3 937] 
SERVICE AND KEGULATOHY ANNOU^'CEMEXTS 
311 
LIST OF CURRENT QUARANTINE AND OTHER RESTRICTIVE 
ORDERS AND MISCELLANEOUS REGULATIONS 
[The domestic and foreign quarantine and other restrictive orders summarized herein, 
are issued under the authority of the I'lant Quarantine Act of Aug. 20, 1912, as amended. 
The Mexican border regulations and the export-certification regulations are issueU under 
specific acts of Congress.] 
QUARANTINE ORDERS 
The numbers assigned to these quarantines indicate merely the chronological 
order of issuance of both domestic and foreign quarantines in one numerical 
series. The quarantine numbers mi.^^suu: in this list are quarantines which have 
either been sui)er.seded or revoked. For convenience of reference these quaran- 
tines are here classified as domestic and foreign, the domestic quarantines being 
divided into (1) those applying primarily to the continental United States and 
(2) those applying primarily to shipments from and to the Territories of Hawaii 
and Puerto Rico. 
Domestic Plaxt QuAKA>TirsEs 
QUARANTINES APPLYING TO THE CONTINENTAL UNITED STATES 
Black stem rust. — Quarantine No. 88, revised, effective September 1, 1937: 
Prohibits, except as provided in the rules and regulations supplemental thereto, 
effective August 1, 1981, the movement into any of the protected States, namely, 
Colorado, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, 
Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, Pennsylvania, South Dakota, Virginia, West 
Virginia, Wisconsin, and Wyoming, as well as the movement from any one of 
said protected States into any other protected State of the common barberry 
(Bert)erls vulgaris), or other species of Berhcris or Mahonia or parts thereof 
capable of propagation, on account of the black stem rust of grains. The regula- 
tions place no restrictions on the interstate movement of Japanese barberry {B. 
thut}J)ergii) or any of its rust-resistant varieties, or of cuttings (without roots) of 
Mahonia shipped for decorative purposes and not for propagation. 
Gypsy moth and brown-tail moth. — Quarantine No. 45, revised, effective Novem- 
ber 4, 1985 : Prohibits, except as provided in the rules and regulations supple- 
mental thereto, revised, effective November 4, 1935, the movement interstate to 
any point outside of the infested area, or from points in the generally infested 
area to points in the lightly infested area, of stone or quarry products, and of 
the plants and the plant products listed therein. The quarantine covers Rhode 
Island and parts of the States of Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New 
Hampshire, and Vermont. 
Japanese heetle. — Quarantine No. 48, revised, effective March 1, 1937: Pro- 
hibits, except as pr(jvided in the rules and regulations supplemental thereto, 
revised, effective March 1, 1987, as amended effective May 10, 1987, the interstate 
movement of (1) fruits and vegetables; (2) nursery, ornamental, and green- 
house stock and other plants; and (8) sand, soil, earth, peat, compost, and 
manure, from the quarantined area to or through any point outside thereof. 
The quarantined area includes the entire States of Massachusetts, Rhode Island, 
Connecticut, New Jersey, and Delaware, and the District of C<»lumbia. and por- 
tions of the States of Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, New York, Pennsylvania, 
Maryland. Virginia, West Virginia, and Ohio. 
Pink bollworm. — Quarantine No. 52, revised, effective October 14, 1936: Pro- 
hibits, except as provided in the rules and regulations supplemental thereto, 
revised effective Octol>er 14, 1986, as amended, effective January 8, 1988, the inter- 
state movement from the regulated areas of Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona, 
of (1) cotton, wild cotton, including all parts of either cotton or wild cotton 
plants, seed cotton, cotton lint, linters, and all other forms of unmanufactured 
cotton fiber, gin waste, cottonseed, cottonseed hulls, and cottonseed cake and 
meal; (2) bagging and other containers and wrapi)ers of cotton and cotton prod- 
ucts: (3) railway cars, boats, and other vehicles which have been used in 
conveying cotton or cotton products or which are fouled with such products: 
(4) hay and other farm products; and (5) farm household goods, farm equii> 
ment, and, if contaminated with cotton, any other articles. 
Thurberia weevil. — Quarantine No. 61. revised, effective August 1, 1927: Pro- 
hibits the interstate movement of Thurhcria, including all parts of the plant, 
from any point in Arizona and prohibits, except as provided in the rules and 
