Fla. Admin. Code Ann. R. 5B-3.0038 - Quarantine Action
(1) Plants and plant
products which are not accompanied by proof of origin and a certificate of
inspection issued by a state or country plant protection governmental agency
indicating compliance with Florida regulations or are found to be infested or
infected with, or exposed to a plant pest not known to be established in the
state shall be subject to being refused entry, returned to the owner,
quarantined, treated, or destroyed as specified by the department. The
destruction, quarantine, treatment, or return of a shipment shall be under the
direction of an authorized representative of the department and at the expense
of the owner. Payment to the department for such expense shall be required
before shipping can resume. Pursuant to Section
581.031(7),
F.S., shippers shall be immediately suspended from shipping into Florida when
shipments of plants and plant products are found to be infested or infected
with a plant pest not known to be established in the state, and the pest is
determined to be potentially damaging to Florida agriculture. This suspension
shall remain in effect until the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer
Services, Division of Plant Industry and the state of origin department of
agriculture agree the problem has been resolved and that shipping may resume.
An Agreement for Treatment, Destruction, Forfeiture or Return of Plants and/or
Plant Parts, FDACS-08029, revised 9/16, will be completed on all shipments
requiring regulatory action. This agreement is supplied by the division for
this purpose and is hereby incorporated herein by reference. A copy may be
obtained via
http://www.flrules.org/Gateway/reference.asp?No=Ref-07879.
The following are examples of plant pests that would require immediate
quarantine action:
(a) Arthropods
1.
Agrilus planipennis -
emerald ash borer
2.
Aceria
litchii - currently in Hawaii; Litchi mite
3.
Anoplophora spp. - Asian
longhorned beetles
4.
Bactericerca cockerelli - potato psyllid
5.
Bactericera nigricornis
complex - Old world potato psyllid
6.
Bagrada hilaris - bagrada
bug
7.
Biprorulus
bibax - spined orange bug
8.
Bostrichidae - Bostrichid
beetles
9.
Brevipalpus
chilensis - Chilean false red mite
10.
Ceratovacuna lanigera -
sugarcane woolly aphid
11.
Epiphyas postvittana - light brown apple moth
12.
Eutetranychus orientalis
- Oriental red mite
13.
Exophthalmus spp. - Caribbean citrus weevils
14.
Halyomorpha halys -
brown marmorated stink bug
15.
Liriomyza huidobrensis - pea leaf miner
16.
Liriomyza langei - pea
leaf miner
17.
Lobesia
botrana - European grapevine moth
18.
Maconellicoccus hirsutus
- pink mealybug
19.
Metamasius spp. - Neotropical palm and bromeliad
weevils
20.
Musgraveia
sulciventris - bronze orange bug
21.
Myllocerus spp. - Asian
weevils
22.
Nasonovia
ribisnigri - currant-lettuce aphid
23.
Nephotettix spp. - Green
leafhoppers on rice
24.
Nilaparvata lugens - brown plant hopper
25.
Oxycarenus hyalinipennis
- dusky cottonseed bug
26.
Prymnotrypes spp. - Andean potato weevils
27.
Rhagoletis mendax -
blueberry maggot fly
28.
Rhynchophorus ferrugineus - red palm weevil
29.
Rhynchophorus palmarum -
giant palm weevil
30.
Russelliana solanicola - a potato psyllid
31.
Siphoninus plyillyleae -
Ash whitefly
32.
Trioza
anceps - avocado psyllid
33.
Trioza perseae - avocado
psyllid
34.
Trioza
erytreae - African citrus psyllid
35.
Tropilaelaps clareae -
Tropilaelaps mite
36.
Tuta
absoluta - tomato leaf miner
(b) Diseases
1. Banana bunchy top virus
2. Chilli leaf curl virus
3. Citrus chlorotic dwarf
4. Citrus leprosis virus
5. Citrus variegated chlorosis
6. Citrus yellow mosaic virus
7. Huanglongbing - citrus greening disease -
Candidatus Liberibacter asiatius; Candidatus
Liberibacter amerianus; Candidatus Liberibacter
africanus
8. Fiji disease of
sugarcane
9.
Fusarium
oxysporum, esp. tropical race IV
10.
Phytophthora
alni
11.
Phytophthora europea
12.
Phytophthora
foliorum
13.
Phytophthora hedriandra
14.
Phytophthora
kernoviae
15.
Phytophthora nemarosa
16.
Phytophthora
pseudosyringae
17.
Phytophthora siskyouensis
18.
Phytophthora ramorum -
sudden oak death
19.
Puccinia horiana - chrysanthemum white rust
20.
Ralstonia solanacearum -
blood disease of banana
21.
Septoria citri
22.
Sugarcane bacilliform badnavirus
23. Sugarcane yellowleaf syndrome
24. Tomato chlorosis virus
25. Tomato infectious chlorosis
virus
26. Tomato leaf curl New
Delhi virus
27. Tomato marchitez
virus
28. Tomato severe leaf curl
virus
29. Tomato torrado
virus
30. Tomato yellow leaf curl
virus - China, Seychelles and Indonesia strains
31. Tomato yellow vein
streak
(c) Mollusks
1.
Achatina spp. - giant
African land snail and others
2.
Archachatina marginata - banana rasp snail
3.
Cryptomphalus spp. -
brown garden snail and others
4.
Megalobulimus oblongus - giant South American snail
5.
Theba pisana - white
garden snail
(d)
Nematodes
1.
Anguina tritici
- wheat gall nematode
2.
Bursaphelenchus cocophilus - red ring nematode
3.
Ditylenchus destructor -
potato rot nematode
4.
Ditylenchus dispaci - bud and stem nematode
5.
Globodera spp. - potato
cyst nematode
6.
Hemicycliophora arenaria - citrus sheath nematode
7.
Heterodera carotae -
carrot cyst nematode
8.
Heterodera cruciferae - cabbage cyst nematode
9.
Heterodera goettingiana -
pea cyst nematode
10.
Heterodera zeae - corn cyst nematode
11.
Hoplolaimus columbus -
Columbia lance nematode
12.
Longidorus africanus - a needle nematode
13.
Longidorus belondriodes
- a needle nematode
14.
Meloidogyne chitwoodi - Columbia root-knot nematode
15.
Meloidogyne citri - a
citrus root-knot nematode
16.
Meloidogyne fujianenis - citrus root-knot nematode
17.
Meloidogyne naasi -
cereal root-knot nematode
18.
Nacobbus aberrans - false root-knot nematode
19.
Pratylenchus
convallariae - a lesion nematode
20.
Pratylenchus crenatus -
a lesion nematode
21.
Pratylenchus goodeyi - a lesion nematode
22.
Xiphinema brevicolle - a
dagger nematode
23.
Xiphinema bricolensis - a dagger nematode
24.
Xiphinema californicum -
a dagger nematode
25.
Xiphinema diversicaudatum - a dagger nematode
26.
Xiphinema index -
California dagger nematode
27.
Xiphinema insigne - a dagger nematode
28.
Xiphinema vuittenezi - a
dagger nematode
29.
Zygotylenchus spp. - a lesion
nematode
(2)
Plant pests of limited distribution in the State of Florida. Plants and plant
products found infested or infected with or exposed to a plant pest of limited
distribution in the state shall be subject to immediate quarantine action and
will not be eligible for certification until treated as prescribed by the
department and released from quarantine. An Agreement for Treatment,
Destruction, Forfeiture or Return of Plant and/or Plant Parts, FDACS-08029,
revised 9/16, will be completed on all shipments requiring regulatory action.
The following are examples of plant pests that would require immediate
quarantine action:
(a) Arthropods
1.
Aleurodicus
rugioperculatus - gumbo limbo whitefly
2.
Aulacaspis yasumatsui -
Asian cycad scale
3.
Diaphorina citri - Asian citrus psyllid
4.
Diaprepes abbreviatus -
diaprepes root weevil
5.
Duponchelia fovealis - European pepper moth
6.
Maconellicoccus hirsutus
- pink mealybug
7.
Metamasius callizona - bromeliad weevil
8.
Metamasius hemipterus -
palm and sugarcane weevil
9.
Morganella longispina - plumose scale
10.
Myllocerus undecimpustulatus
undatus - weevil
11.
Nipaecoccus viridis - Lebbeck mealybug
12.
Noctua pronuba - large
yellow underwing
13.
Oligonychus persae - avocado mite
14.
Opuntiaspis spp. - scale
insect
15.
Paratachardinapseudolobata - lobate lac scale
16.
Parlatoria ziziphi -
black parlatoria scale
17.
Pectinophora gossypiella - pink bollworm
18.
Phalacrococcus howertoni
- Howerton's scale
19.
Philephedra sp. - scale insect
20.
Phoenicococcus marlatti
- red date scale
21.
Raoiella indica - red palm mite
22.
Singhiella simplex -
ficus whitefly
23.
Vinsonia
stellifera - stellate scale
24.
Xyleborus glabratus -
red bay ambrosia beetle
(b) Diseases
1.
Agrobacterium tumefaciens
- crown gall
2. Cucumber green
mottle mosaic virus
3. Cucurbit
leaf crumple begemovirus
4.
Cucurbit yellow stunting disorder crinivirus
5.
Guignardia citricarpa -
citrus black spot
6.
Huanglongbing - citrus greening
7. Lethal yellowing of palms
8. Pepino mosaic virus
9.
Phomopsis gardeniae -
gardenia canker
10.
Phytophthora tropicalis
11.
Puccinia pelargonii -
zonalis - geranium rust
12.
Sphaceloma poinsettiae - poinsettia scab
13. Texas phoenix palm decline
phytoplasma
14. Tomato yellow leaf
curl virus - all in the complex
15.
Xanthomonas axonopodis pv. citri - citrus
canker
(c) Mollusks
1.
Otala lactea - milk
snail
2.
Zachrysia
provisoria - Cuban land snail
(d) Nematodes
1.
Meloidogyneenterlobii -
Guava root-knot nematode
2.
Tylenchulus semipenetrans - a citrus
nematode
(3)
Common Plant Pests. All nursery stock and other plants and plant products found
infested or infected with a common plant pest shall be subject to immediate
quarantine action when the population of the plant pest is adversely affecting
the plant or plant product. The plant or plant product will not be eligible for
certification until treated as prescribed by the department and released from
quarantine. An Agreement for Treatment, Destruction, Forfeiture or Return of
Plants and/or Plant Parts, FDACS-08029, revised 9/16, will be completed on all
shipments requiring regulatory action.
Notes
Rulemaking Authority 570.07(23), 581.031(4), 581.101 FS. Law Implemented 581.031(7), (9), 581.101 FS.
New 4-1-97, Amended 6-12-00, 10-8-03, 9-24-08, 2-26-17, 10-18-18.
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