UNITED STATES DEPART! ENT 0? AGRICULTURE URAL RESEARCH ADMIJTI NTOMOLOGY AND PLA17T Washington 25, D. C. PLANT BOARD agricultural research administration BUREAU OF ENTOMOLOGY AKD PLA17T uTJAHANTr'E August h, 1943 B.E.P.Q,. 57S-45 SUMMARY OE STATE FOR SERY- STOCK SHIPPING RBqnHEMQTZS AND PLANT QUARANTINES AND REGULATIONS AEFECTING INTERSTATE SHIPMENTS TEXAS The information contained in this summary was compiled from material received from the plant quarantine official of Texas and has "been approved by him. It is issued for the convenience of plant quarantine inspectors, shippers, transportation agents, truckers, and others concerned in the in- terstate movement of plants, plant products, and other materials subject to State regulation on account of plant pents. The summary for Texas gives the general requirements for shipping nursery stock into that State, as well as digests of the State plant quar- antines and regulations affecting interstate shipments. An appendix fur- nishes information on post-office requirements for mailing plants a^ well as terminal-inspection procedure. This summary does not include digests of nursery-stock or plant-quarantine requirements rolating to the movement of plants entirely within the State. 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 independently of or as a substitute for the original texts of the regulations and quarantines, and it is not to be interpreted as legally authoritative. Eor detailed information address the Chief, Division of Plant Quarantines, State Department of Agriculture, Austin, Texas. In addition to State requirements, shippers will need to take into consideration applicable plant quarantines of the United States Department of Agriculture. In most instances these quarantines regulate the inter- state movement of specified plants, plant products, end other articles from designated regulated areas. However, some of these quarantines regu- late the interstate movement of certain articles into designated protected areas. Copies of such quarantines mj^y be obtained from the Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine, Washington 25, D. C. Acting Chief, Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine ^~ T c xa s nur s e ry- stock sh ipp in ~ re qui r emc n t s -2- TEXAS Summary of Seneral ffursery-Stoek Shipping Requi reme'n t s (Orchard and Nurs*. Insp. law, ch. 7, arts.l2g-lJ5, Rev. Civ. Stat. 1925, as amended 19}+1; ch.10, arts. 169U, 169s-;, 1639, Rev'. Crim. Stat.1925) .Definition of ITursory Stock. — All fruit trees and vines, shade trees, and forest trees, whether nursery-grown or- wild; all scions, seedlings, roses, evergreens, shrubs, or ornamentals, also such greenhouse plants or pro- pagation stock; berry plants; and cut flowers taken from any plant growing in the State which may bo 3 medium for disseminating injurious insect pests and. contagious den ascs„ General Shipping Requirements. — No one may ship nursery stock into Toxas without having filed with the Texas Oommissionrr of Agriculture a certi- fied copy of his. certificate of inspection of tho State of origin. When treatment of the stock is, required the certificate must show that such .tech: has been fumigated or otherwise treated. If the. certificate is ac- ceptable to the Commissioner a Texas importation certificate will be issued perj lit ting shipment into Texas of the stock described. Each container of nursery stock from outside the State must bear a tag on which is printed a copy of the certificate of the State of origin. The movement of c? trus nursery stock into Texas from any area is prohibited except under special permit issued by the Con: vis si oner, See Citrus -ursery-Stock. Ho carrier shall receive, transport, or deliver shipments of nursery stock when not accompanied by copies. of inspect1 on certificates, as re- quired. The carrier shell not be held liable for damages for refusing to do so,. The agent of such carrier shall immediately report uncertified shipments to tho Commissioner* It is unlawful for any agent of a nurseryman or a dealer to deliver infested or diseased plants to anyone even though such plants are received in a container leaning an inspection certificate. . ■ Citrus. Seed (Regulations; Feb. \ I9U6) No on^ may move citrus seed into Teres without first furnishing the Commissioner of Agriculture with a certified official statement from the State of origin, made out in duplicate, that the seed was harvested in territory free from citrus canker and in an area free from quick decline disease, together with an affidavit that the seed was treated in the specified antiseptic solution. The original certificate must be attached to the outside of the container in which the seed is shipped, end a dupli- cate copy must be sent to the Commissioner in advance of shipment. ^•'exas nursery- stock shipping requirements -3- Citrus Nursery Stock (Regulations) No one may chip citrus nursery stock into any part of Texas without having obtained from the Commissioner of Agriculture a special citrus license, and no one may ship such stock into the counties of Cameron, Willacy, Hidalgo, Starr, Kenedy, Brooks, Jim Hogg* and Zapata oxcept under special permit. Applicants for the special citrus liconse, in addition to complying with all requirements for a general nursery license, must file with the Commissioner (l) a statement signed "by the applicant and the chief nursery inspector of the State of origin showing the numher of each variety of citrus trees growing on the properties of the applicant and (2) an agreement to ship into Texas only btock grown on his own premises and covered by an inspection certificate of the State of origin to he furnished to the Toxac Department of Agriculture. The stock must he free from all injurious posts and in no case will stock located within 10 miles of any citrus canker, scaly hark or camphor scale he permitted to he delivered in Texas. The citrus stock must (l) he accompanied by an official cortificato showing that it has been defoliated, scrubbed, and reinspected when packed; (2) bear a label showing its age, variety, and rootstcck; and (3) have or the container the special Texas citrus license tag and the inspection certificate of the State of origin. Citrus Nursery Stock and Fruit (H. B. 52b, approved Juno 30, 1539) No one may ship citrus nursery -took or citrus fruit into Texas without first having filed with the Commissioner of Agriculture a cer- tified copy of a certificate of the State of origin showing (l) that the stock or fruit was produced in a county known to be free from the "black scale, branch and twig boror, long- tailed mealybug, orange-peel minor, withertip cf lime, and scaly bark, or (2) that the stock an^ fruit have been treated by a method approved by the Commissioner. No carrier shall receive, transport, or deliver shipments of citrus nursery stock or citrus fruit originating outside the State which do not bear a copy of the inspection certificate of the State of origin and of the Texas permit issued by the Commissioner; and no carrier shall be liable for damages for refusing to do so. Te ;-:a 9 mir s e ry- s to ck sh .I np ing requirement s _h_ Citrus Nursery Stock and Fruit (Cont.) ( Quarantine Proclamation No. 1? C, effective Apr. lk, I9U7) It is unlawful for anyone to move any citrus stock, budwood, or re dlings into the Winter Garden Citrus District, or protected area, com- posed of a portion of Webb County and the counties of Dimmit, Frio, La Salle, Maverick, and Zavala, except under special permit from the Commissioner of Agriculture. Such permit vail be issued upon compliance with the following conditions? ( l) All citrus nursery trees must bo defoliated and scrubbed with a specified solution; (?) if noxious weeds or grasses are present in the originating nursery, the trees must be shipped bare-rooted; (3) citrus bi dwood and citrus seedlings must be dipped in a specified solution; (h) all treatments must be under supervision of a State inspector who shall issue special tags certifying treatm n't; (j) in the case of citrus nursery trees the inspector shell issue a written report retting forth the number of each varicty» date of treatment, insects found or. the trees, and names of shipper and consignee; and (6) such stock must be shipped within 2^;- hours of per- formance of required treatment. Citrus fruits may not be shipped into the protected area, including the entire county of '/ebb, unless they have been washed, scrubbed, or treated to render them free of live- scale insects and other economic pests. See also Citrus Eursery Stock Regulations. Cut Flowers (Proclamation :To. 90, effective June 1, 1935) Dace, container of cut flowers shipped into Texas must be tagged with a Texas permit label, bea.rinm a copy of a Texas certificate, and a. copy of ah inspection certificate of the State of origin. Each applicant for a Texas floral importation permit must file \tith the Department of A er-iculturo a copy of certificate of floral inspection of the State of origin. Shipments of floral material moving into Texae e.re subject to inspec- tion at destination. Texas nlant quarantines Summary of Plant Quarantines Azalea Flower Spot (Quarantine 129, revised effective iTov. 6, 19^0) Azaleas of any variety may not "be transported from any regulated area into Texas unless each shipnent is accompanied "by a special inspection cer- tificate of the State of origin. Certificates may cd issued when the plants have "been rprayed while growing, at least once during the budding period, with one of the approved sprays listed and all blooms or flowers showing signs of disease removed prior to certification. All mulch, leaves, and old flowers must be removed from the tall. If not sprayed in the field, plants must he sprayed or dipped, prior to shipment, with one of the approved sprays. A valii nursery inspection certificate may he used if complirnce with this quarantine is indicated in writing by a State official on the certi- ficate or attached to it. Regulated area Alabama Louisiana South Carolina Florida Mississippi Texas Georgia IJorth Carolina 3?exas plant quarantines -0- Internal Cork JOi sea so of_ Sweet Pot ate (Proclamation lb. M-3 A, amending Proclamation No. kg, effective Mar. 7, 191+9) The movement into the "Internal'. Cork Free Area" of Texas of sweetpotatoes, sweetpotato slips3 or any part thereof, from the infected States, and any other State that nay hereafter "become infected with the disease, is pro- hibited, except by special permission of the Texas Commissi oner of Agri! culture,, 1? ■.' . acted States Alabama Louisiana. Oklahoma Arkansas Mississippi South Carolina Florida North Carolina Tennessee G e 0 r ■ L ' Texas Internal Cork Free Area Counties of; Andersons Angelifyfc., Archer, -Armstrong, Bailey, Baylor, Borden, Bowie, Brewster, Briscoe, Brown, Callahan, Camp, Carson, Cans, Castro, Cherokee, Childress, Clay, Cochran, Coke, Coleman, Collin, Collingsworth, Comanche, Cooke, Cottle, Crosby, Culberson, Dalian, Delias, Dawson, Deaf. Sr.ith, Delta, Denton, .Dickens, Donley, Eastland, Ector, Ellis, PI Paso, Erath, Palls, Fisher, Floyd, Foard, Franklin, Freestone, Galnos, Garza^ Glasscock, Gray, Grayson, Gregg, Hale, Hall, Hansford, Hardeman, Harrison, Hartley, Haskell, Hemphill, Henderson, Hockley, Hood, Hopkins, Houston, Howard, Hudspeth, Hunt, Hutchinson, Jacks Johnson, Jones, Kaufman, Kent, King, Kncx, Lamar, Lanb, Leon, Lipscomb, Loving, Lubbock, Lynn, Madison, Marion, Martin, Midland, Mitchell, Montague, Moore, MorriSj Motley, Nacogdoches, Navarro, Nolan, Ochiltree, Oldham, Palo Pinto, Panola, Parker, Parmer, Potter, Rains, Randall, Red River, Reeves, Roberts, Robertson, Rockwall, Runnels, Rusk, Sabine, San Augustin*, Scurry, Shackelford, Shelby, Sherman, Smith, Somervell, Stephens, Sterling, Stonewall, Swisher, Tarrant, Taylor, Terry, Throckmorton, Titus, Tom Green, Trinity, Upshur, Van Zandt, Ward, Wheeler, Wichita, Wilbarger, ''inkier, Wise, Wood, Yoakum, Young -7- Tcxas plant quarantines Peach Mosaic Disease (Quarantine Orier No. 6, effective Jan. 5, I9U5) Restricted articles. — Almond, apricot, nectarine, peach, plum, and prune trees, rootstock, grafts, "buds, or other parts thereof capahlo of propa- gation, except fruit pits. Conditions governing shipment. — Transportation of the restricted articles from any infected area into, within, or from Texas is permitted only when there is securely attached to the outside of each shipment a valid nursery- inspection certificate of the State of origin hearing the name and address of the consignor. Issuo.nce of certificates. — Certificates authorizing shipment of the re- stricted articles may "be issued on condition that all diseased trees were removed from the environs of nurseries; and "budwood sources for a radius of 1 mile hy or "before May 15, provided that certificates will not he issued for 1 year following the finding of mosaic infection either ir> or immediately adjacent to a nursery "black or hudwood orchard. The annual inspection of host trees within such 1-mile radius is required. All hud- wood secured in or shipped from a regulated area must ho cut under the supervision of an inspector and covered "by a special certificate. These restrictions do not apply to shipments of restricted articles to the U. S. Department of Agriculture or to recognized State institutions for experimental or scientific purposes oxcojjt that a special permit must he secured for movement into or within Texas. Regulated area Arizona: Counties of Apache, Cochise, Coconino, Graham, Maricopa, Pima, Santa Cruz, Yavapai California: All of San Diego County and th-se portions of Los Angles, Riverside, and San Bernardino Counties covered "by the California intrastate quarantine Colorado: Counties of Mesa and Montezuma ETew Mexico: Counties of Bernalillo, Dona Ana, Lincoln, Otero, Rio Arriha, Sandoval, San Juan, Santa-Fe, Sierra, Socorro, Taos, Valencia Oklahoma: Counties of Alfalfa, Bryan, Johnston, Woods Texas: Counties of Brown, Callahan, Cherokee, Comanche, Dallas, Eastland, El Paso, Fannin, Fisher, Floyd, Gregg, Hale, Hudspeth, Johnson, Jones, Mj.lis, Palo Pinto, Parker, Runnels, Rusk, San Saha, Smith, Tarrant, Taylor, Upshur, Wilhargor, Wood, Young Utah: Counties of Grand and Washington Texo,s plarat quarantines -g- Pbony Poach Pi seo so (Quarantine No. 5, effective "Tan. 5, 19^5) Be.-ralnt "> 1 'Tod.uc_t._sv — Peach and nectarine roots, or peach and nectarine trees with roots, or any kind of trees grafted on peach or nectarine roots. Conditions governing shipment. — rTro.nsporto.tion of regulated products within or from anyinfoetGEts-rea through any port of Texas is permitted only when each such shipment is accompanied "by a -valid inspection certi- ficate of the State of origin, I s su- nco o f _ c c r t i fie o;t e s . — Inspection certificates will he issued only on condition that .all poach on! nectarine trees growing in the nursery and within a 1-mile radius thereof were inspected prior to June J/0 and that no phony— descased trees existed in such area or all phony-diseased trees, including roots, were removed and destroyed proir to June 30» preceding the shipping season, Pegu? atop areas Alabama: Entire State Fl -, v i da : Ent i r c S tat e Georgia: Entire State Arkansas: Counties of Arkansas, Ashley, Bradley, Chicot, Colunhia, Crittenden, Cross, Desha, Drew, Hempstead, Howard, Jefferson, Johnson, Lafayette, Leo, Lincoln, Little Biver, Miller, Monroe, Nevada, Phillips, Pike, Saint Francis, Sevier, Union, White, Woodruff Louisiana? Parishes of Bienville, Bossier, Caddo, Claiborne, Be Soto, Jackson; Lincoln, Morehouse, Natchitoches, Ouachita, Red River, Union, Webster Mississippi: Entire State except the counties of Alcorn, Benton, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Clarke, Coahoma, Do Soto, Granada, Ituwamba, Lafayette, Lauderdale, Lee, Leflore, Madison, Marshall, Panola, Pontotoc, Prentiss, Quitman, Rankin, Scott, Simpson, Sunflower, Tippah, Tishomingo, Tunica, Union, barren, Yalobusha Missouri: C unties of Dunklin and Per-iiscot South Carolina: Counties of Edgefield, Greenville, Greenwood, Laurons, Saluda, Spartanburg . Tonne so ec: Counties of Chester, Crockett, Davidson, Franklin, Hamilton, Hardeman, Hardin, Haywood, Lauderdale, Marion, Putnam, Rutherford, Shelby, Tipton, White, Wilson Texas: Counties of Atascosa, Bexar, Bowie, Brazos, -Cherokee, Conal, Dallas, Gregg, Harrison, Henderson, "ouston, Jasper, Kaufman, Kerr, Limestone, McLennan, Milam, Panola, Robertson, Rusk, San Augustine, Smith, Travis, Upshur, Yvn Zandt, Wood Texas plant quarantines -9- Potato Diseases and Potato Tuber ^oth (Quarantine Proclamation IfC-E, effective Eec. b, I9U6) Each shipment or lot of seed potatoes transported, soli, or offered for sole in the Texas counties of Cameron, Kidalge , and Willacy uust be accompanied by a certificate of the State of origin to the effect that such seed potatoes were inspected in the field while growing and in r-tor- age and found free from late blight, bacterial ring rot*: and potato tuber moth. Seel potatoes known to be infested with potato tub-r moth may not be moved into the aforesaid counties unless fumigated by approved methods and so certified. The certificate must accompany the shipment and must state the number of containers in the shinment. All seed potatoes must be in new container? with an identification tag sealed thereto, on which is printed the name of the distributor or grower, the grade, and State of origin. Texas plant quarantines -10- Swe e tpot a to Wee v il (Quarantine Order Ho. '1 C, effective Aug. 1, 19'!-7) He s trie ted material. — (l) Sweetpotato roofer, or tubers and plants, vines, or parts thereof, (2) cny vires or roots of other plants belonging to the . gf-nus Ipomoea, and (3) such other plants as may ho found to ho hosts of the sweetpotato weevil. Conditions severe ire „20V.,'\!r'cu:l^« — Restricted material may not he moved from any ro.:ulated arc1, into, within, or from Texas unless a valid sweetpotato ■ t;evil inspection certific&te of the State of origin is securely attached to the outside of each container thereof. Conditions governing certification. — (l) The rortrictod material certifies! must bo apparently free from infestation "by ten weevil, find ( 2) must have been produced, packed, and he ndle J in such manner as to eliminate danger of spread of weevils. i"o certificate will he issued for shipment of sweetpotatocs from Texas to an?/ Stats which ''ay prohibit the entry of sweetpotatoes from the regulated a v..: a in Tex^n. Alabama: Counties of Baldwin, Coffee, Covington, Geneva, Mohile Plorida: Entire State exc opt counties of Bay, Calhoun, Escambia, Prank] in, Gulf, Holmes, Madison, Wakulla, Walton, Washington Georgia: Counties of Chatham, Colquitt, Grady, Tift, Worth Louisiana: Parish of Do Scte and ell perishes south of and including Vernon, Lapides, Avoyelles, Pointc Coupee, West Feliciana, Sast kilioiana, Saint Helena, Tangipahoa, Washington Counties of Greene, Hancock, Karric<:' , Je.ohson, Stone, Walthall Counties of An 7: line, ^.ransas, Atascofa, Austin, Bandera, Bastrop, Bee, Bell, Bexar, Blanco, Bosque, 3razoria, Lra7.es, 3rooks, Burleson, Burnet, Caldwell, Calhoun, Cameron, Chambers, Colorado, Comal, Concho, Coryell, Crane, Crockett, Be Witt, limit, Duval, Bdwards, Payette, Port Bond, Brio, Galveston, Cill^spie, Colind, Gon;aies, Crimes, Guadalupe, Hamilton, Hardin, Harris, Hays, Hidalgo, Hill, Irion, Jackson, Jasper, Jeff Davis, Jefferson, Jim Hogg, Jim Wells, Kernes, Kendall, Senedj , Kerr, Kimble, Kinney, Kleberg, Lampasas, La Sail©, Lavaca, Leo, Liberty, Limestone, Live Oak, Llano, heCuiloch, McLennan, Hci'Iullen, Mason, Matagorda, Maverick, Medina, iienard, Milam, Montgomery, Haoogdooher?, Newton, Kueces, Orenre, Pecos, Polk, Prosidio, Reagan, Real, Refugio, San Augustine, San Jacinto, Can Patricio, San Saba, Schleicher, Starr, Sat ton, Terrell, Travis, Trinity, Syler, Upton, Uvalde, Trnl Verde, Victoria, Walker, Waller, Washington, Webb, Wharton, Willacy, Wiliia.:son, Wilson, Zapata, ^avaia -11- Texas plant quarantine o Vetch Weevil (Quarantine Proclamation No. ^k, effective aav JL, I9U7 ; as amen lei Aug. 27, lykg) Restrictions, — Vetch seed grown in or shipped from the infested territory will not he admitted into Texas unless the State of origin certifies that each lot has "been (l) fumigated according to approved methods or (2) grown in or shipped from a noninfested area in the infested territory. The original certificate must accompany the shipment, and a copy must be sent to the Texas Commissioner of Agriculture at time of shipment. Certificates from noninfestod areas. — When it has "been determined "by an- nual official surveys that an area of any State in the infested territory is not infested, provided that adequate protection is afforded against entry of vetch weevil into such area, the Texas Commissioner of Agriculture; upon receipt of evidence thereof from such State, nay permit the movement into Texas of vetch seed so certified. Infested territory Alabama Arkansas Connecticut Delaware District of Columbia Georgia I daho Maryland Mississippi New Jersey North Carolina Oregon Pennsylvania South Carolina Virginia Washington The foregoing summary was checked and approved en November 1, 19^+S, by Walter T. McKay, Chief, Division of Plant Quarantines, as to the quar- antines then in effect. The quarantine pertaining to internal cork dis- ease of sweetpotato was summarized thereafter. -12- APPS1TDIX Requirements for --'Jailing Plants and Plant Products Under the postal laws and regulations^ nursery stock:, including all field-grown florists1 stock, trees, shrubs, vines, cuttings, grafts, scions, buds, fruit pits, and other seeds of fruit and ornamental trees or shrubs; and other plants and plant products for propagation, including strawberry plants ( except field, vegetable, and flower seeds, bedding ■ Lants and other herbaceous plants, bulbs, and roots), may be admitted to the mails only when accompanied by a State inspection certificate to the effect that the nursery or premises from which sue1'1, stock is shipped has been inspected within a year and found free from injurious insects and plant diseases. Parcels containing such nursery stock must be plainly marked to show the nature of. the contents end the name and address of the sender. (Postal. Laws and Regulations 19---0, sec. 595 - 5 Inspection and certification must be dona by a plant quarantine official of the State of origin. An individual mailing :-f such plants or plant products, if fro;' uninspected premises, will also be accepted upon examination and! certifi- cation uy a State plant quarantine official. The address of the Texas plant quarantine official is given in the preceding summary. Terr. inal iru-pecticn of Hail Shipments of Plae.tsand Plant Products (Act I'fa r . h , 1Q15, as amended June 4, l°:3'o; Postal Laws and Regulations I9U0, sec. 596) Establishment of Terminal Inspection. — Any Statu desiring to operate under the provision.; of the terminal inspection law so as to regulate the move- ment of mail shipments of plants and plant products into (or within) the State may, after haying provided therefor at State expense and having ' i ;nated one or more places where inspection will .be maintained, arrange to have such mail shipments turned over to State plant quarantine inspec- tors for examination at losignated inspection points. Application will be raa.de to the Secretary of Agriculture ''oy submitting a list of plants and plant products and the plant pests transmitted thereby, which are to be examined. 1:hi: list, when approved in whole or in part, will be transmitted to the Postmasti r General whereupon postmasters will be informed and in- structed. Anyone mailir : a parcel containing any plants or plant products ad- dressed to on;- place withir a State maintaining terminal inspection thereof is required, under the law, to have the pareel plainly marked on the out- side io show the nature of the contents. Materials shipped under Federal quarantine certificates issued by the Bureau of Entomology end ^lant Quarantine may be exempted from terminal inspection at the option of the receiving State. Under the provisions of the 193^ amendment te the law, any State may arrange through Federal channels, after approval by the Secretary of Agriculture as indicated above, to regulate or prohibit the movement into (or within) the State oi mall shipments of designated plants and plant products the movement of which would constitute a violation of State plant quarantine laws or regulations. -13- Terminal Inspection Procedure, — Upon arrival in any State maintaining terminal Inspection, plrnts or plant products named on the approved list will be forwarded by the postmaster at destination to the neatest in- spection point. If the plants or plant products are found, upon inspec- tion, to be free f rom irijiri ous pests and not in violation of any plant quarantine or regulation of the State of destination or the United States Department of Agriculture, or if disinfested when they are found infested, such plants or plant products will then "be forwarded "by the postmaster at the point of inspection to the addressee upon payment of postage. If plants or plant product:;, upon inspection, are found to be in- fested with injurious pests and cannot bo satisfactorily disinfested, or care in violation of any plant quarar tine or regulation of the State of destination or the United States Department of Agriculture, the postmaster upon notification by the State inspector will inform the sender that the parcel will be returned to him upon his request and at his expense. In default of such request the parcel will be turned over to the State author- ities for destruction. Terminal inspection of plants and plant products is now maintained by Arizona, Arkansas, California, District of Columbia, Florida, Hawaii, Idaho, Minnesota, Mississippi, Montana, Oregon, Puerto Pico, Utah, and Washington. Flints and plant products subject to terminal inspection end places where terminal-inspection service is maintained are listed at the end of the summary of the general nursery-stock shipping requirements for each of the above-mentioned States, District, and Territories. Procedure for Paying Forwarding Portage. — Methods of paying forwarding postage are provided to expedite the handling of parcels subject to ter- minal inspection, as follows: (1) The addressee nay have the parcels ad- dressed to himself in care of the State inspector at a designated terminal- inspection point in the State of destination and provide the inspector with postage for forwarding the inspected plants; or (2) the addressee may arrange with the sender to place on the parcels a pledge reading, "Forwarding postage guaranteed, " whereupon the additional postage for forwarding will be collected from the addressee. UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA 3 1262 09314 8913