134 BUREAU OF ENTOMOLOGY AND PLANT QUARANTINE [Apiil-^une 
nurserymen, plant-quarantine officials, and others interested in the exportation 
of plants and plant products to that Colony. 
It was prepared by Harry B. Shaw, plant quarantine inspector, in charge, 
Foreign Information Service. Division of Foreign Plant Quarantines, from the 
original texts of the Plant Pest and Disease (Importation) Act, ]1)82 and of 
the Orders of August 2<), ll>2i), and September 17, 1931, which einbodv the 
effective phytosanitary import restrictions of the Colony of Barbados, and re- 
viewed by the Director of Agriculture of that Colony. 
The information contained in this circular is- believed to be correct and 
complete up to the time of preparation, but it is not intended to be used in- 
dependently of, nor as a substitute for, the original texts, and it is not to be 
interpreted as legally authoritative. 
Lee a. Strong, 
CJiicf, Bureau of Eutomologij and Plant Quarantine. 
PLANT-QUARANTINE IMPORT RESTRICTIONS. COLONY OF BARBADOS, BRITISH WEST 
INDIES 
Basic Legislation 
The Trade Act of 1910, sections 45 and 46. 
Plant Pest and Disease (Importation) Act, October 22, 1932. 
Summary 
importation pbohibitei) 
"Sugarcane cuttings: Importation from any source prohibited to prevent the 
introduction of injurious pests and diseases. (Plant Pest and Disease (Im- 
portation) Act, 1932, art. 3.) 
Gramineae, stems, leaves, or any part except the seed: Importation pro- 
liibited to prevent the introduction of injurious pests and diseases. (Act of 
1932, art. 3.) 
Citrus and mango stocks : Importation prohibited to prevent the introduction 
of coccids, nematodes, and lepidopterous and coleopterous stem borers, and 
also the withertip, scab, and guinmosis diseases. (Act of 1932, art. 3.) 
Banana stools (Musa) : Importation prohibited to prevent the introduction 
of Castnca licus Drury and the banana weevil or root borer {Cosmopolites 
sordidus Germ.). (Act of 1932, art. 3.) 
Fresh fruits: Importation prohibited from Argentina, Azores, Bermuda, 
Brazil, France, Hawaii. Italy, Jamaica. Madeira, Sicily, Spain, and the Union 
of South Africa, to prevent the introduction of the Mediterranean fruitfly 
{Ccratitis ea pit at a Wied.). (Act of 1932, art. 3.) 
Seed coconuts for propagation : Importation prohibited to prevent the intro- 
duction of the red ring disease {AphcleneJwidcs cocophilus (Cobb) Goodey). 
(Act of 1932, art. 3.) 
Cottonseed meal : Importation prohibited to prevent the introduction of pink 
bollworm and other cotton pests. (Order of Aug. 29, 1929.) 
IMPORTATION RESTRICTED 
Cottonseed, seed cotton, or cotton lint: May be imported only under an import 
permit issued l)y the Director of Agriculture, a precaution against the intro- 
duction of the pink bollworm and other cotton pests. (Plant Pest and Disease 
(Importation) Act, 1932, art. 5.) 
Gramineae, dried seeds or grain, dried steins or leaves, and manufactured 
articles: Importation subject to the provisions of article 12, paragraph 3; i. e., 
its entrv will be refused if the product is likely to introduce any injurious plant 
parasite. (Act of 1932, art. 4.) 
Tubers, bulbs, cuttings, rooted plants, and aerial plants : An import permit 
issued by the Director of Agriculture required as a precaution against the 
introduction of injurious pests and diseases. (Act of 1932, art. 3.) 
Soil, covering, wrapping, or other material in which a plant has been grown: 
May be imported only under an import permit issued by the Director of Agri- 
