54 ANNUAL REPORTS OF DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, 1933 
PLANTS AND PLANT PRODUCTS ENTERED FOR EXPORTATION OR FOR TRANSPORTATION 
AND EXPORTATION 
In addition to the regulated imports for consumption entry recorded in tables 
15 to 29, this Bureau supervised the entry under permit, either for exportation 
or for transportation and exportation, of considerable quantities of plants and 
plant products, as follows: Flower bulbs, corms, and tubers, 1,285,690; fruit 
trees, 54,128; cacti and succulents, 21,711; orchids, 495; miscellaneous plants, 
5,521; acorns, 379,575 pounds; apples, 163,891 pounds; bananas, 6 bunches; 
beans (string), 195,300 pounds; cherries, 700 pounds; chestnuts, 43 pounds; 
cipollini, 190 pounds; Citrus medica, 180 pounds; eggplants, 35,758 pounds; 
garlic, 2,452,816 pounds; ginger, 683 pounds; grapes, 61,853 pounds; grapefruit, 
10,549,001 pounds; husk tomatoes, 1,608 pounds; kudzu, 754 pounds; lemons, 
7,849,514 crates; lily bulbs (edible), 955 pounds; limes (sour), 7,970 pounds; 
mangoes, 50 pounds; melons, 535,502 pounds; nectarines, 1,400 pounds; onions, 
5,916,823 pounds; oranges, 1,167,841 pounds; peas, 1,330,176 pounds; peaches, 
18,397 pounds; peppers, 84,409 pounds; pineapples, 103,997 crates; plums, 1,336 
pounds; potatoes, 664,501 pounds; pumpkins, 963 pounds; St. Johns bread, 110 
pounds; tamarind bean pods, 44 pounds; tangerines, 1,600 pounds; tomatoes, 
13,203,197 pounds; waterchestnuts, 2,300 pounds; waterlily roots, 679 pounds; 
watermelons, 215,770 pounds; yam bean roots, 200 pounds; corn, 818,820 pounds; 
cotton, 74,603 bales and 15 packages, including 920 bales and 5 packages of 
linters; cottonseed cake, 1,665,950 pounds; cotton waste, 156 bales and 4 packages; 
seed or paddy rice, 9,471 pounds. 
MARITIME-PORT INSPECTION 
SHIP INSPECTION 
The inspection of ships from foreign countries and from Hawaii and Puerto 
Rico has been continued along the lines described in previous annual reports. 
The inspection at ports in California, Florida, Hawaii, and certain ports in 
Puerto Rico has been performed by State and Territorial officials serving as 
collaborators of the Bureau of Plant Quarantine at a very small cost to the 
Department. 
A record by ports of the ship inspection appears in table 30. 
