv.
    Cardaria pubescens (C. A. Mey.) Jarmol.
    Convolvulus arvensis L.
    Cirsium arvense (L.) Scop.
    Elytrigia repens (L.) Desv. (=Agropyron repens (L.) Beauv.)
    Euphorbia esula L.
    Sonchus arvensis L.
    Sorghum halepense (L.) Pers.
    
        (b) The tolerance applicable to the prohibition of the noxious weed 
    seeds listed in paragraph (a)(2) of this section shall be two seeds in 
    the minimum amount required to be examined as shown in column 1 of 
    table 1 of Sec. 361.5. If fewer than two seeds are found in an initial 
    examination, the shipment from which the sample was drawn may be 
    entered. If two seeds are found in an initial examination, a second 
    sample must be examined. If two or fewer seeds are found in the second 
    examination, the shipment from which the samples were drawn may be 
    entered. If three or more seeds are found in the second examination, 
    the shipment from which the samples were drawn may not be entered. If 
    three or more seeds are found in an initial examination, the shipment 
    from which the sample was drawn may not be entered.
        (c) Any seed of any noxious weed that can be determined by visual 
    inspection (including the use of transmitted light or dissection) to be 
    within one of the following categories shall be considered inert matter 
    and not counted as a weed seed:
        (1) Damaged seed (other than grasses) with over one half of the 
    embryo missing;
        (2) Grass florets and caryopses classed as inert:
        (i) Glumes and empty florets of weedy grasses;
        (ii) Damaged caryopses, including free caryopses, with over one-
    half the root-shoot axis missing (the scutellum excluded);
        (iii) Immature free caryopses devoid of embryo or endosperm;
        (iv) Free caryopses of quackgrass (Elytrigia repens) that are 2 mm 
    or less in length; or
        (v) Immature florets of quackgrass (Elytrigia repens) in which the 
    caryopses are less than one-third the length of the palea. The 
    caryopsis is measured from the base of the rachilla.
        (3) Seeds of legumes (Fabaceae) with the seed coats entirely 
    removed.
        (4) Immature seed units, devoid of both embryo and endosperm, such 
    as occur in (but not limited to) the following plant families: 
    buckwheat (Polygonaceae), morning glory (Convolvulaceae), nightshade 
    (Solanaceae), and sunflower (Asteraceae).
        (5) Dodder (Cuscuta spp.) seeds devoid of embryos and seeds that 
    are ashy gray to creamy white in color are inert matter. Dodder seeds 
    should be sectioned when necessary to determine if an embryo is 
    present, as when the seeds have a normal color but are slightly 
    swollen, dimpled, or have minute holes.
    
    
    Sec. 361.7  Special provisions for Canadian-origin seed and screenings.
    
        (a) In addition to meeting the declaration and labeling 
    requirements of Sec. 361.2 and all other applicable provisions of this 
    part, all Canadian-origin agricultural seed and Canadian-origin 
    vegetable seed imported into the United States from Canada for seeding 
    (planting) purposes or cleaning must be accompanied by a certificate of 
    analysis issued by the Canadian Food Inspection Agency or by a private 
    seed laboratory accredited by the Canadian Food Inspection Agency. 
    Samples of seed shall be drawn using sampling methods comparable to 
    those detailed in Sec. 361.5 of this part. The seed analyst who 
    examines the seed at the laboratory must be accredited to analyze the 
    kind of seed covered by the certificate.
        (1) If the seed is being imported for seeding (planting) purposes, 
    the certificate of analysis must verify that the seed meets the noxious 
    weed seed tolerances of Sec. 361.6. Such seed will not be subject to 
    the sampling requirements of Sec. 361.3(b).
        (2) If the seed is being imported for cleaning, the certificate of 
    analysis must name the kinds of noxious weed seeds that are to be 
    removed from the lot of seed. Seed being imported for cleaning must be 
    consigned to a facility operated in accordance with Sec. 361.8(a).
        (b) Coated or pelleted agricultural seed and coated or pelleted 
    vegetable seed of Canadian origin may be imported into the United 
    States if the seed was analyzed prior to being coated or pelleted and 
    is accompanied by a certificate of analysis issued in accordance with 
    paragraph (a) of this section.
        (c) Screenings otherwise prohibited under this part may be imported 
    from Canada if the screenings are imported for processing or 
    manufacture and are consigned to a facility operating under a 
    compliance agreement as provided by Sec. 361.8(b).
    
    (Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control 
    number 0579-0124)
    
    Sec. 361.8  Cleaning of imported seed and processing of certain 
    Canadian-origin screenings.
    
        (a) Imported seed that is found to contain noxious weed seeds at a 
    level higher than the tolerances set forth in Sec. 361.6(b) may be 
    cleaned under the
    
    [[Page 48471]]
    
    monitoring of an APHIS inspector. The cleaning will be at the expense 
    of the owner or consignee.
        (1) At the location where the seed is being cleaned, the identity 
    of the seed must be maintained at all times to the satisfaction of the 
    Administrator. The refuse from the cleaning must be placed in 
    containers and securely sealed and identified. Upon completion of the 
    cleaning, a representative sample of the seed will be analyzed by a 
    registered seed technologist, an official seed laboratory, or by APHIS; 
    if the seed is found to be within the noxious weed tolerances set forth 
    in Sec. 361.6(b), the seed may be allowed entry into the United States;
        (2) The refuse from the cleaning must be destroyed under the 
    monitoring of an APHIS inspector at the expense of the owner or 
    consignee of the seed.
        (3) Any person engaged in the business of cleaning imported seed 
    may enter into a compliance agreement under paragraph (c) of this 
    section to facilitate the cleaning of seed imported into the United 
    States under this part.
        (b) Any person engaged in the business of processing screenings who 
    wishes to process screenings imported from Canada under Sec. 361.7(c) 
    that are otherwise prohibited under this part must enter into a 
    compliance agreement under paragraph (c) of this section.
        (c) A compliance agreement for the cleaning of imported seed or 
    processing of otherwise prohibited screenings from Canada shall be a 
    written agreement 1 between a person engaged in such a 
    business, the State in which the business operates, and APHIS, wherein 
    the person agrees to comply with the provisions of this part and any 
    conditions imposed pursuant thereto. Any compliance agreement may be 
    canceled orally or in writing by the APHIS inspector who is monitoring 
    its enforcement whenever the inspector finds that the person who 
    entered into the compliance agreement has failed to comply with the 
    provisions of this part or any conditions imposed pursuant thereto. If 
    the cancellation is oral, the decision and the reasons for the decision 
    shall be confirmed in writing, as promptly as circumstances permit. Any 
    person whose compliance agreement has been canceled may appeal the 
    decision to the Administrator, in writing, within 10 days after 
    receiving written notification of the cancellation. The appeal shall 
    state all of the facts and reasons upon which the person relies to show 
    that the compliance agreement was wrongfully canceled. The 
    Administrator shall grant or deny the appeal, in writing, stating the 
    reasons for such decision, as promptly as circumstances permit. If 
    there is a conflict as to any material fact, a hearing shall be held to 
    resolve such conflict. Rules of practice concerning such a hearing will 
    be adopted by the Administrator.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \1\ Compliance Agreement forms are available without charge from 
    Permit Unit, PPQ, APHIS, 4700 River Road Unit 136, Riverdale, MD 
    20737-1236, and from local offices of the Plant Protection and 
    Quarantine. (Local offices are listed in telephone directories).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    
    Sec. 361.9  Recordkeeping.
    
        (a) Each person importing agricultural seed or vegetable seed under 
    this part must maintain a complete record, including copies of the 
    declaration and labeling required under this part and a sample of seed, 
    for each lot of seed imported. Except for the seed sample, which may be 
    discarded 1 year after the entire lot represented by the sample has 
    been disposed of by the person who imported the seed, the records must 
    be maintained for 3 years following the importation.
        (b) Each sample of vegetable seed and each sample of agricultural 
    seed must be at least equal in weight to the sample size prescribed for 
    noxious weed seed examination in table 1 of Sec. 361.5.
        (c) An APHIS inspector shall, during normal business hours, be 
    allowed to inspect and copy the records.
    
    (Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control 
    number 0579-0124)
    
    
    Sec. 361.10  Costs and charges.
    
        Unless a user fee is payable under Sec. 354.3 of this chapter, the 
    services of an APHIS inspector during regularly assigned hours of duty 
    and at the usual places of duty will be furnished without cost. The 
    U.S. Department of Agriculture's provisions relating to overtime 
    charges for an APHIS inspector's services are set forth in part 354 of 
    this chapter. The U.S. Department of Agriculture will not be 
    responsible for any costs or charges incident to inspections or 
    compliance with this part, other than for the services of the APHIS 
    inspector during regularly assigned hours of duty and at the usual 
    places of duty. All expenses incurred by the U.S. Department of 
    Agriculture (including travel, per diem or subsistence, and salaries of 
    officers or employees of the Department) in connection with the 
    monitoring of cleaning, labeling, other reconditioning, or destruction 
    of seed, screenings, or refuse under this part shall be reimbursed by 
    the owner or consignee of the seed or screenings.
    
        Done in Washington, DC, this 10th day of September 1997.
    Terry L. Medley,
    Administrator, Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service.
    [FR Doc. 97-24524 Filed 9-15-97; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 3410-34-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
10/16/1997
Published:
09/16/1997
Department:
Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
97-24524
Dates:
October 16, 1997.
Pages:
48456-48471 (16 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Docket No. 93-126-5
RINs:
0579-AA64: Imported Seed and Screenings
RIN Links:
https://www.federalregister.gov/regulations/0579-AA64/imported-seed-and-screenings
PDF File:
97-24524.pdf
CFR: (13)
7 CFR 361.2(a)
7 CFR 361.6(b)
7 CFR 201.38
7 CFR 361.1
7 CFR 361.2
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