Tolerance Crop Grouping Program IV, 68153-68172 [2014-26661]
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 220 / Friday, November 14, 2014 / Proposed Rules
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regulatory document is not available to
the public until after it has been signed
and made available by EPA.
DATES: See Unit I. under SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION.
ADDRESSES: The docket for this action,
identified by docket identification (ID)
number EPA–HQ–OPP–2005–0561, is
available at https://www.regulations.gov
or at the Office of Pesticide Programs
Regulatory Docket (OPP Docket) in the
Environmental Protection Agency
Docket Center (EPA/DC), West William
Jefferson Clinton Bldg., Rm. 3334, 1301
Constitution Ave. NW., Washington, DC
20460–0001. The Public Reading Room
is open from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.,
Monday through Friday, excluding legal
holidays. The telephone number for the
Public Reading Room is (202) 566–1744,
and the telephone number for the OPP
Docket is (703) 305–5805. Please review
the visitor instructions and additional
information about the docket available
at https://www.epa.gov/dockets.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Michelle Arling, Field and External
Affairs Division (7506P), Office of
Pesticide Programs, Environmental
Protection Agency, 1200 Pennsylvania
Ave. NW., Washington, DC 20460–0001;
telephone number: (703) 308–5891;
email address: arling.michelle@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. What action is EPA taking?
Section 25(a)(2)(A) of FIFRA requires
the EPA Administrator to provide the
Secretary of USDA with a copy of any
draft proposed rule at least 60 days
before signing it in proposed form for
publication in the Federal Register. The
draft proposed rule is not available to
the public until after it has been signed
by EPA. If the Secretary of USDA
comments in writing regarding the draft
proposed rule within 30 days after
receiving it, the EPA Administrator
shall include the comments of the
Secretary of USDA and the EPA
Administrator’s response to those
comments with the proposed rule that
publishes in the Federal Register. If the
Secretary of USDA does not comment in
writing within 30 days after receiving
the draft proposed rule, the EPA
Administrator may sign the proposed
rule for publication in the Federal
Register any time after the 30-day
period.
II. Do any statutory and executive order
reviews apply to this notification?
No. This document is merely a
notification of submission to the
Secretary of USDA. As such, none of the
regulatory assessment requirements
apply to this document.
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List of Subjects in Part 171
Environmental protection, Applicator
competency, Agricultural worker safety,
Pesticide safety training, Pesticide
worker safety, Pesticides and pests,
Restricted use pesticides.
Dated: November 3, 2014.
William L. Jordan,
Acting Director, Office of Pesticide Programs.
[FR Doc. 2014–26895 Filed 11–13–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
68153
follow the instructions at https://
www.epa.gov/dockets/contacts.html.
Additional instructions on
commenting or visiting the docket,
along with more information about
dockets generally, is available at https://
www.epa.gov/dockets.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Barbara Madden, Registration Division
(7505P), Office of Pesticide Programs,
Environmental Protection Agency, 1200
Pennsylvania Ave. NW., Washington,
DC 20460–0001; telephone number:
(703) 305–6463; email address:
madden.barbara@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
40 CFR Part 180
I. General Information
[EPA–HQ–OPP–2006–0766; FRL–9918–40]
A. Legal Authority
EPA is initiating this rulemaking to
amend the existing crop grouping
regulations under section 408(e)(1)(C) of
the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic
Act (FFDCA), which authorizes EPA to
establish ‘‘general procedures and
requirements to implement [section
408].’’ 21 U.S.C. 346a(e)(1)(C). Under
FFDCA section 408, EPA is authorized
to establish tolerances for pesticide
chemical residues in food. EPA
establishes tolerances for each pesticide
based on the potential risks to human
health posed by that pesticide. A
tolerance is the maximum permissible
residue level established for a pesticide
in raw agricultural produce and
processed foods. The crop group
regulations currently in §§ 180.40 and
180.41 enable the establishment of
tolerances for a group of crops based on
residue data for certain crops that are
representative of the group and have
been established under FFDCA section
408(e)(1)(C).
RIN 2070–AJ28
Tolerance Crop Grouping Program IV
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
EPA is proposing revisions to
its pesticide tolerance crop grouping
regulations, which allow the
establishment of tolerances for multiple,
related crops based on data from a
representative set of crops. EPA is
proposing five new crop groups, two
new and two revised commodity
definitions, and revisions to the
regulations on the interaction of crop
group tolerances with processed food
tolerances and meat, milk, and egg
tolerances. Once final, EPA expects
these revisions to promote greater use of
crop groupings for tolerance-setting
purposes, both domestically and in
countries that export food to the United
States. This is the fourth in a series of
planned crop group updates expected to
be proposed over the next several years.
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before January 13, 2015.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments,
identified by docket identification (ID)
number EPA–HQ–OPP–2006–0766, by
one of the following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the online
instructions for submitting comments.
Do not submit electronically any
information you consider to be
Confidential Business Information (CBI)
or other information whose disclosure is
restricted by statute.
• Mail: OPP Docket, Environmental
Protection Agency Docket Center (EPA/
DC), (28221T), 1200 Pennsylvania Ave.
NW., Washington, DC 20460–0001.
• Hand Delivery: To make special
arrangements for hand delivery or
delivery of boxed information, please
SUMMARY:
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B. Does this action apply to me?
You may be potentially affected by
this action if you are an agricultural
producer or food manufacturer. The
following list of North American
Industrial Classification System
(NAICS) codes is not intended to be
exhaustive, but rather provides a guide
to help readers determine whether this
document applies to them. Potentially
affected entities may include:
• Crop production (NAICS code 111).
• Animal production (NAICS code
112).
• Food manufacturing (NAICS code
311).
• Pesticide manufacturing (NAICS
code 32532).
C. What should I consider as I prepare
my comments for EPA?
1. Submitting CBI. Do not submit this
information to EPA through
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 220 / Friday, November 14, 2014 / Proposed Rules
regulations.gov or email. Clearly mark
the part or all of the information that
you claim to be CBI. For CBI
information in a disk or CD–ROM that
you mail to EPA, mark the outside of the
disk or CD–ROM as CBI and then
identify electronically within the disk or
CD–ROM the specific information that
is claimed as CBI. In addition to one
complete version of the comment that
includes information claimed as CBI, a
copy of the comment that does not
contain the information claimed as CBI
must be submitted for inclusion in the
public docket. Information so marked
will not be disclosed except in
accordance with procedures set forth in
40 CFR part 2.
2. Tips for preparing your comments.
When preparing and submitting your
comments, see the commenting tips at
https://www.epa.gov/dockets/
comments.html.
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II. Background
A. Tolerance-Setting Requirements and
Petitions From the Interregional
Research Project Number 4 (IR–4) To
Expand the Existing Crop Grouping
System
EPA is authorized to establish
maximum residue limits (MRLs) or
tolerances for pesticide chemical
residues in or on food commodities
under FFDCA section 408 (21 U.S.C.
346a). EPA establishes pesticide
tolerances only after determining that
aggregate exposure to the pesticide is
considered safe. The U.S. Food and
Drug Administration (FDA) and the U.S.
Department of Agriculture (USDA)
enforce compliance with tolerance
limits.
Traditionally, tolerances are
established for a specific pesticide and
commodity combination. However,
under EPA’s crop grouping regulations
(§ 180.41), a single tolerance may be
established that applies to a group of
related commodities. For example,
Leafy Vegetable Crop Group 4–14 is
proposed to include 62 commodities,
with head lettuce, leaf lettuce, spinach,
and mustard greens as the
representative crops. Crop group
tolerances may be established based on
residue data from designated
representative commodities within the
group. Representative commodities are
selected based on EPA’s determination
that they are likely to bear the maximum
level of residue that could occur on any
crop within the group. Once a crop
group tolerance is established, the
tolerance level applies to all
commodities within the group.
This proposed rule is the fourth in a
series of planned crop group
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amendments expected to be completed
over the next several years. Specific
information regarding the history of the
crop group regulations, the previous
amendments to the regulations and the
process for amending crop groups can
be found in the Federal Register of May
23, 2007 (Ref. 1). Specific information
regarding how the Agency implements
crop group amendments can be found in
§ 180.40(j).
This proposal is based upon five
petitions developed by the International
Crop Grouping Consulting Committee
(ICGCC) workgroup and submitted to
EPA by a nation-wide cooperative
project, IR–4. These petitions and the
supporting monographs are included in
the docket for this action, under docket
ID number EPA–HQ–OPP–2006–0766 at
https://regulations.gov. EPA expects that
a series of additional petitions seeking
amendments and changes to the crop
grouping regulations (§ 180.41) will
originate from the ICGCC workgroup
over the next several years.
EPA believes that this proposal is a
burden-reducing regulation. It will
provide for greater sharing of data by
permitting the results from a magnitude
of residue field trial studies in one crop
to be applied to other, similar crops.
The primary beneficiaries are minor
crop producers and consumers. Minor
crop producers will benefit because
lower registration costs will encourage
more products to be registered on minor
crops, providing additional tools for
pest control. Consumers are expected to
benefit by having more affordable and
abundant food products available.
Secondary beneficiaries include
pesticide registrants, as expanded
markets for pesticide products will lead
to increased sales.
EPA believes that data from
representative crops will not
underestimate the public exposure to
pesticide residues through the
consumption of treated crops. IR–4,
which is publicly funded, will also
more efficiently use resources as a result
of this rule. Revisions to the crop
grouping scheme will result in no
appreciable costs or negative impacts to
consumers, minor crop producers,
pesticide registrants, the environment,
or human health.
B. International Considerations
1. North American Free Trade
Agreement (NAFTA) partner
involvement in proposal. EPA’s Office of
Pesticide Programs’ Chemistry Science
Advisory Council (ChemSAC), an
internal Agency peer review committee,
provided a detailed analysis for each
proposed crop group to Canada’s Pest
Management Regulatory Agency
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(PMRA), IR–4, and the government of
Mexico for their review and comment,
and invited these parties to participate
in the ChemSAC meeting to finalize the
recommendations for each petition.
PMRA has indicated that it will, in
parallel with the United States effort
and under the authority of Canada’s Pest
Control Products (PCP) Act (2002),
establish equivalent crop groups.
Additionally, once the new crop groups
become effective in the United States,
Mexico will have them as a reference for
the establishment of maximum residue
limits in Mexico.
2. Relationship of proposal to Codex
activities. The United States and
Canadian Delegations to the Codex
Committee on Pesticide Residues
(CCPR) have an ongoing effort to
harmonize the NAFTA crop groups and
representative commodities with those
being developed by Codex, an
international commission created to
develop international food standards,
guidelines and related texts, as part of
their revision of the Codex
Classification of Foods and Feeds.
Canada and the United States are
working closely with the Chairs of the
Codex group for this project (The
Netherlands and the United States) to
coordinate the U.S. crop group
amendments with the efforts to amend
the Codex crop groups. The goals of
coordinating these NAFTA activities
with Codex activities are to minimize
differences within and among the
Unites States and Codex groups and to
develop representative commodities for
each group that will be acceptable on an
international basis. These efforts could
lead to the increased harmonization of
tolerances and MRL recommendations.
C. Scheme for Organization of Revised
and Pre-Existing Crop Groups
EPA has amended the generic crop
group regulations to include an explicit
scheme for how revised crop groups
will be organized in the regulations.
In brief, the regulations now specify
that when a crop group is amended in
a manner that expands or contracts its
coverage of commodities, EPA will
retain the pre-existing crop group in
§ 180.41; insert the new, related crop
group immediately after the pre-existing
crop group in the Code of Federal
Regulations (CFR); and title the new,
related crop group in a way that clearly
differentiates it from the pre-existing
crop group. The new, related crop group
will retain roughly the same name and
number as the pre-existing group except
that the number will be followed by a
hyphen and the final two digits of the
year it is established. For example, EPA
is proposing to revise Crop Group 5:
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Brassica Leafy Vegetables. The revised
group is proposed be titled Crop Group
5–14: Head and Stem Brassica
Vegetable. Although EPA will initially
retain pre-existing crop groups that have
been superseded by new crop groups,
EPA will not establish new tolerances
under the pre-existing groups. Further,
EPA plans to eventually convert
tolerances for any pre-existing crop
groups to tolerances with the coverage
of the new crop group. This conversion
will be effected both through the
registration review process and in the
course of establishing new tolerances for
a pesticide. To this end, EPA requests
that petitioners for tolerances address
this issue in their petitions.
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III. Specific Proposed Revisions
This unit explains the proposed
amendments to the crop group
regulations.
A. Crop Group 4–14: Leafy Vegetable
Group
EPA is proposing to expand Leafy
Vegetable, except Brassica Crop Group 4
to both add and remove commodities
and to restructure the group. EPA
proposes to name the new crop group
the Leafy Vegetable Crop Group 4–14.
1. Add new commodities. In creating
new Crop Group 4–14, EPA proposes to
include most, but not all, commodities
currently in Crop Group 4 and to add
the following 41 commodities currently
not in Crop Group 4: Aster, Indian,
Kalimeris indica (L.) Sch. Bip.;
Blackjack, Bidens pilosa L.; broccoli
raab, Brassica ruvo L.H. Bailey; broccoli,
Chinese, Brassica oleracea var.
alboglabra (L.H. Bailey) Musil; cabbage,
abyssinian, Brassica carinata A. Braun;
cabbage, seakale, Brassica oleracea L.
var. costata DC.; Cat’s whiskers, Cleome
gynandra L.; Cham-chwi, Doellingeria
scabra (Thunb.) Nees; Cham-na-mul,
Pimpinella calycina Maxim; Chinese
cabbage, bok choy, Brassica rapa subsp.
chinensis (L.) Hanelt; Chipilin,
Crotalaria longirostrata Hook & Arn;
cilantro, fresh leaves, Coriandrum
sativum L.; collards, Brassica oleracea
var. Viridis L.; Cosmos, Cosmos
caudatus Kunth; Dang-gwi, Angelica
gigas; dillweed, Anethum graveolens L.;
Dol-nam-mul, Sedum sarmentosum
Bunge; Ebolo, Crassocephalum
crepidioides (Benth.) S. Moore; escarole,
Cichorium endive L. subsp. endiva;
Fameflower, Talinum fruticosum (L.)
Juss.; Feather cockscomb, Glinus
oppositifolius (L.) Aug. DC.; Good King
Henry, Chenopodium bonus-henricus
L.; Hanover salad, Brassica napus var.
Pabularia (DC.) Rchb.; Huauzontle,
Chenopodium berlandieri Moq.; jute,
leaves, Corchorus spp.; kale, Brassica
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oleracea var. Sabellica L;lettuce, bitter,
Launaea cornuta (Hochst. ex Oliv. &
Hiern) C. Jeffrey; Maca, Lepidium
meyenii Walp.; Mizuna, Brassica rapa L.
subsp. nipposinica (L. H. Bailey) Hanelt;
mustard greens, Brassica juncea subsp.,
including Brassica juncea (L.) Czern.
subsp. integrifolia (H. West) Thell.,
Brassica juncea (L.) Czern. var. tsatsai
(T. L. Mao) Gladis; primrose, English,
Primula vulgaris Huds.; radish, leaves,
Raphanus sativus L. var sativus,
including Raphanus sativus L. var.
mougri H. W. J. Helm and Raphanus
sativus L. var. oleiformis Pers; rape
greens, Brassica napus L. var. napus,
including Brassica rapa subsp.
trilocularis (Roxb.) Hanelt, Brassica
rapa subsp. dichotoma (Roxb.) Hanelt,
and Brassica rapa subsp. oleifera Met;
Rocket, wild, Diplotaxis tenuifolia (L.)
DC.; Shepherd’s purse, Capsella bursapastoris (L.) Medik; spinach, malabar,
Basella alba L.; spinach, tanier,
Xanthosoma brasiliense (Desf.) Engl.;
turnip greens, Brassica rapa L. subsp.
Rapa; Violet, Chinese, Asystasia
gangetica (L.) T. Anderson; and
watercress, Nasturtium officinale W. T.
Aiton. Also included are cultivars,
varieties, and hybrids of these
commodities.
Included in this list of commodities
are seven brassica leafy vegetables
currently in Crop Group 5: Broccoli
raab, Chinese cabbage (bok choy),
collards, kale, mizuna, mustard greens,
and rape greens. These seven
commodities represent all current
members of Crop subgroup 5B, with the
exception of mustard spinach. Mustard
spinach has not been proposed for
inclusion in Crop Group 4–14 because
it is one of several common names for
mustard greens, which is already
proposed for inclusion in Crop Group
4–14. EPA is proposing a corresponding
change to Crop Group 5, which will be
incorporated in the proposed new Crop
Group 5–14.
The 41 new commodities proposed
for Crop Group 4–14 were chosen based
on similarities between the existing and
additional commodities in plant
morphology; cultural practices,
including that all commodities are row
crops; pest problems; edible food
portions and lack of animal feed
portions; potential exposures to residues
resulting from application of specific
pesticides; geographical locations;
processing; and established tolerances.
In particular, the brassica leafy
vegetables are proposed to be moved
from Crop Group 5 to revised Crop
Group 4–14 because leafy brassica leafy
vegetables are similar in growth pattern,
leaf exposure and pesticide residues to
the other leafy vegetables in Crop Group
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4–14, and dissimilar from the crops in
Crop Group 5, which are grown and
consumed for their stem or bulb.
Moreover, the leaf morphology of the
moved crops leads to residues that can
be higher than in broccoli and cabbage,
Crop Group 5’s representative
commodities.
Cardoon, celery, Chinese celery,
celtuce, Florence fennel, and rhubarb,
which are currently included in Crop
Group 4, are not proposed for Crop
Group 4–14 but rather new Crop Group
22 Stalk, Stem and Leaf Petiole. The
plant morphology of these six crops is
more similar to crops grown and
consumed for their stalk, stem, and leaf
petiole, rather than for their leaves alone
as are the crops in Crop Group 4–14.
Edible-leaved chrysanthemum, which is
also in Crop Group 4, has not been
proposed for inclusion in Crop Group
4–14 because it is another common
name for chrysanthemum garland,
which is already included in Crop
Group 4 and is proposed for inclusion
in Crop Group 4–14.
2. Representative commodities for
new crop group. The representative
commodities in Crop Group 4 are celery,
head lettuce, leaf lettuce, and spinach.
EPA proposes the following
representative commodities for Crop
Group 4–14: Head lettuce, leaf lettuce,
spinach, and mustard greens. Generally,
the selection of representative
commodities is based on a
representative commodity that is most
likely to: Contain the highest residues
(whether raw or processed); be major in
terms of production and consumption;
and be similar in morphology, growth
habit, pest problems and edible portion,
and subject to similar processing as the
related commodities within a group or
subgroup. The representative
commodities proposed for Crop Group
4–14 represent over 93% of the total
leafy vegetable harvested acres reported
by USDA’s Census of Agriculture and
are the highest consumed commodities
on a per capita basis in the group;
therefore, these commodities were
chosen to represent Crop Group 4–14.
Inclusion of brassica leafy vegetables in
a separate subgroup is desirable because
of potentially different actions of
herbicides on leafy Brassica vegetables,
verses other leafy, non-brassica crops.
3. New subgroups. The existing Crop
Group 4 subgroups are Leafy greens,
subgroup 4A, and Leaf petioles,
subgroup 4B. In light of the significant
differences between existing Crop
Group 4 and proposed Crop Group 4–
14, EPA is proposing the following
subgroups for Crop Group 4–14:
i. Leafy greens subgroup 4–14A.
(Representative commodities-Head
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lettuce, Leaf lettuce, and Spinach). EPA
proposes that subgroup 4–14A include
the following 27 commodities in
addition to the 20 commodities that
currently are included in subgroup 4A:
Amaranth, Chinese; Amaranth, leafy;
Aster, Indian; Blackjack; Cat’s whiskers;
Cham-chwi; Cham-na-mul; Chipilin;
cilantro, fresh leaves; Cosmos; Danggwi; dillweed; Dol-nam-mul; Ebolo;
escarole; Fameflower; Feather
cockscomb; Good King Henry;
Huauzontle; jute, leaves; lettuce, bitter;
plantain, buckthorn; Primrose, English;
spinach, malabar; spinach, tanier; Swiss
chard; and Violet, Chinese. Also
included are cultivars, varieties, and
hybrids of these commodities.
Swiss chard is proposed for inclusion
in subgroup 4–14A because both the
leaves and petioles are consumed and
the leaves constitute a major portion of
the plant, whereas that is not the case
for the brassica leafy greens in subgroup
4–14B. Arugula, upland cress, and
garden cress are currently members of
Crop subgroup 4A; however, these
commodities are members of the
Brassicaceae family and are therefore
proposed for inclusion in subgroup 4–
14B, because of their similarities to the
other commodities proposed in that
subgroup.
Leafy greens subgroup 4–14A is
proposed to have head lettuce, leaf
lettuce, and spinach as the
representative commodities, which are
the same as the current Leafy Greens
subgroup 4A.
ii. Brassica leafy greens subgroup 4–
14B. (Representative commodityMustard greens). As previously
discussed, EPA is proposing to add
eight brassica leafy vegetables currently
in Crop Group 5 (those included in Crop
subgroup 5B, except mustard spinach)
to Crop Group 4–14. EPA is also
proposing to create a subgroup in new
Crop Group 4–14 for these commodities
and 12 other similar commodities. This
new subgroup 4–14B is proposed to
include the following 20 commodities:
Arugula; broccoli raab; broccoli,
Chinese; cabbage, abyssinian; cabbage,
seakale; Chinese cabbage, bok choy;
collards; cress, garden; cress, upland;
Hanover salad; kale; Maca; Mizuna;
mustard greens; radish, leaves; rape
greens; Rocket, wild; Shepherd’s purse;
turnip greens; and watercress. Also
included are cultivars, varieties, and
hybrids of these commodities.
Arugula, upland cress, and garden
cress are proposed for inclusion in new
subgroup 4–14B because these
commodities are members of the
Brassicaceae family. Inclusion of
brassica leafy vegetables in a separate
subgroup is desirable because of
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potentially different actions of
herbicides on leafy brassica vegetables,
versus other leafy (non-brassica) crops.
EPA proposes these additional
commodities in Crop subgroups 4–14A
and 4–14B because of the similarities in
cultural practices, potential residue
exposures, dietary consumption
importance, and the lack of animal feed
items. A comparison of existing
tolerances supports the proposed
subgroups and representative
commodities for Crop Group 4–14.
EPA is not proposing to carry Leaf
petiole subgroup 4B over to Crop Group
4–14 because, as previously discussed,
most of the crops in that group are being
proposed for inclusion in the new
proposed Stalk, Stem, and Leaf Petiole
Crop Group 22.
B. Crop Group 5–14: Head and Stem
Brassica Vegetable Group
EPA is proposing to amend Brassica
(Cole) Leafy Vegetables Crop Group 5, to
remove commodities and to restructure
the group. EPA proposes to name the
new crop group the Brassica Head and
Stem Vegetable Crop Group 5–14.
1. Commodities not included. EPA
proposes to not include eight
commodities currently in Crop Group 5
(Chinese broccoli (gai lon); broccoli raab
(rapini); cabbage, Chinese (bok choy);
collards; kale; mizuna; mustard greens;
and rape greens) in Crop Group 5–14
because, as previously discussed, the
commodities are being included in Crop
Group 4–14. EPA also proposes to not
include one other commodity currently
in Crop Group 5 (kohlrabi) in Crop
Group 5–14. Kohlrabi is proposed to be
included in the proposed new Stalk,
Stem, and Leaf Petiole Crop Group 22,
as the kohlrabi’s exposed, enlarged, and
bulb-like stem can have higher pesticide
residues than the proposed
representative commodities (broccoli or
cabbage) for new Crop Group 5–14.
Two other commodity terms are not
being carried over from Crop Group 5 to
new Crop Group 5–14. First, Chinese
mustard cabbage is not a distinct crop,
but rather a common name that refers to
various leafy non-heading Brassica
greens. The brassica leafy greens have
been proposed for new Crop Group 4–
14. The term Chinese mustard cabbage
is also not proposed for new Crop Group
5–14 because of its non-distinctive
nature. Second, cavalo broccoli is the
same species as cauliflower, and the
name was used to refer to various types
of broccoli or cauliflower in the past. It
is not proposed for inclusion in new
Crop Group 5–14 because of
redundancy.
Thus, EPA is proposing that new Crop
Group 5–14 contain the following
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commodities: Broccoli, Brassica
oleracea L. var. italica Plenck; brussels
sprouts, Brassica oleracea L. var.
gemmifera (DC.) Zenker; cabbage,
Brassica oleracea L. var. capitata L.;
cabbage, Chinese, napa, Brassica rapa L.
subsp. pekinensis (Lour.) Hanelt; and
cauliflower, Brassica oleracea L. var.
capitata L. Also included are cultivars,
varieties, and hybrids of these
commodities.
The commodities proposed for
inclusion in new Crop Group 5–14 were
chosen based on similarities in plant
morphology; cultural practices,
including that all are row crops; pest
problems; edible food and animal feed
portions; residue levels; geographical
locations; processing; and established
tolerances on these commodities. The
commodities chosen for this crop group
also further the goal of international
harmonization of tolerances and other
MRLs, through coordinating the U.S.
crop group amendments with efforts to
amend the Codex crop groups.
2. Representative commodities. The
representative commodities in Crop
Group 5 are broccoli or cauliflower,
cabbage, and mustard greens. EPA
proposes the following representative
commodities for new Crop Group 5–14:
Broccoli or cauliflower, and cabbage.
These commodities are the same
representative commodities as in Crop
Group 5, except for mustard greens. EPA
proposes to move those commodities
currently represented by mustard greens
to new Crop Group 4–14; therefore,
mustard greens is not proposed as a
representative commodity for new Crop
Group 5–14. All other representative
commodities are the same as those
currently representing Crop Group 5,
and are proposed to represent new Crop
Group 5–14 group members because the
proposed representative commodities
are the most likely to: Contain the
highest residues (whether raw or
processed); be major in terms of
production and consumption; and be
similar in morphology, growth habit,
pest problems and edible portion, and
subject to similar processing as the
related commodities within a group or
subgroup. These representative
commodities account for >99% of the
harvested acres for the members of this
amended crop group, and are the most
widely grown Brassica head and stem
commodities in the United States, with
the largest acreages and geographical
distribution. The representative
commodities are based on similarities in
its vegetable structures, exposure to
residues, and cultural practices and
geographical locations, as well as their
high production (both acres and yield)
and consumption. A comparison of
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established tolerances on Crop subgroup
5A also supports that residue levels will
be similar between members of the crop
group.
3. No subgroups in new Crop Group
5–14. EPA proposes to not include
subgroups in new Crop Group 5–14
given the small number of commodities.
C. Crop Group 22: Stalk, Stem, and Leaf
Petiole Group
EPA is proposing to establish a new
crop group, entitled Stalk, Stem, and
Leaf Petiole Crop Group 22.
1. Commodities. EPA proposes to
include the following 19 commodities
in Crop Group 22: Agave, Agave spp.;
aloe vera, Aloe vera (L.) Burm. f.;
asparagus, Asparagus officinalis L;
bamboo shoots, Arundinaria spp.;
Bambusa spp., Chimonobambusa spp.;
Dendrocalamus spp., Fargesia spp.;
Gigantochloa spp., Nastus elatus;
Phyllostachys spp.; Thyrsostachys spp.;
cardoon, Cynara cardunculus L.; celery,
Apium graveolens var. dulce (Mill.)
Pers.; celery, Chinese, Apium graveolens
L. var. secalinum (Alef.) Mansf.;
Celtuce, Lactuca sativa var. angustana
L.H. Bailey; fennel, Florence, fresh
leaves and stalk, Foeniculum vulgare
Mill. subsp. vulgare var. azoricum
(Mill.) Thell.; fern, edible, fiddlehead;
Fuki, Petasites japonicus (Siebold &
Zucc.) Maxim.; kale, sea, Crambe
maritima L.; Kohlrabi, Brassica oleracea
L.var gongylodes L.; palm hearts,
various species; Prickly pear, pads,
Opuntia ficus-indica (L.) Mill., Opuntia
spp.; Prickly pear, Texas, pads, Opuntia
engelmannii Salm-Dyck ex Engelm. var.
lindheimeri (Engelm.) B. D. Parfitt &
Pinkav; rhubarb, Rheum x hybridum
Murray; Udo, Aralia cordata Thunb.;
and Zuiki, Colocasia gigantea (Blume)
Hook. f. Also included are cultivars,
varieties, and hybrids of these
commodities.
The 19 members of the new proposed
Stalk, Stem and Leaf Petiole Crop Group
22 are proposed based on similarities of
the morphology of the stalk, stem, and
leaf petiole vegetables; the cultural
practices; the edible food and livestock
feed portions; the plant exposure to
pesticide residue levels; the
geographical locations; the manner of
processing; the food uses; and the
established tolerances for the
commodities. Additionally, the proposal
of a separate new Stalk, Stem and Leaf
Petioles Crop Group 22 will be similar
to the Codex stalk and stem group.
As previously discussed, the new
Crop Group 22 is proposed to include
certain commodities currently in Crop
Group 4, Leafy Vegetable, except
Brassica (those in subgroup 4B, with the
exception of Swiss chard). Additionally,
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kohlrabi, which is currently a member
of Crop Group 5, Brassica (Cole) Leafy
Vegetables Crop is proposed to be
included in Crop Group 22. The reasons
for these two proposed changes are
discussed in Units III A.2. and III B.2.
2. Representative commodities. EPA
proposes two representative
commodities for new Stalk, Stem, and
Leaf Petiole Crop Group 22: Asparagus
and Celery.
The proposed representative
commodities, asparagus and celery,
were chosen because they account for
>98% of the harvested acres and
production for the proposed members of
this group. They are the two most
widely grown stalk, stem, and leaf
petiole crops in the United States, with
both the largest acreages and
geographical distribution. The selection
of representative commodities is based
on a representative commodity that is
most likely to: Contain the highest
residues (whether raw or processed); be
major in terms of production and
consumption; and be similar in
morphology, growth habit, pest
problems and edible portion, and
subject to similar processing as the
related commodities within a group or
subgroup.
3. Crop subgroups. EPA proposes new
Stalk, Stem, and Leaf Petiole Crop
Group 22 to have two crop subgroups:
i. Stalk and stem vegetable subgroup
22A. (Representative commodity—
Asparagus). Twelve commodities are
proposed for this subgroup: Agave; aloe
vera; asparagus; bamboo shoots; Celtuce;
fennel, Florence, fresh leaves and stalk;
fern, edible; kale, sea; Kohlrabi; palm
hearts; Prickly pear, pads; and Prickly
pear, Texas, pads. Also included are
cultivars, varieties, and hybrids of these
commodities.
ii. Leaf petiole vegetable subgroup
22B. (Representative commodity—
Celery). Seven commodities are
proposed for subgroup: Cardoon; celery;
celery, Chinese; Fuki; rhubarb; Udo; and
Zuiki. Also included are cultivars,
varieties, and hybrids of these
commodities.
Comparisons of established tolerances
on the commodities proposed for new
Stalk and stem vegetable subgroup 22A
and new Leaf petiole vegetable
subgroup 22B support that residue
levels will be similar between members
of the crop group. Comparison of
tolerances for the individual members of
each subgroup also supports that these
two representative commodities will
support the crop subgroups.
4. Commodity definitions. In
conjunction with new Crop Group 22,
EPA proposes two new commodity
definitions for fern, edible and palm
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hearts to be added to § 180.1(g), as
specified in the proposed regulatory
text. These commodity definitions are
being proposed in order to easily
distinguish and define the various
varieties of edible ferns and palm hearts,
respectively.
D. Crop Group 23: Tropical and
Subtropical Fruit, Edible Peel Group
EPA is proposing to establish a new
crop group, entitled Tropical and
Subtropical Fruit, Edible Peel, Crop
Group 23.
1. Commodities. EPA proposes to
include the following 108 commodities
in new Group 23: Acaı, Euterpe oleracea
¸ ´
Mart.; Acerola, Malpighia emarginata
DC.; African plum, Vitex doniana
Sweet; Agritos, Berberis trifoliolata
Moric.; Almondette, Buchanania lanzan
Spreng.; Ambarella, Spondias dulcis
Sol. ex Parkinson; Apak palm, Brahea
dulcis (Kunth) Mart.; Appleberry,
´
Billardiera scandens Sm.; Araza,
Eugenia stipitata McVaugh; Arbutus
berry, Arbutus unedo L.; Babaco,
Vasconcellea x heilbornii (V. M.
Badillo) V. M. Badillo; Bacaba palm,
Oenocarpus bacaba Mart.; Bacaba-deleque, Oenocarpus distichus Mart.;
Bayberry, Red, Morella rubra Lour.;
Bignay, Antidesma bunius (L.) Spreng.;
´
Bilimbi, Averrhoa bilimbi L.; Borojo,
Borojoa patinoi Cuatrec.; Breadnut,
Brosimum alicastrum Sw.; Cabeluda,
Plinia glomerata (O. Berg) Amshoff;
Cajou, fruit, Anacardium giganteum
´
Hance ex Engl.; Cambuca, Marlierea
edulis Nied.; Carandas-plum, Carissa
edulis Vahl; Carob, Ceratonia siliqua L.;
Cashew apple, Anacardium occidentale
L.; Ceylon iron wood, Manilkara
hexandra (Roxb.) Dubard; Ceylon olive,
Elaeocarpus serratus L.; Cherry-of-theRio-Grande, Eugenia aggregata (Vell.)
Kiaersk.; Chinese olive, black, Canarium
tramdenum C. D. Dai & Yakovlev;
Chinese olive, white, Canarium album
(Lour.) Raeusch.; Chirauli-nut,
Buchanania latifolia Roxb.; Ciruela
verde, Bunchosia armeniaca (Cav.) DC.;
Cocoplum, Chrysobalanus icaco L.;
date, Phoenix dactylifera L.; Davidson’s
plum, Davidsonia pruriens F. Muell.;
Desert-date, Balanites aegyptiacus (L.)
Delile; Doum palm coconut, Hyphaene
thebaica (L.) Mart.; False sandalwood,
Ximenia americana L.; Feijoa, Acca
sellowiana (O. Berg) Burret; fig, Ficus
carica L.; Fragrant manjack, Cordia
dichotoma G. Forst.; Gooseberry,
abyssinian, Dovyalis abyssinica (A.
Rich.) Warb.; Gooseberry, Ceylon,
Dovyalis hebecarpa (Gardner) Warb.;
Gooseberry, Indian, Phyllanthus
emblica L.; Gooseberry, otaheite,
Phyllanthus acidus (L.) Skeels;
Governor’s plum, Flacourtia indica
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(Burm. F.) Merr.; Grumichama, Eugenia
brasiliensis Lam; Guabiroba,
Campomanesia xanthocarpa O. Berg;
Guava, Psidium guajava L.; Guava berry,
Myrciaria floribunda (H. West ex Willd.)
O. Berg; Guava, Brazilian, Psidium
guineense Sw.; Guava, cattley, Psidium
cattleianum Sabine; Guava, Costa Rican,
Psidium friedrichsthalianum (O. Berg)
Nied.; Guava, para, Psidium
acutangulum DC.; Guava, purple
strawberry, Psidium cattleianum Sabine
var. cattleianum; Guava, strawberry,
Psidium cattleianum Sabine var.
littorale (Raddi) Fosberg; Guava, yellow
strawberry, Psidium cattleianum Sabine
var. cattleianum forma lucidum O. Deg.;
Guayabillo, Psidium sartorianum (O.
Berg) Nied.; Illawarra plum, Podocarpus
´
elatus R. Br. Ex Endl.; Imbe, Garcinia
livingstonei T. Anderson; Imbu,
Spondias tuberosa Arruda ex Kost.;
Indian-plum, Flacourtia jangomas
(Lour.) basionym); Jaboticaba, Myrciaria
cauliflora (Mart.) O. Berg; Jamaicacherry, Muntingia calabura L.;
Jambolan, Syzygium cumini (L.) Skeels;
Jelly palm, Butia capitata (Mart.) Becc.;
Jujube, Indian, Ziziphus mauritiana
Lam.; Kaffir-plum, Harpephyllum
caffrum Bernh. Ex C. Krauss; Kakadu
plum, Terminalia latipes Benth. subsp.
psilocarpa Pedley; Kapundung,
Baccaurea racemosa (Reinw.) Mull.
Arg.; Karanda, Carissa carandas L.;
Kwai muk, Artocarpus hypargyreus
Hance ex Benth.; Lemon aspen,
Acronychia acidula F. Muell; Mangaba,
Hancornia speciosa Gomes; Marian
plum, Bouea macrophylla Griff.;
Mombin, malayan, Spondias pinnata (J.
Koenig ex L. f.) Kurz; Mombin, purple,
Spondias purpurea L.; Mombin, yellow,
Spondias mombin L.; Monkeyfruit,
Artocarpus lacucha Buch.-Ham.; Monos
plum, Pseudanamomis umbellulifera
(Kunth) Kausel; Mountain cherry,
Bunchosia cornifolia Kunth; Nance,
Byrsonima crassifolia (L.) Kunth; Natal
plum, Carissa macrocarpa (Eckl.) A. DC;
Noni, Morinda citrifolia L.; Olive, Olea
europaea L. subsp. europaea; papaya,
mountain, Vasconcellea pubescens A.
´
DC.; Pataua, Oenocarpus bataua Mart.;
Peach palm, fruit, Bactris gasipaes
Kunth var. gasipaes; persimmon, black,
Diospyros texana Scheele; persimmon,
Japanese, Diospyros kaki Thunb.;
Pitomba, Eugenia luschnathiana
Klotzsch ex O. Berg; Plum-ofMartinique, Flacourtia inermis Roxb.;
Pomerac, Syzygium malaccense (L.)
Merr. & L.M. Perry; Rambai, Baccaurea
motleyana (Mull. Arg.) Mull. Arg.; Rose
apple, Syzygium jambos (L.) Alston;
Rukam, Flacourtia rukam Zoll. &
Moritizi; Rumberry, Myrciaria dubia
(Kunth) McVaugh, (Myrtaceae); Sea
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grape, Coccoloba uvifera (L.) L.; Sentul,
Sandoricum koetjape (Burm. F.) Merr.;
Sete-capotes, Campomanesia
guazumifolia (Cambess.) O. Berg; Silver
aspen, Acronychia wilcoxian, (F. Muell.)
T.G. Hartley; Starfruit, Averrhoa
carambola L; Surinam cherry, Eugenia
uniflora L.; Tamarind, Tamarindus
indica L.; Uvalha, Eugenia pyriformis
Cambess; Water apple, Syzygium
aqueum (Burm. F.) Alston; Water pear,
Syzygium guineense (Willd.) DC.; Water
berry, Syzygium cordatum Hochst. Ex C.
Krauss; and Wax jambu, Syzygium
samarangense (Blume) Merr. & L.M.
Perry. Also included are cultivars,
varieties, and hybrids of these
commodities.
The commodities proposed for new
Crop Group 23 are based on similarities
in fruit size; peel (edible for all
commodities); cultural practices;
geographical distribution; lack of animal
feed items; tolerance levels of
established tolerances; and pest
problems. The commodities chosen also
further the goal of international
harmonization of tolerances and MRLs,
through coordinating the U.S. crop
group amendments with efforts to
amend the Codex crop groups.
2. Representative commodities. EPA
proposes four representative
commodities for Tropical and
Subtropical Fruit, Edible Peel, Crop
Group 23: Olive, Fig, Guava, and Date.
The proposed representative
commodities were chosen because they
account for >95% of the harvested U.S.
acres for the members of the proposed
Crop Group 23. The selection of
representative commodities is based on
a representative commodity that is most
likely to: Contain the highest residues
(whether raw or processed); be major in
terms of production and consumption;
and be similar in morphology, growth
habit, pest problems and edible portion,
and subject to similar processing as the
related commodities within a group or
subgroup. Comparison of the tolerances
established for the representative
commodities support that residue levels
will adequately cover the wide number
of commodities.
3. Crop subgroups. EPA proposes to
create three crop subgroups for Tropical
and Subtropical Fruit, Edible Peel Crop
Group 23:
i. Small fruit, edible peel subgroup
23A. (Representative commodity—
Olive). EPA is proposing 56
commodities for new subgroup 23A:
Acerola; African plum; Agritos;
Almondette; Appleberry; Arbutus berry;
Bayberry, red; Bignay; Breadnut;
Cabeluda; Carandas-plum; Ceylon iron
wood; Ceylon olive; Cherry-of-the-RioGrande; Chinese olive, black; Chinese
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olive, white; Chirauli-nut; Cocoplum;
Desert-date; False sandalwood; Fragant
manjack; gooseberry, abyssinian;
gooseberry, Ceylon; gooseberry,
otaheite; Governor’s plum;
Grumichama; Guabiroba; guava berry;
guava, Brazilian; guava, Costa Rican;
Guayabillo; Illawarra plum; Indianplum; Jamaica-cherry; Jambolan; Kaffirplum; Kakadu plum; Kapundung;
Karnada; Lemon aspen; Mombin,
yellow; Monos plum; Mountain cherry;
olive; persimmon, black; Pitomba;
Plum-of-Martinique; Rukam; Rumberry;
Sea grape; Sete-capotes; Silver aspen;
Water apple; Water pear; Water berry;
and Wax jambu. Also included are
cultivars, varieties and hybrids of these
commodities.
ii. Medium to large fruit, edible peel
subgroup 23B. (Representative
commodities—Fig and Guava). EPA is
proposing 43 commodities for new
´
subgroup 23B: Ambarella; Araza;
´
Babaco; Bilimbi; Borojo; Cajou, fruit;
´
Cambuca; Carob; Cashew apple; Ciruela
verde; Davidson’s plum; Feijoa; Fig;
gooseberry, Indian; guava; guava,
cattley; guava, para; guava, purple
strawberry; guava, strawberry; guava,
´
yellow strawberry; Imbe; Imbu;
Jaboticaba; Jujube, Indian; Kwai muk;
Mangaba; Marian plum; Mombin,
malayan; Mombin, purple; Monkeyfruit;
Nance; Natal plum; Noni; papaya,
mountain; persimmon, Japanese;
Pomerac; Rambai; Rose apple; Sentul;
starfruit; Surinam cherry; Tamarind;
and Uvalha. Also included are cultivars,
varieties and hybrids of these
commodities.
iii. Palm fruit, edible peel subgroup
23C. (Representative commodity—Date).
EPA is proposing nine commodities for
new subgroup 23C: Acaı; Apak palm;
¸ ´
Bacaba palm; Bacaba-de-leque; date;
´
Doum palm coconut; Jelly palm; Pataua;
and Peach palm, fruit. Also included are
cultivars, varieties and hybrids of these
commodities.
The creation of these subgroups and
the choice of representative commodity
designations are based on sorting
commodities into fruit size, small versus
medium to large fruit, based on the
surface area to mass (volume) ratio, with
the addition of a palm subgroup in order
to determine the proposed subgrouping
scheme. Small fruit were distinguished
from medium and large fruit depending
on whether the fruit’s surface area to
mass (volume) ratio was greater or less
than 1.5:1. Palm commodities are
proposed to be classified in a separate
subgroup based on the botanical
similarity of trees in the family
Arecaceae (alt. Palmae). Palm fruit is
produced in clusters that are partially
exposed to the elements, and fruit is
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located considerably higher on palm
trees than other tropical and subtropical
fruits; therefore, similar use patterns of
pesticide applications are expected to
occur and similar residue patterns can
be expected within the palm group. EPA
has determined that residue data on the
designated representative crops will
provide adequate information on
residue levels in crops and subgroups.
E. Crop Group 24: Tropical and
Subtropical Fruit, Inedible Peel Group
EPA is proposing to establish a new
crop group entitled Tropical and
Subtropical Fruit, Inedible Peel, Crop
Group 24:
1. Commodities. EPA proposes to
include the following 104 commodities
in new Crop Group 24: Abiu, Pouteria
caimito (Ruiz & Pav.) Radlk; Aisen,
Boscia senegalensis (Pers.) Lam.; Akee
apple, Blighia sapida K.D. Koenig;
Atemoya, Annona cherimola Mill. X A.
squamosa L.; avocado, Persea
americana Mill.; avocado, Guatemalan,
Persea americana Mill. var.
guatemalensis; avocado, Mexican,
Persea americana Mill. var. drymifolia
(Schltdl. & Cham.) S. F. Blak; avocado,
West Indian, Persea americana var.
americana; Bacury, Platonia insignis
Mart.; Bael fruit, Aegle marmelos (L.)
ˆ
Correa; banana, Musa spp. and hybrids;
banana, dwarf, Musa hybrids; Musa
acuminata Colla; Binjai, Mangifera
caesia Jack; Biriba, Annona mucosa
Jacq.; Breadfruit, Artocarpus altilis
(Parkinson) Fosberg; Burmese grape,
Baccaurea ramiflora Lour.; Canistel,
Pouteria campechiana (Kunth) Baehni;
Cat’s-eyes, Dimocarpus longan Lour.
subsp. malesianus Leenh.; Champedak,
Artocarpus integer (Thunb.) Merr.;
Cherimoya, Annona cherimola Mill.;
´
Cupuacu, Theobroma grandiflorum
(Willd. Ex Spreng.) K. Schum.; Custard
apple, Annona reticulata L.; Dragon
fruit, Hylocereus undatus (Haw.) Britton
& Rose; Durian, Durio zibethinus L.;
Elephant-apple, Limonia acidissima L.;
Etambe, Mangifera zeylanica (Blume)
Hook. F.; Granadilla, Passiflora ligularis
Juss.; Granadilla, giant, Passiflora
quadrangularis L.; Ilama, Annona
´
macroprophyllata Donn. Sm.; Inga, Inga
vera Willd. subsp. affinis (DC.) T. D.
Penn.; Jackfruit, Artocarpus
´
heterophyllus Lam.; Jatoba, Hymenaea
courbaril L.; Karuka, Pandanus
julianettii Martelli; Kei apple, Dovyalis
caffra (Hook. F. & Harv.) Warb.; Langsat,
ˆ
Lansium domesticum Correa; Lanjut,
Mangifera lagenifera Griff.; Longan,
Dimocarpus longan Lour.; Lucuma,
Pouteria lucuma (Ruiz & Pav.) Kuntze;
Lychee, Litchi chinensis Sonn.; Mabolo,
Diospyros blancoi A. DC.; Madras-thorn,
Pithecellobium dulce (Roxb.) Benth.;
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Mammy-apple, Mammea americana L.;
Manduro, Balanites maughamii
Sprague; mango, Mangifera indica L.;
mango, horse, Mangifera foetida Lour.;
mango, Saipan, Mangifera odorata
Griff.; Mangosteen, Garcinia
mangostana L.; Marang, Artocarpus
odoratissimus Blanco; Marmaladebox,
Genipa americana L.; Matisia, Matisia
cordata Humb. & Bonpl.; Mesquite,
Prosopis juliflora (Sw.) DC.; Mongongo,
fruit, Schinziophyton rautanenii
(Schinz) Radcl.-Sm; Monkey-bread-tree,
Adansonia digitata L.; Monstera,
Monstera deliciosa Liebm.; Nicobarbreadfruit, Pandanus leram Jones ex
Fontana; Paho, Mangifera altissima
Blanco; Pandanus, Pandanus utilis
Bory; papaya, Carica papaya L.;
passionflower, winged-stem, Passiflora
alata Curtis; passionfruit, Passiflora
edulis Sims; passionfruit, banana,
Passiflora tripartita var. mollissima
(Kunth) Holm-Niels. & P. Jorg.;
passionfruit, purple, Passiflora edulis
Sims forma edulis; passionfruit, yellow,
Passiflora edulis Sims forma flavicarpa
O. Deg.; Pawpaw, common, Asimina
triloba (L.) Dunal; Pawpaw, smallflower, Asimina parviflora (Michx.)
Dunal; Pelipisan, Mangifera casturi
Kosterm.; Pequi, Caryocar brasiliense
Cambess; Pequia, Caryocar villosum
(Aubl.) Pers.; persimmon, American,
Diospyros virginiana L.; pineapple,
Ananas comosus (L.) Merr.; Pitahaya,
Hylocereus polyrhizus (F. A. C. Weber)
Britton & Rose; Pitaya, Hylocereus spp.
including H. megalanthus, H.
ocamponis and H. polychizus; Pitaya
amarilla, Hylocereus triangularis Britton
& Rose; Pitaya roja, Hylocereus
ocamponis (Salm-Dyck) Britton & Rose;
Pitaya, yellow, Hylocereus megalanthus
(K. Schum. ex Vaupel) Ralf Bauer;
plantain, Musa paradisiaca L.;
pomegranate, Punica granatum L.;
Poshte, Annona liebmanniana Baill.;
Prickly pear, fruit, Opuntia ficus-indica
(L.) Mill., Opuntia spp.; Prickly pear,
Texas, fruit, Opuntia engelmannii SalmDyck ex Engelm. var. lindheimeri
(Engelm.) B. D. Parfitt & Pinkava;
Pulasan, Nephelium ramboutan-ake
(Labill.) Leenh.; Quandong, Santalum
acuminatum (R. Br.) DC.; Rambutan,
Nephelium lappaceum L.; Saguaro,
Carnegiea gigantea (Engelm.) Britton &
Rose; Sapodilla, Manilkara zapota (L.)
P. Royen; Sapote, black, Diospyros
digyna Jacq.; Sapote, green, Pouteria
viridis (Pittier) Cronquist; Sapote,
mamey, Pouteria sapota (Jacq.) H.E.
Moore & Stearn; Sapote, white,
Casimiroa edulis La Llave & Lex; Sataw,
Parkia speciosa Hassk.; Satinleaf,
Chrysophyllum oliviforme L.; Screwpine, Pandanus tectorius Parkinson;
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Sierra Leone-tamarind, Dialium
guineense Willd.; Soncoya, Annona
´
purpurea Moc. & Sesse ex Dunal;
Soursop, Annona muricata L.; Spanish
lime, Melicoccus bijugatus Jacq.; Star
apple, Chrysophyllum cainito L.; Sugar
apple, Annona squamosa L.; Sun
Sapote, Licania platypus (Hemsl.)
Fritsch; Tamarind-of-the-Indies,
Vangueria madagascariensis J. F. Gmel.;
Velvet Tamarind, Dialium indum L.;
Wampi, Clausena lansium (Lour.)
Skeels; White star apple, Chrysophyllum
albidum G. Don; and Wild loquat,
¨
Uapaca kirkiana Mull. Arg. Also
included are cultivars, varieties, and
hybrids of these commodities.
2. Representative commodities. EPA
proposes the following commodities as
representatives for new Tropical and
Subtropical Fruit, Inedible Peel, Crop
Group 24: Atemoya or Sugar apple;
avocado; pomegranate or banana;
Dragon fruit; Prickly pear, fruit; lychee;
passionfruit; and pineapple.
These representative commodities
will account for approximately 99% of
the harvested U.S. acres for the
members of the new crop group. The
selection of representative commodities
is based on a representative commodity
that is most likely to: Contain the
highest residues (whether raw or
processed); be major in terms of
production and consumption; and be
similar in morphology, growth habit,
pest problems and edible portion, and
subject to similar processing as the
related commodities within a group or
subgroup. Comparison of the tolerances
established for the representative
commodities support that residue levels
will adequately cover the wide number
of commodities.
3. Crop subgroups. EPA proposes five
crop subgroups for new Tropical and
Subtropical Fruit, Inedible Peel, Crop
Group 24:
i. Small fruit, inedible peel subgroup
24A. (Representative commodity—
Lychee). EPA is proposing 18
commodities in new subgroup 24A:
Aisen; Bael fruit; Burmese grape; Cat’s
´
eyes; Inga; lychee; Madras-thorn;
Manduro; Matisia; Mesquite; Mongongo,
fruit; Pawpaw, small-flower; Satinleaf;
Sierra Leone-tamarind; Spanish lime;
Velvet tamarind; Wampi; and White star
apple. Also included are cultivars,
varieties and hybrids of these
commodities.
ii. Medium to large fruit, smooth,
inedible peel subgroup 24B.
(Representative commodities—Avocado,
plus Pomegranate or Banana). EPA is
proposing 42 commodities for new
subgroup 24B: Abiu; Akee apple;
avocado; avocado, Guatemalan;
avocado, Mexican; avocado, West
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Indian; Bacury; banana; banana, dwarf;
´
Binjai; Canistel; Cupuacu; Etambe;
´
Jatoba; Kei apple; Langstat; Lanjut;
Lucuma; Mabolo; mango; mango, horse;
mango, Saipan; Mangosteen; Paho;
papaya; Pawpaw, common; Pelipisan;
Pequi; Pequia; persimmon, American;
plantain; pomegranate; Poshte;
Quandong; Sapote, black; Sapote, green;
Sapote, white; Sataw; Screw-pine; Star
apple; Tamarind-of-the-Indies; and Wild
loquat. Also included are cultivars,
varieties and hybrids of these
commodities.
iii. Medium to large fruit, rough or
hairy, inedible peel subgroup 24C.
(Representative commodities—
Pineapple, plus Atemoya or Sugar
apple). EPA is proposing 27
commodities for new subgroup 24C:
Atemoya; Biriba; breadfruit;
Champedak; Cherimoya; Custard apple;
Durian; Elephant-apple; Ilama; Jackfruit;
Karuka; longan; Mammy-apple;
Marmalade-box; Marang; Monkey-bread
tree; Nicobar-breadfruit; Pandanus;
pineapple; Pulasan; Rambutan;
Sapodilla; Sapote, mamey; Soncoya;
Soursop; Sugar apple; and Sun sapote.
Also included are cultivars, varieties
and hybrids of these commodities.
iv. Cactus inedible peel subgroup
24D. (Representative commodities—
Dragon fruit and Prickly pear fruit). EPA
is proposing nine commodities for new
subgroup 24D: Dragon fruit; Pitahaya;
Pitaya; Pitaya amarilla; Pitaya roja;
Pitaya, yellow; Prickly pear, fruit; Texas
prickly pear, fruit; and Saguaro. Also
included are cultivars, varieties and
hybrids of these commodities.
v. Vine inedible peel subgroup 24E.
(Representative commodity—
Passionfruit). EPA is proposing eight
commodities for new subgroup 24E:
Granadilla; Granadilla, giant; Monstera;
passionflower, winged-stem;
passionfruit; passionfruit, banana;
passionfruit, purple; and passionfruit,
yellow. Also included are cultivars,
varieties and hybrids of these
commodities.
The creation of these subgroups and
the choice of representative commodity
designations are based on similarities
between cultural practices, potential
residue exposure due to fruit size area,
and lack of animal feed items. The
proposed subgroup designations are
based on fruit size (small versus
medium to large fruit), determined via
the surface area to mass (volume) ratio,
as well as peel texture (rough or hairy,
smooth, or cactus), and growth habit
(e.g., vine crops).
F. Other Changes
1. Revise § 180.40(e) and (f). EPA
believes that § 180.40(f) of the Crop
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Group Regulations, promulgated in 1983
(Ref. 2), has become outdated and that
revisions are needed. Section 180.40(f)
addresses the interaction of crop group
tolerances with processed food
tolerances and meat, milk, and egg
tolerances. Under FFDCA section 408,
raw food tolerances and exemptions
from tolerance apply to processed foods
as well; however, separate processed
food tolerances are needed if residues
may concentrate to levels higher than
the raw food tolerance in one or more
fractions of the raw food following
processing. (21 U.S.C. 346a(a)(2)). This
provision in the FFDCA is generally
referred to as the flow-through provision
because it legally permits residues—or,
more accurately, the raw food
tolerance—to flow through to processed
food. Similarly, residues in a raw crop
may make necessary a tolerance in meat,
milk, and egg commodities if the crop,
or a fraction thereof, is a significant
animal feed commodity and the
consumption of the treated crop may
lead to residues in livestock
commodities. (§ 180.3(b)). Section
180.40(f) requires that, if any
commodity covered by a crop group is
utilized as an animal feed, any needed
tolerances or exemptions from tolerance
in meat, milk, or egg commodities must
be established before the crop group
tolerance will be promulgated. Section
180.40(f) also specifies that:
• Representative crops in a crop
group include all crops that upon
processing may result in a greater
concentration of residues in the
processed food;
• Processing data will be required
before establishing a crop group
tolerance; and
• Crop group tolerances will not be
established on processed foods prepared
from crops covered by crop group
tolerances.
When § 180.40(f) was proposed, one
commenter criticized it as subject to
misinterpretation. The commenter noted
that crop groups do not include all
crops that are processed as
representative commodities and thus
the provision may be construed as a
‘‘guide for crops for which food or feed
additive data will be required.’’ (Ref. 2).
Another commenter asked EPA to
reconsider the exclusion on crop group
tolerances for processed foods. In
response to the first commenter, EPA
disagreed that the provision would be
misconstrued as limiting processing
data requirements to representative
commodities. While not disputing that
crop groups do not include all
commodities subject to processing as
representative commodities, the Agency
thought the provision did not suggest
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that processing data was not required on
all commodities that are processed. EPA
cited the bar on setting group tolerances
on processed foods as the basis for this
conclusion. Nonetheless, the Agency
did note that representative
commodities are intended to be
representative of ‘‘the overall residue
picture for the group,’’ including
residues in processed foods. As to the
second comment, EPA declined to
remove the bar on establishing crop
group tolerances for processed foods.
EPA concluded that, given the relatively
low number of processed food
tolerances established each year and the
potentially significant differences in
processing techniques even for
commodities in the same crop group, it
would not be appropriate to set
processed food group tolerances.
However, EPA promised to re-examine
this exclusion in the future (Ref. 2).
EPA has now re-examined the
requirements of § 180.40(f) in light of 30
years of experience in implementing the
1983 crop groups rule, evaluating
residue levels in processed foods; and
setting processed food tolerances. Based
on this re-examination, EPA has
concluded that § 180.40(f) is no longer
consistent with Agency practice and
fails to provide clear direction to
tolerance petitioners.
With regard to consistency with
Agency practice, § 180.40(f) is out-ofstep with Agency determinations made
on what commodities are appropriately
considered representative and on
whether processed food group
tolerances should be set. As noted,
§ 180.40(f) specifies that ‘‘representative
crops include all crops in the group that
could be processed such that residues
may concentrate in processed food and/
or feed.’’ The thinking behind this
provision appears to have been that
processed food and animal feeds were
so unique that residue data on them was
needed in all cases to evaluate human
exposure to a pesticide under a group
tolerance and to determine whether
processed food and feed tolerances are
needed. In practice, EPA has not found
this to be the case. For example, nearly
every crop in the Crop Group 15—
Cereal Grains is processed into fractions
that could result in concentrated
residues but EPA only selected a
handful of the crops to serve as
representative crops. Designating every,
or nearly every, crop in a crop group as
a representative commodity would have
defeated the purpose of having a crop
group. The selection of only a few of the
cereal grains that are processed as
representative crops was based on an
analysis on the representativeness of
these crops as to both raw and
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processed commodities. EPA has
determined that, as to the commodities
in this group, processing data on only a
few commodities would be adequate for
estimating residue values in all
processed foods covered by the crop
group tolerance (under FFDCA section
408, raw food tolerances apply to all
processed food, including animal feed,
derived from that raw food) (Ref. 3).
(See 21 U.S.C. 346a(a)(2))
EPA’s experience implementing the
crop group regulations has also led EPA
to question the wisdom of § 180.40(f)’s
bar on crop group tolerances for
‘‘processed foods prepared from crops
covered by [a] group tolerance.’’ If, as
found for the cereal grains group and
other more recently established crop
groups, processing data on a few
commodities are adequate to assess
residue levels in processed food and
animal feed covered by the crop group
tolerance, there is no reason not to
consider setting a crop group tolerance
for processed food or animal feed,
where needed. In fact, outside of the
context of the crop group regulations in
§§ 180.40 and 180.41, EPA has been
setting de facto crop group tolerances
for processed foods pursuant to its
Residue Chemistry Test Guidelines (Ref.
4) for years. For example, those
Guidelines identify the commodity
‘‘citrus’’ as appropriate for use in setting
both raw and processed food/feed
tolerances. Although this term is not
necessarily co-extensive with Crop
Group 10–10, Citrus Fruit Group, it does
indicate EPA’s judgment that processed
food/feed tolerances are workable for
categories of commodities and not just
single commodities.
Additionally, EPA’s conclusions in
1983 regarding the relative rarity of the
need for processed food tolerances and
the uniqueness of food processing
techniques have not stood the test of
time. Although the number of processed
food tolerances is small compared to the
number of raw food tolerances, the
overall number of processed food
tolerances is significant. For example,
there are over 250 processed food
tolerances established for the processed
commodities of just four crops: Almond
(hulls); apple (wet and dry pomace and
juice); sugar beet (dried pulp, molasses,
and refined sugar); and wheat (bran,
germ, flour, middlings, milled
byproducts, and shorts). Further, EPA’s
conclusion about the uniqueness of
processing techniques has not been
borne out by the thousands of
processing studies received by EPA.
EPA’s method of estimating pesticide
levels in processed foods is conservative
because EPA bases its estimate on the
highest residue value found in field
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trials designed to produce worst-case
residue levels. Data from the USDA’s
Pesticide Data Program (PDP) confirms
the conservativeness of EPA’s approach.
PDP data show that residues in
processed foods are usually one to two
orders of magnitude below the level
estimated by EPA in its exposure
assessment and tolerance selection
processes.
EPA has not only found § 180.40(f) to
be out-of-step with Agency practice, but
upon further reflection based upon
years of experience, EPA now believes
there is substantial merit in the
comments made 30 years ago
questioning the regulation’s clarity.
Other than the bar on processed food
group tolerances, EPA believes that
§ 180.40(f) meant to establish three
principles. First, the provision was
intended to incorporate in the crop
group regulations EPA’s long-held
policy (generally referred to as the
‘‘coordination policy’’) of not setting
tolerances on raw agricultural
commodities unless any needed
tolerances on processed foods
(including animal feeds) and on meat,
milk, and/or eggs are in place (or are
being simultaneously established) (Ref.
2, p. 29856). Otherwise, raw foods
containing legal residues might result,
after processing for human or animal
consumption or after consumption by
livestock, in adulterated commodities
subject to seizure.
Second, the provision was intended to
indicate that representative
commodities would be chosen for crop
groups with an eye toward the issue of
residue levels in processed foods and in
meat, milk, and eggs resulting from
animals consuming treated food so that
the representative crops would be truly
representative of the group. Third, the
provision was intended to explain that
processing studies and animal feeding
studies, where appropriate, would be
required on the representative
commodities. Unless such studies were
submitted when needed, EPA believed
it could not determine overall exposure
levels resulting from a crop group
tolerance and if a crop group tolerance
would inadvertently lead to processed
food or animal feed that has over
tolerance residues. Little of this,
however, plainly emerges from the text
of § 180.40(f).
Based on this re-examination of
§ 180.40(f), EPA has concluded that
several changes are needed. EPA is
proposing to revise § 180.40(f) to more
clearly enunciate the three principles
originally included in the provision and
to update these provisions in line with
current practice. For the sake of clarity,
the proposed revisions include dividing
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§ 180.40(f) into four paragraphs. In
proposed § 180.40(f)(1), EPA is
proposing to adopt a statement of its
coordination policy similar to that in
EPA’s Federal Insecticide, Fungicide,
and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA)
regulations that bars the granting of a
FIFRA registration until all needed
tolerances have received Agency
approval. (See 40 CFR 152.112(g)) EPA
is proposing that crop group tolerances
not be established until all other
‘‘necessary’’ tolerances have been
approved (or are being simultaneously
established). Generally, the
establishment of a tolerance for one raw
commodity makes other tolerances
‘‘necessary’’ if normal processing,
handling, production, transportation, or
storage of the treated commodity, or
consumption of the commodity by
livestock, could lead to the presence of
a residue in another commodity not
covered by a tolerance or exemption.
Proposed § 180.40(f)(1) specifies that
tolerances in other food forms are
considered necessary if:
• A processed form or fraction of a
raw food covered by the crop group
tolerance may contain residues due to
processing that are higher than the crop
group tolerance;
• There exist raw commodities
derived or produced from commodity
covered by the crop group tolerance but
the derived raw food is not covered by
the crop group tolerance; and
• Commodities, or fractions thereof,
that are covered by the crop group
tolerance are a significant animal feed
item and consumption of the feed item
may lead to residues in meat, milk, or
eggs.
The reason for the second criteria is
that the production of food may result
in multiple discrete raw and processed
commodities as a crop moves from
harvest to market, but the flow-through
provision only applies to processed
foods. Raw foods that are discrete from
the raw commodity specified in the
tolerance need a separate tolerance if
they contain any residue level (i.e., they
are not covered by the flow-through
provision). Separate raw forms of the
same crop can be created, for example,
by drying the crop because not all forms
of drying are considered to be
‘‘processing,’’ as that term is used in the
FFDCA (Ref. 5). Proposed § 180.40(f)(1)
carves out an exception to the first two
types of necessary tolerances where
there is complete separation between
crops grown solely to be sold as a
specific raw commodity and crops
grown for the purpose of producing a
processed food or a separate raw
commodity. In these circumstances, no
processed food tolerance (or separate
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raw commodity tolerance) is needed to
set the raw food tolerance because
production of the commodity for the
raw food market will not result in the
production of processed foods (or
distinct raw commodities).
In new § 180.40(f)(2) EPA is proposing
to add express authority to set processed
food group tolerances for processed
foods, or fractions of foods, produced
from foods covered by the crop groups
established in § 180.41. Thus, EPA is
proposing to delete the language barring
the establishment of crop group
tolerances for processed foods as
currently exists in § 180.40(f). Such
processed commodity group tolerances
would apply to the types of processed
commodities, including both food and
feed products, as to which EPA has
traditionally set processed food
tolerances (e.g., juice, oil, and dried
pulp of citrus commodities). Thus,
going forward, EPA will be able to
replace multiple individual processed
commodity tolerances with a single crop
group processed commodity tolerance.
For example, a crop group tolerance on
‘‘Grain, cereal, group 15, bran’’ would
apply to bran from each of the 14
commodities in Crop Group 15.
In new § 180.40(f)(2) EPA is also
proposing to set crop group tolerances
for discrete raw commodities produced
from commodities covered by the crop
groups in § 180.41 where these discrete
raw commodities are not covered by the
crop group. An example of such a
discrete ‘‘produced’’ raw food is
aspirated grain fractions that are
produced during the storage of grain but
is neither the raw agricultural
commodity ‘‘grain’’ nor a processed
food. Once final, EPA would be
authorized to set, for example, a crop
group tolerance for ‘‘Grain, cereal, group
15, aspirated grain fractions.’’ Further,
§ 180.40(f)(2) integrates processed food
(and ‘‘produced’’ raw commodities)
group tolerances into § 180.40 more
generally by specifying that these group
tolerances are to be governed by several
of the provisions in § 180.40 pertaining
to raw agricultural commodity crop
groups:
• § 180.40(c)—allowing crop group
tolerances to be established where
tolerances already exist on the
representative commodities;
• § 180.40(d)—establishing the
representative commodities as the
minimum residue chemistry data base;
• § 180.40(e)—requiring that
registered patterns of pesticide use be
similar for all crops in the group;
• § 180.40(g)—specifying the
maximum variation in residue values in
representative crops generally permitted
for establishing a crop group; and
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• § 180.40(h)—providing an
alternative for excluding a commodity
from a crop group.
Because of these proposed revisions,
EPA is also proposing to revise
§ 180.40(e) to make clear that crop
groups may only be established where
both the pesticide use patterns in the
production of the crops and the food
processing steps are similar.
In new § 180.40(f)(3) EPA is proposing
to restate EPA’s concept of
representative commodities to
incorporate its revised view that a
representative commodity can represent
both raw and processed foods covered
by the crop group tolerance as well as
residues that may result in meat, milk,
or eggs from use of covered crops, or
fractions thereof, as animal feed.
Finally, in new § 180.40(f)(4) EPA is
also proposing to make clear that
processing data, data on residues in raw
commodities derived or produced from
the commodity in the crop group, and
animal feeding studies will be required,
where appropriate. Processing data are
generally required if a raw commodity
is processed and residues may
concentrate in one or more of the
processed fractions. EPA expects that
processing data on the representative
commodities will generally be sufficient
for establishing processed commodity
group tolerances but, as with raw
agricultural commodity crop groups,
may require additional processing data
where circumstances warrant. Animal
studies are required if the raw
commodity or any of its processed
fractions are a significant animal feed
commodity.
2. Revise Crop Groups 16, 17, and 18
to clarify that separate group tolerances
may be set on forage, fodder, straw, and
hay. Crop groups 16, 17, and 18 cover
animal feeds (forage, fodder, straw, and/
or hay) for various grains, grasses, and
non-grass/non-grain crops. EPA’s
experience in administering these crop
groups has shown that, for some
pesticides, there may be significant
differences between residue levels of
forage, fodder, stover, straw, and/or hay
for the covered crops even though the
residue levels in each of these animal
feeds are similar for the various crops
covered. For example, with Crop Group
16, residue levels in forage and fodder
of corn and wheat may be very different
than residue levels in straw of corn and
wheat despite a similarity between
residue levels in corn and wheat for
each of the these animal feed
commodities individually (i.e., residue
levels in forage of corn and wheat are
similar, residue levels in fodder of corn
and wheat are similar, etc.). In these
circumstances, EPA believes that
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enforcement can be more efficient and
dietary exposure assessments more
precise if separate group tolerances can
be set on the animal feeds covered by
the group tolerance. Accordingly, EPA
is proposing to amend each of these
crop groups to make clear that separate
crop groups can be set for one or more
of the animal feeds in the group if there
are differences between the residue
levels in the animal feed commodities
but residue levels are similar for the
individual commodities across the
covered crops.
3. Revise broccoli commodity
definition. EPA proposes to revise the
commodity definition for broccoli in
§ 180.1(g) to correct the spelling for gai
lon, which is currently written as ‘‘gia
lon.’’
4. Revise sugar apple commodity
definition. EPA proposes to revise the
commodity definition for sugar apple in
§ 180.1(g) to update the scientific name
for sugar apple as well as to remove the
remove sweetsop and anon from the
definition.
IV. References
The following is a listing of the
documents that are specifically
referenced in this document. The docket
includes these documents and other
information considered by EPA,
including documents that are referenced
within the documents that are included
in the docket, even if the referenced
document is not physically located in
the docket. For assistance in locating
these other documents, please consult
the person listed under FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT.
1. EPA. Pesticide Tolerance Crop
Grouping Program; Proposed Expansion;
Proposed Rule. Federal Register (77 FR
28920, May 23, 2007) (FRL–8126–1).
2. EPA. Crop Grouping: Amendment
to Tests on the Amount of Residue
Remaining in Minor Crops; Final Rule.
Federal Register (48 FR 29855, June 29,
1983).
3. EPA. Bernard A. Schneider.
Selection of Representative
Commodities and Processed
Commodities. July 24, 2014. Docket ID
number EPA–HQ–OPP–2006–0766.
4. EPA. Residue Chemistry Test
Guidelines. OPPTS 860.1520, Processed
Food/Feed. August 1996.
5. EPA. Pesticides; Status of Dried
Commodities as Raw Agricultural
Commodities; Notice. Federal Register
(61 FR 2386, January 25, 1996) (FRL–
4992–4).
6. EPA. Pesticide Tolerance Crop
Grouping Program; Proposed Expansion;
Proposed Rule. Federal Register (77 FR
28920, May 23, 2007) (FRL–8126–1).
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7. EPA. Pesticide Tolerance Crop
Grouping Program; Final Rule. Federal
Register (72 FR 69150, December 7,
2007) (FRL–8343–1).
V. Statutory and Executive Order
Reviews
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A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory
Planning and Review and Executive
Order 13563: Improving Regulation and
Regulatory Review
This action is not a ‘‘significant
regulatory action’’ under the terms of
Executive Order 12866 (58 FR 51735,
October 4, 1993) and is therefore not
subject to review under Executive
Orders 12866 and 13563 (76 FR 3821,
January 21, 2011).
EPA prepared an analysis of the
potential costs and benefits associated
with this action in the first proposed
rule of this series of updates (Ref. 6).
This analysis is contained in ‘‘Economic
Analysis Proposed Expansion of Crop
Grouping Program.’’ A copy of the
analysis is available in the docket.
Because the costs and benefits of each
update to the crop grouping rule are
essentially the same, EPA believes the
May 23, 2007 economic analysis
continues to be applicable here and is
summarizing it in this unit.
This is a burden-reducing regulation.
Crop grouping has saved money by
permitting the results of pesticide
exposure studies for one crop to be
applied to other, similar crops. This
regulation would expand certain
existing crop groups and add new crop
groups.
The primary beneficiaries of the
regulation are minor crop producers and
consumers. Specialty crop producers
will benefit because lower registration
costs will encourage manufacturers to
register more pesticides on minor crops,
providing these growers with additional
pesticide options. The greater
availability of pesticides for use in the
United States as well as increased
coverage of tolerances to imported
commodities may result in a larger
supply of imported and domestically
produced specialty produce at
potentially lower costs benefiting
consumers. Secondary beneficiaries are
pesticide registrants, who benefit
because expanded markets for
pesticides will lead to increased sales.
IR–4 and EPA, which are publicly
funded Federal Government entities,
will more efficiently use resources as a
result of the rule.
EPA will conserve resources if, as
expected, new or expanded crop groups
result in fewer emergency pesticide use
requests from specialty crop growers.
Further, new and expanded crop groups
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will likely reduce the number of
separate risk assessments and tolerance
rulemakings that EPA will have to
conduct. The public will further benefit
from the increased international
harmonization of crop classification and
nomenclature, harmonized commodity
import and export standards, and
increased potential for resource sharing
between EPA and other pesticide
regulatory agencies. Revisions to the
crop grouping program will result in no
appreciable costs or negative impacts to
consumers, specialty crop producers,
and pesticide registrants.
The benefits of this action can be
shown through the example of the
impact of changes to Crop Group 3 in
a prior rulemaking (Ref. 7). That
rulemaking established Bulb Vegetable
Crop Group 3–07, which expanded
upon the related Crop Group 3, Bulb
Vegetables from 7 to 25 crops, an
increase of 18 from the original crop
group. Prior to the establishment of the
expanded crop group, adding tolerances
for the 18 crops would have required a
minimum of 18 field trials at a cost of
approximately $5.4 million (assuming
$300,000 per field trial). However, after
promulgation of the new group, these 18
new crops could obtain pesticide
tolerances under a Crop Group 3–07
tolerance with no field trials in addition
to those required on the representative
commodities (which did not change
with the expansion of the group). Fewer
field trials mean a greater likelihood
that these commodities will obtain
tolerance coverage under the FFDCA,
aiding growers and reducing the costs of
both the IR–4 data development process
and the EPA review process, all while
maintaining the protectiveness of the
tolerance regulatory scheme.
B. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
This action does not impose any new
information collection requirements that
would require additional review or
approval by OMB under the provisions
of PRA, 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq. However,
this action is expected to reduce
mandatory paperwork due to a
reduction in required studies. This
action will also have the effect of
reducing the number of residue
chemistry studies because fewer
representative crops would need to be
tested under a crop grouping scheme,
than it would otherwise be required.
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
Pursuant to RFA section 605(b), 5
U.S.C. 601 et seq., I hereby certify that
this proposed rule will not have a
significant adverse economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities.
This proposed rule does not have any
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direct adverse impacts on small
businesses, small non-profit
organizations, or small local
governments.
For the purpose of assessing the
impacts of this proposed rule on small
entities, a small entity is defined as:
1. A small business as defined by the
Small Business Administration’s (SBA)
regulations at 13 CFR 121.201.
2. A small governmental jurisdiction
that is a government of a city, county,
town, school district or special district
with a population of less than 50,000.
3. A small organization that is any
not-for-profit enterprise which is
independently owned and operated and
is not dominant in its field.
In determining whether a rule has a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities, the
impact of concern is any significant
adverse economic impact on small
entities, since the primary purpose of
the regulatory flexibility analyses is to
identify and address regulatory
alternatives ‘‘which minimize any
significant economic impact of the
proposed rule on small entities’’ (5
U.S.C. 603 and 604). Thus, an agency
may certify that a rule will not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities if
the rule relieves regulatory burden or
otherwise has a positive economic effect
on all of the small entities subject to the
rule.
This proposed action provides
regulatory relief and regulatory
flexibility. The new crop groups ease
the process for pesticide manufacturers
to obtain pesticide tolerances on greater
numbers of crops. Pesticides will be
more widely available to growers for use
on crops, particularly specialty crops.
This proposed action is not expected to
have any adverse impact on small
businesses.
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
(UMRA)
EPA has determined that this action
does not contain a Federal mandate that
may result in expenditures of $100
million or more for State, local, and
tribal governments, in the aggregate, or
the private sector in any 1 year.
Accordingly, this action is not subject to
the requirements of UMRA sections 202,
203, 204, and 205, 2 U.S.C. 1501 et seq.
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
Pursuant to Executive Order 13132,
64 FR 43255, August 10, 1999, EPA has
determined that this action does not
have federalism implications, because it
will not have substantial direct effects
on the States, on the relationship
between the national government and
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the States, or on the distribution of
power and responsibilities among the
various levels of government, as
specified in the Executive Order. Thus,
Executive Order 13132 does not apply
to this action.
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation
and Coordination With Indian Tribal
Governments
As required by Executive Order
13175, 65 FR 67249, November 9, 2000,
EPA has determined that this action
does not have tribal implications
because it will not have any effect on
tribal governments, on the relationship
between the Federal Government and
the Indian tribes, or on the distribution
of power and responsibilities between
the Federal Government and Indian
tribes, as specified in the Executive
order. Thus, Executive Order 13175
does not apply to this action.
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of
Children From Environmental Health
Risks and Safety Risks
Executive Order 13045, 62 FR 19885,
April 23, 1997 does not apply because
this action is not designated as an
economically significant regulatory
action as defined by Executive Order
12866 (see Unit V.A.), nor does it
establish an environmental standard, or
otherwise have a disproportionate effect
on children.
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use
This action is not a ‘‘significant
energy action’’ as defined in Executive
Order 13211, 66 FR 28355, May 22,
2001 because it is not designated as an
regulatory action as defined by
Executive Order 12866 (see Unit V.A.),
nor is it likely to have any adverse effect
on the supply, distribution, or use of
energy.
I. National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act (NTTAA)
Section 12(d) of NTTAA, 15 U.S.C.
272 note, directs EPA to use voluntary
consensus standards in its regulatory
activities unless to do so would be
inconsistent with applicable law or
impractical. Voluntary consensus
standards are technical standards (e.g.,
materials specifications, test methods,
and sampling procedures) that are
developed or adopted by voluntary
consensus standards bodies. This action
does not impose any technical standards
that would require EPA to consider the
use of any voluntary consensus
standards.
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal
Actions To Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and
Low-Income Populations
This action does not have an adverse
impact on the environmental and health
A
conditions in low-income and minority
communities. Therefore, this action
does not involve special consideration
of environmental justice related issues
as specified in Executive Order 12898,
59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994.
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 180
Environmental protection,
Administrative practice and procedure,
Commodities, Pesticides and pests.
Dated: November 3, 2014.
James Jones,
Assistant Administrator, Office of Chemical
Safety and Pollution Prevention.
Therefore, it is proposed that 40 CFR
chapter I be amended as follows:
PART 180—[AMENDED]
1. The authority citation for part 180
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 21 U.S.C. 321(q), 346a and 371.
2. In § 180.1:
a. Revise the entries for ‘‘Broccoli’’
and ‘‘Sugar apple’’ in the table in
paragraph (g).
■ b. Add entries for ‘‘Fern, edible’’ and
‘‘Palm hearts’’ in alphabetical order to
the table in paragraph (g).
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
■
■
§ 180.1
*
Definitions and interpretations.
*
*
(g) * * *
*
*
B
*
Broccoli ..............
*
*
*
Broccoli, Chinese broccoli (gai lon, white flowering broccoli).
*
Fern, edible ........
*
*
*
*
*
*
Fern, edible, fiddlehead including: Black lady fern, Deparia japonica (Thunb.) M. Kato; Bracken fern, Pteridium aquilinum (L.)
Kuhn; Broad buckler fern, Dryopteris dilatata (Hoffm.) A. Gray; Cinnamon fern, Osmundastrum cinnamomeum (L.) C. Presl;
Lady fern, Athyrium filix-femina (L.) Roth ex Mert.; Leather fern, Acrostichum aureum L.; Mother fern, Diplazium proliferum
(Lam.) Thouars; Ostrich fern, Matteuccia struthiopteris (L.) Tod.; Vegetable fern, Diplazium esculentum (Retz.) Sw.; Zenmai
fern, Osmuda japonica Thunb.
*
Palm hearts .......
*
*
*
*
*
*
Palm hearts, various species including: African fan palm, Borassus aethiopum Mart.; Cabbage palm, Euterpe oleracea Mart.;
Cabbage palmetto, Sabal palmetto (Walter) Schult. & Schult. f.; Coconut, Cocos nucifera L.; Palmyra palm, Borassus
flabellifera L.; Peach Palm, Bactris gasipaes Kunth; Royal palm, Roystonea oleracea (Jacq.) O.F. Cook; Salak palm,
Salacca zalacca (Gaertn.) Voss; Saw palmetto, Serenoa repens (W. Bartram) Small; Wine palm, Raphia spp.
*
Sugar apple .......
*
*
*
*
*
*
Annona squamosa L. and its hybrid atemoya (Annona cherimola Mill X A. squamosa L.) Also includes true custard apple
(Annona reticulata L.).
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*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
■ 3. In § 180.40, revise paragraphs (e)
and (f) to read as follows:
§ 180.40
*
*
Tolerances for crop groups.
*
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*
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*
*
*
(e) Since a group tolerance reflects
maximum residues likely to occur on all
individual crops within a group, the
proposed or registered patterns of use
for all crops in the group or subgroup
must be similar before a group tolerance
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*
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*
*
*
is established. The pattern of use
consists of the amount of pesticide
applied, the number of times applied,
the timing of the first application, the
interval between applications, and the
interval between the last application
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and harvest. The pattern of use will also
include the type of application; for
example, soil or foliar application, or
application by ground or aerial
equipment. Additionally, since a group
tolerance reflects maximum residues
likely to occur on all individual foods
within a group, food processing
practices must be similar for all crops in
the group or subgroup if the processing
practice has the potential to result in
residues in a processed commodity at a
higher concentration than the raw
agricultural commodity.
(f)(1) General. EPA will not establish
a crop group for a pesticide unless all
tolerances made necessary by the
presence of pesticide residues in the
crop group commodities have been
issued or are being issued
simultaneously with the crop group
tolerance. For purposes of this
paragraph (f)(1):
(i) Necessary tolerances for residues
resulting from crop group tolerances
include:
(A) Tolerances for processed food,
including processed animal feed, to the
extent needed under 21 U.S.C.
346a(a)(2).
(B) Tolerances for raw commodities
not covered by the crop group tolerance
that are derivative of commodities in the
group.
(C) Tolerances for meat, milk, or egg
products that may contain residues as a
result of livestock’s consumption of
animal feed containing pesticide
residues to the extent needed under
§ 180.6(b).
(ii) Notwithstanding the foregoing, a
tolerance is not considered necessary for
processed food, derivative raw
commodities, or meat, milk, and eggs if
the precursor raw commodities are
grown solely for sale as a raw
commodities and are completely
segregated from commodities grown for
the purpose of producing processed
foods, derivative raw commodities, and
commodities, or fractions thereof, that
are used as animal feed.
(2) Processed commodity and related
raw commodity crop group tolerances.
EPA may establish crop group
tolerances for processed commodities or
fractions of commodities (e.g., bran and
flour from the Cereal Grains Group),
including processed fractions used as
animal feed (e.g., pomace from the Pome
Fruit Group), produced from crops in
the crop groups in § 180.41. EPA may
establish crop group tolerances for raw
commodities or fractions of
commodities, including fractions used
as animal feed, derived from
commodities covered by the crop groups
in § 180.41 (e.g., aspirated grain dust
associated with the Cereal Grains
Group). Crop group tolerances on
processed foods and derivative raw
commodities may be based on data on
representative commodities for
associated crop group. Paragraphs (c),
(d), (e), (g), and (h) of this section apply
to group tolerances authorized by this
paragraph (f)(2).
(3) Representative crops. Unless
indicated otherwise in §§ 180.40 and
180.41, the processed food and feed
forms of the representative crops for a
crop group are considered to be
representative of the processed food and
feed forms and any derivative raw
commodities not covered by the crop
group, that are produced from any of the
raw agricultural commodities covered
by the crop group tolerance.
Additionally, unless indicated
otherwise in §§ 180.40 and 180.41,
representative commodities for such
crop groups are selected taking into
consideration whether their use as
animal feed will result in residues in or
on meat, milk, and/or eggs at a level
representative of the residues that
would result from use of the other
commodities or byproducts in the crop
group as an animal feed.
(4) Data. Processing data on
representative crops are required prior
to establishment of a group tolerance if
the processing of the representative
commodity has the potential to result in
residues in a processed commodity at a
higher concentration than in the
representative commodity. Residue data
are required on raw commodities
derived from the crops in the crop group
tolerance but not directly covered by the
tolerance. Animal feeding studies with
a representative crop are required if the
representative crop is used as a
significant animal feed.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 4. In § 180.41:
■ a. Revise paragraph (b).
■ b. Redesignate paragraphs (c)(6)
through (28) as paragraphs (c)(7)
through (29), respectively.
■ c. Add a new paragraph (c)(6).
■ d. Redesignate newly redesignated
paragraphs (c)(8) through (29) as
paragraphs (c)(9) through (30),
respectively.
■ e. Add a new paragraph (c)(8).
■ f. Revise newly redesignated
paragraphs (c)(25)(ii), (c)(26)(ii), and
(c)(27)(ii) introductory text.
■ g. Add paragraphs (c)(31), (32), and
(33).
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
§ 180.41
Crop group tables.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) Commodities not listed are not
considered as included in the groups for
the purposes of this paragraph (b), and
individual tolerances must be
established. Miscellaneous commodities
intentionally not included in any group
include globe artichoke, hops, peanut,
and water chestnut.
(c) * * *
(6) Crop Group 4–14. Leafy Vegetable
Group.
(i) Representative commodities. Head
lettuce, leaf lettuce, mustard greens, and
spinach.
(ii) Commodities. The following Table
1 lists all commodities included in Crop
Group 4–14.
TABLE 1—CROP GROUP 4–14: LEAFY VEGETABLE
Related crop
subgroup
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Commodities
Amaranth, Chinese (Amaranthus tricolor L.) ......................................................................................................................................
Amaranth, leafy (Amaranthus spp.) ....................................................................................................................................................
Arugula (Eruca sativa Mill.) .................................................................................................................................................................
Aster, Indian (Kalimeris indica (L.) Sch. Bip.) ....................................................................................................................................
Blackjack (Bidens pilosa L.) ................................................................................................................................................................
Broccoli, Chinese (Brassica oleracea var. alboglabra (L.H. Bailey) Musil) ........................................................................................
Broccoli raab (Brassica ruvo L.H. Bailey) ...........................................................................................................................................
Cabbage, abyssinian (Brassica carinata A. Braun) ............................................................................................................................
Cabbage, seakale (Brassica oleracea L. var. costata DC.) ...............................................................................................................
Cat’s whiskers (Cleome gynandra L.) ................................................................................................................................................
Cham-chwi (Doellingeria scabra (Thunb.) Nees) ...............................................................................................................................
Cham-na-mul (Pimpinella calycina Maxim) ........................................................................................................................................
Chervil, fresh leaves (Anthriscus cerefolium (L.) Hoffm.) ...................................................................................................................
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4–14A
4–14A
4–14B
4–14A
4–14A
4–14B
4–14B
4–14B
4–14B
4–14A
4–14A
4–14A
4–14A
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TABLE 1—CROP GROUP 4–14: LEAFY VEGETABLE—Continued
Related crop
subgroup
Commodities
Chinese cabbage, bok choy (Brassica rapa subsp. chinensis (L.) Hanelt) .......................................................................................
Chipilin (Crotalaria longirostrata Hook & Arn) ....................................................................................................................................
Chrysanthemum, garland (Glebionis coronaria (L.) Cass. ex Spach. Glebionis spp.) ......................................................................
Cilantro, fresh leaves (Coriandrum sativum L.) ..................................................................................................................................
Collards (Brassica oleracea var. Viridis L.) ........................................................................................................................................
Corn salad (Valerianella spp.) ............................................................................................................................................................
Cosmos (Cosmos caudatus Kunth) ....................................................................................................................................................
Cress, garden (Lepidium sativum L.) .................................................................................................................................................
Cress, upland (Barbarea vulgaris W. T. Aiton) ..................................................................................................................................
Dandelion (Taraxacum officinale F.H. Wigg. Aggr.) ...........................................................................................................................
Dang-gwi (Angelica gigas) ..................................................................................................................................................................
Dillweed (Anethum graveolens L.) ......................................................................................................................................................
Dock (Rumex patientia L.) ..................................................................................................................................................................
Dol-nam-mul (Sedum sarmentosum Bunge) ......................................................................................................................................
Ebolo (Crassocephalum crepidioides (Benth.) S. Moore) ..................................................................................................................
Endive (Cichorium endivia L. ssp. Endivia) ........................................................................................................................................
Escarole (Cichorium endivia L. ssp. Endivia) .....................................................................................................................................
Fameflower (Talinum fruticosum (L.) Juss.) .......................................................................................................................................
Feather cockscomb (Glinus oppositifolius (L.) Aug. DC.) ..................................................................................................................
Good King Henry (Chenopodium bonus-henricus L.) ........................................................................................................................
Hanover salad (Brassica napus var. Pabularia (DC.) Rchb.) ............................................................................................................
Huauzontle (Chenopodium berlandieri Moq.) .....................................................................................................................................
Jute, leaves (Corchorus spp.) .............................................................................................................................................................
Kale (Brassica oleracea var. Sabellica L.) .........................................................................................................................................
Lettuce, bitter (Launaea cornuta (Hochst. ex Oliv. & Hiern) C. Jeffrey) ............................................................................................
Lettuce, head (Lactuca sativa L.; including Lactuca sativa var. capitata L.) .....................................................................................
Lettuce, leaf (Lactuca sativa L.; including Lactuca sativa var. longifolia Lam.; Lactuca sativa var. crispa L.) .................................
Maca (Lepidium meyenii Walp.) .........................................................................................................................................................
Mizuna (Brassica rapa L. subsp. nipposinica (L. H. Bailey) Hanelt) ..................................................................................................
Mustard greens (Brassica juncea subsp., including Brassica juncea (L.) Czern. subsp. integrifolia (H. West) Thell., Brassica
juncea (L.) Czern. var. tsatsai (T. L. Mao) Gladis).
Orach (Atriplex hortensis L.) ...............................................................................................................................................................
Parsley, fresh leaves (Petroselinum crispum (Mill.) Nyman ex A.W. Hill; Petroselinum crispum var. neapolitanum Danert) ..........
Plantain, buckthorn (Plantago lanceolata L.) ......................................................................................................................................
Primrose, English (Primula vulgaris Huds.) ........................................................................................................................................
Purslane, garden (Portulaca oleracea L.) ...........................................................................................................................................
Purslane, winter (Claytonia perfoliata Donn ex Willd) ........................................................................................................................
Radicchio (Cichorium intybus L.) ........................................................................................................................................................
Radish, leaves (Raphanus sativus L. var sativus, including Raphanus sativus L. var. mougri H. W. J. Helm (Raphanus sativus
L. var. oleiformis Pers).
Rape greens (Brassica napus L. var. napus, including Brassica rapa subsp. trilocularis (Roxb.) Hanelt; Brassica rapa subsp.
dichotoma (Roxb.) Hanelt; Brassica rapa subsp. oleifera Met).
Rocket, wild (Diplotaxis tenuifolia (L.) DC.) ........................................................................................................................................
Shepherd’s purse (Capsella bursa-pastoris (L.) Medik) .....................................................................................................................
Spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) ...........................................................................................................................................................
Spinach, malabar (Basella alba L.) ....................................................................................................................................................
Spinach, New Zealand (Tetragonia tetragonioides (Pall.) Kuntze) ....................................................................................................
Spinach, tanier (Xanthosoma brasiliense (Desf.) Engl.) ....................................................................................................................
Swiss chard (Beta vulgaris L. subsp. Vulgaris) ..................................................................................................................................
Turnip greens (Brassica rapa L. subsp. Rapa) ..................................................................................................................................
Violet, Chinese (Asystasia gangetica (L.) T. Anderson) ....................................................................................................................
Watercress (Nasturtium officinale W. T. Aiton) ..................................................................................................................................
Cultivars, varieties, and hybrids of these commodities ......................................................................................................................
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(iii) Crop subgroups. The following
Table 2 identifies the crop subgroups for
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Crop Group 4–14, specifies the
representative commodities for each
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4–14B
4–14A
4–14A
4–14A
4–14B
4–14A
4–14A
4–14B
4–14B
4–14A
4–14A
4–14A
4–14A
4–14A
4–14A
4–14A
4–14A
4–14A
4–14A
4–14A
4–14B
4–14A
4–14A
4–14B
4–14A
4–14A
4–14A
4–14B
4–14B
4–14B
4–14A
4–14A
4–14A
4–14A
4–14A
4–14A
4–14A
4–14B
4–14B
4–14B
4–14B
4–14A
4–14A
4–14A
4–14A
4–14A
4–14B
4–14A
4–14B
subgroup, and lists all the commodities
included in each subgroup.
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TABLE 2—CROP GROUP 4–14: SUBGROUP LISTING
Representative
commodities
Commodities
Crop Subgroup 4–14A. Leafy greens subgroup
Head lettuce, leaf lettuce, and spinach.
Amaranth, Chinese; amaranth, leafy; aster, Indian; blackjack; cat’s whiskers; chervil, fresh leaves; cham-chwi; cham-namul; chipilin; chrysanthemum, garland; cilantro, fresh leaves; corn salad; cosmos; dandelion; dang-gwi; dillweed; dock;
dol-nam-mul; ebolo; endive; escarole; fameflower; feather cockscomb; good king henry; huauzontle; jute, leaves; lettuce, bitter; lettuce, head; lettuce, leaf; orach; parsley, fresh leaves; plantain, buckhorn; primrose, English; purslane,
garden; purslane, winter; radicchio; spinach; spinach, malabar; spinach, New Zealand; spinach, tanier; swiss chard;
violet, Chinese; cultivars, varieties, and hybrids of these commodities.
Crop Subgroup 4–14B. Brassica leafy greens subgroup
Mustard greens ........
Arugula; broccoli raab; broccoli, Chinese; cabbage, abyssinian; cabbage, seakale; Chinese cabbage, bok choy; collards;
cress, garden; cress, upland; hanover salad; kale; maca; mizuna; mustard greens; radish, leaves; rape greens; rocket,
wild; shepherd’s purse; turnip greens; watercress; cultivars, varieties, and hybrids of these commodities.
*
*
*
*
*
(8) Crop Group 5–14. Brassica Head
and Stem Vegetable Group.
(i) Representative commodities.
Broccoli or cauliflower and cabbage.
(ii) Commodities. The following List 1
contains all commodities included in
Crop Group 5–14.
LIST 1—CROP GROUP 5–14: BRASSICA HEAD AND STEM VEGETABLE
Broccoli (Brassica oleracea L. var. italica
Plenck).
Brussels sprouts (Brassica oleracea L. var.
gemmifera (DC.) Zenker).
Cabbage (Brassica oleracea L. var. capitata
L.).
Cabbage, Chinese, napa (Brassica rapa L.
subsp. pekinensis (Lour.) Hanelt).
Cauliflower (Brassica oleracea L. var.
capitata L.).
Cultivars, varieties, and hybrids of these
commodities.
*
*
*
*
*
(25) * * *
(ii) Commodities. The commodities
included in Crop Group 16 are: Forage,
fodder, stover, and straw of all
commodities included in the group
cereal grains group. EPA may establish
separate group tolerances on forage,
fodder, hay, stover, or straw, if data on
the representative commodities indicate
differences in the levels of residues on
forage, fodder, stover, or straw.
(26) * * *
(ii) Commodities. The commodities
included in Crop Group 17 are: Forage,
fodder, stover, and hay of any grass,
Gramineae/Poaceae family (either green
or cured) except sugarcane and those
included in the cereal grains group, that
will be fed to or grazed by livestock, all
pasture and range grasses and grasses
grown for hay or silage. EPA may
establish separate group tolerances on
forage, fodder, stover, or hay, if data on
the representative commodities indicate
differences in the levels of residues on
forage, fodder, stover, or hay.
(27) * * *
(ii) Commodities. EPA may establish
separate group tolerances on forage,
fodder, straw, or hay, if data on the
representative commodities indicate
differences in the levels of residues on
forage, fodder, straw, or hay. The
following is a list of all the commodities
included in Crop Group 18:
*
*
*
*
*
(31) Crop Group 22. Stalk, Stem and
Leaf Petiole Vegetable Group.
(i) Representative commodities.
Asparagus and celery.
(ii) Commodities. The following Table
1 lists all commodities included in Crop
Group 22.
TABLE 1—CROP GROUP 22: STALK, STEM AND LEAF PETIOLE VEGETABLE GROUP
Related crop
subgroup
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
Commodities
Agave (Agave spp.) ............................................................................................................................................................................
Aloe vera (Aloe vera (L.) Burm.f. ........................................................................................................................................................
Asparagus (Asparagus officinalis L.) ..................................................................................................................................................
Bamboo, shoots (Arundinaria spp.; Bambusa spp., Chimonobambusa spp.; Dendrocalamus spp., Fargesia spp.; Gigantochloa
spp., Nastus elatus; Phyllostachys spp.; Thyrsostachys spp.).
Cardoon (Cynara cardunculus L.) ......................................................................................................................................................
Celery (Apium graveolens var. dulce (Mill.) Pers.) .............................................................................................................................
Celery, Chinese (Apium graveolens L. var. secalinum (Alef.) Mansf.) ..............................................................................................
Celtuce (Lactuca sativa var. angustana L.H. Bailey) .........................................................................................................................
Fennel, Florence, fresh leaves and stalk (Foeniculum vulgare Mill. subsp. vulgare var. azoricum (Mill.) Thell.) .............................
Fern, edible, fiddlehead ......................................................................................................................................................................
Fuki (Petasites japonicus (Siebold & Zucc.) Maxim.) .........................................................................................................................
Kale, sea (Crambe maritima L.) .........................................................................................................................................................
Kohlrabi (Brassica oleracea L. var gongylodes L.) ............................................................................................................................
Palm hearts (various species) ............................................................................................................................................................
Prickly pear, pads (Opuntia ficus-indica (L.) Mill., Opuntia spp.) .......................................................................................................
Prickly pear, Texas, pads (Opuntia engelmannii Salm-Dyck ex Engelm. var. lindheimeri (Engelm.) B. D. Parfitt & Pinkav) ..........
Rhubarb (Rheum x hybridum Murray) ................................................................................................................................................
Udo (Aralia cordata Thunb.) ...............................................................................................................................................................
Zuiki (Colocasia gigantea (Blume) Hook. f.) .......................................................................................................................................
Cultivars, varieties, and hybrids of these commodities. .....................................................................................................................
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22A
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22B
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(iii) Crop subgroups. The following
Table 2 identifies the crop subgroups for
Crop Group 22, specifies the
representative commodities for each
subgroup, and lists all the commodities
included in each subgroup.
TABLE 2—CROP GROUP 22: SUBGROUP LISTING
Representative
commodities
Commodities
Crop Subgroup 22A. Stalk and stem vegetable subgroup
Asparagus ................
Agave; aloe vera; asparagus; bamboo, shoots; celtuce; fennel, florence, fresh leaves and stalk; fern, edible; kale, sea;
kohlrabi; palm hearts; prickly pear, pads; prickly pear, Texas, pads; cultivars, varieties, and hybrids of these commodities
Crop Subgroup 22B. Leaf petiole vegetable subgroup
Celery .......................
Cardoon; celery; celery, Chinese; fuki; rhubarb; udo; zuiki; cultivars, varieties, and hybrids of these commodities
(32) Crop Group 23. Tropical and
Subtropical Fruit, Edible Peel Group.
(i) Representative commodities. Date,
fig, guava, and olive.
(ii) Commodities. The following Table
1 lists all commodities included in Crop
Group 23.
TABLE 1—CROP GROUP 23: TROPICAL AND SUBTROPICAL FRUIT, EDIBLE PEEL
Related crop
subgroup
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
Commodities
Acaı (Euterpe oleracea Mart.) .............................................................................................................................................................
¸ ´
Acerola (Malpighia emarginata DC.) ..................................................................................................................................................
African plum (Vitex doniana Sweet) ...................................................................................................................................................
Agritos (Berberis trifoliolata Moric.) ....................................................................................................................................................
Almondette (Buchanania lanzan Spreng.) ..........................................................................................................................................
Ambarella (Spondias dulcis Sol. ex Parkinson) .................................................................................................................................
Apak palm (Brahea dulcis (Kunth) Mart.) ...........................................................................................................................................
Appleberry (Billardiera scandens Sm.) ...............................................................................................................................................
´
Araza (Eugenia stipitata McVaugh) ....................................................................................................................................................
Arbutus berry (Arbutus unedo L.) .......................................................................................................................................................
Babaco (Vasconcellea x heilbornii (V. M. Badillo) V. M. Badillo) ......................................................................................................
Bacaba palm (Oenocarpus bacaba Mart.) .........................................................................................................................................
Bacaba-de-leque (Oenocarpus distichus Mart.) .................................................................................................................................
Bayberry, red (Morella rubra Lour.) ....................................................................................................................................................
Bignay (Antidesma bunius (L.) Spreng.) ............................................................................................................................................
Bilimbi (Averrhoa bilimbi L.) ................................................................................................................................................................
´
Borojo (Borojoa patinoi Cuatrec.) .......................................................................................................................................................
Breadnut (Brosimum alicastrum Sw.) .................................................................................................................................................
Cabeluda (Plinia glomerata (O. Berg) Amshoff) .................................................................................................................................
Cajou, fruit (Anacardium giganteum Hance ex Engl.) ........................................................................................................................
´
Cambuca (Marlierea edulis Nied.) ......................................................................................................................................................
Carandas-plum (Carissa edulis Vahl) .................................................................................................................................................
Carob (Ceratonia siliqua L.) ................................................................................................................................................................
Cashew apple (Anacardium occidentale L.) .......................................................................................................................................
Ceylon iron wood (Manilkara hexandra (Roxb.) Dubard) ...................................................................................................................
Ceylon olive (Elaeocarpus serratus L.) ..............................................................................................................................................
Cherry-of-the-Rio-Grande (Eugenia aggregata (Vell.) Kiaersk.) ........................................................................................................
Chinese olive, black (Canarium tramdenum C. D. Dai & Yakovlev) ..................................................................................................
Chinese olive, white (Canarium album (Lour.) Raeusch.) .................................................................................................................
Chirauli-nut (Buchanania latifolia Roxb.) ............................................................................................................................................
Ciruela verde (Bunchosia armeniaca (Cav.) DC.) ..............................................................................................................................
Cocoplum (Chrysobalanus icaco L.) ...................................................................................................................................................
Date (Phoenix dactylifera L.) ..............................................................................................................................................................
Davidson’s plum (Davidsonia pruriens F. Muell.) ...............................................................................................................................
Desert-date (Balanites aegyptiacus (L.) Delile) ..................................................................................................................................
Doum palm coconut (Hyphaene thebaica (L.) Mart.) .........................................................................................................................
False sandalwood (Ximenia americana L.) ........................................................................................................................................
Feijoa (Acca sellowiana (O. Berg) Burret) ..........................................................................................................................................
Fig (Ficus carica L.) ............................................................................................................................................................................
Fragrant manjack (Cordia dichotoma G. Forst.) .................................................................................................................................
Gooseberry, abyssinian (Dovyalis abyssinica (A. Rich.) Warb.) ........................................................................................................
Gooseberry, Ceylon (Dovyalis hebecarpa (Gardner) Warb.) .............................................................................................................
Gooseberry, Indian (Phyllanthus emblica L.) .....................................................................................................................................
Gooseberry, otaheite (Phyllanthus acidus (L.) Skeels) ......................................................................................................................
Governor’s plum (Flacourtia indica (Burm. F.) Merr.) ........................................................................................................................
Grumichama (Eugenia brasiliensis Lam) ............................................................................................................................................
Guabiroba (Campomanesia xanthocarpa O. Berg) ............................................................................................................................
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68169
Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 220 / Friday, November 14, 2014 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 1—CROP GROUP 23: TROPICAL AND SUBTROPICAL FRUIT, EDIBLE PEEL—Continued
Related crop
subgroup
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
Commodities
Guava (Psidium guajava L.) ...............................................................................................................................................................
Guava berry (Myrciaria floribunda (H. West ex Willd.) O. Berg) ........................................................................................................
Guava, Brazilian (Psidium guineense Sw.) ........................................................................................................................................
Guava, cattley (Psidium cattleianum Sabine) .....................................................................................................................................
Guava, Costa Rican (Psidium friedrichsthalianum (O. Berg) Nied.) ..................................................................................................
Guava, para (Psidium acutangulum DC.) ...........................................................................................................................................
Guava, purple strawberry (Psidium cattleianum Sabine var. cattleianum) ........................................................................................
Guava, strawberry (Psidium cattleianum Sabine var. littorale (Raddi) Fosberg) ...............................................................................
Guava, yellow strawberry (Psidium cattleianum Sabine var. cattleianum forma lucidum O. Deg.) ..................................................
Guayabillo (Psidium sartorianum (O. Berg) Nied.) .............................................................................................................................
Illawarra plum (Podocarpus elatus R. Br. Ex Endl.) ...........................................................................................................................
´
Imbe (Garcinia livingstonei T. Anderson) ...........................................................................................................................................
Imbu (Spondias tuberosa Arruda ex Kost.) ........................................................................................................................................
Indian-plum (Flacourtia jangomas (Lour.). basionym) ........................................................................................................................
Jaboticaba (Myrciaria cauliflora (Mart.) O. Berg) ...............................................................................................................................
Jamaica-cherry (Muntingia calabura L.) .............................................................................................................................................
Jambolan (Syzygium cumini (L.) Skeels) ...........................................................................................................................................
Jelly palm (Butia capitata (Mart.) Becc.) ............................................................................................................................................
Jujube, Indian (Ziziphus mauritiana Lam.) .........................................................................................................................................
Kaffir-plum (Harpephyllum caffrum Bernh. Ex C. Krauss) .................................................................................................................
Kakadu plum (Terminalia latipes Benth. subsp. psilocarpa Pedley) ..................................................................................................
Kapundung (Baccaurea racemosa (Reinw.) Mull. Arg.) .....................................................................................................................
Karanda (Carissa carandas L.) ...........................................................................................................................................................
Kwai muk (Artocarpus hypargyreus Hance ex Benth.) ......................................................................................................................
Lemon aspen (Acronychia acidula F. Muell) ......................................................................................................................................
Mangaba (Hancornia speciosa Gomes) .............................................................................................................................................
Marian plum (Bouea macrophylla Griff.) .............................................................................................................................................
Mombin, malayan (Spondias pinnata (J. Koenig ex L. f.) Kurz) ........................................................................................................
Mombin, purple (Spondias purpurea L.) .............................................................................................................................................
Mombin, yellow (Spondias mombin L.) ..............................................................................................................................................
Monkeyfruit (Artocarpus lacucha Buch. Ham.) ...................................................................................................................................
Monos plum (Pseudanamomis umbellulifera (Kunth) Kausel) ...........................................................................................................
Mountain cherry (Bunchosia cornifolia Kunth) ....................................................................................................................................
Nance (Byrsonima crassifolia (L.) Kunth) ...........................................................................................................................................
Natal plum (Carissa macrocarpa (Eckl.) A. DC.) ...............................................................................................................................
Noni (Morinda citrifolia L.) ...................................................................................................................................................................
Olive (Olea europaea L. subsp. europaea) ........................................................................................................................................
Papaya, mountain (Vasconcellea pubescens A. DC.) .......................................................................................................................
´
Pataua (Oenocarpus bataua Mart.) ....................................................................................................................................................
Peach palm, fruit (Bactris gasipaes Kunth var. gasipaes) .................................................................................................................
Persimmon, black (Diospyros texana Scheele) ..................................................................................................................................
Persimmon, Japanese (Diospyros kaki Thunb.) .................................................................................................................................
Pitomba (Eugenia luschnathiana Klotzsch ex O. Berg) .....................................................................................................................
Plum-of-Martinique (Flacourtia inermis Roxb.) ...................................................................................................................................
Pomerac (Syzygium malaccense (L.) Merr. & L.M. Perry) ................................................................................................................
Rambai (Baccaurea motleyana (Mull. Arg.) Mull. Arg.) ......................................................................................................................
Rose apple (Syzygium jambos (L.) Alston) ........................................................................................................................................
Rukam (Flacourtia rukam Zoll. & Moritizi) ..........................................................................................................................................
Rumberry (Myrciaria dubia (Kunth) Mc Vaugh Myrtaceae) ................................................................................................................
Sea grape (Coccoloba uvifera (L.) L.) ................................................................................................................................................
Sentul (Sandoricum koetjape (Burm. F.) Merr.) .................................................................................................................................
Sete-capotes (Campomanesia guazumifolia (Cambess.) O. Berg) ...................................................................................................
Silver aspen (Acronychia wilcoxian (F. Muell.) T.G. Hartley) .............................................................................................................
Starfruit ( Averrhoa carambola L.) ......................................................................................................................................................
Surinam cherry (Eugenia uniflora L.) ..................................................................................................................................................
Tamarind (Tamarindus indica L.) ........................................................................................................................................................
Uvalha (Eugenia pyriformis Cambess ) ..............................................................................................................................................
Water apple (Syzygium aqueum (Burm. F.) Alston) ..........................................................................................................................
Water pear (Syzygium guineense (Willd.) DC) ..................................................................................................................................
Water berry (Syzygium cordatum Hochst. Ex C. Krauss) ..................................................................................................................
Wax jambu (Syzygium samarangense (Blume) Merr. & L.M. Perry) .................................................................................................
Cultivars, varieties, and hybrids of these commodities ......................................................................................................................
(iii) Table. The following Table 2
identifies the crop subgroups for Crop
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lists all the commodities included in
each subgroup.
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68170
Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 220 / Friday, November 14, 2014 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 2—CROP GROUP 23: SUBGROUP LISTING
Representative
commodities
Commodities
Crop Subgroup 23A. Small fruit, edible peel subgroup
Olive .........................
Acerola; African plum; agritos; almondette; appleberry; arbutus berry; bayberry, red; bignay; breadnut; cabeluda;
carandas-plum; Ceylon iron wood; Ceylon olive; cherry-of-the-Rio-Grande; Chinese olive, black; Chinese olive, white;
chirauli-nut; cocoplum; desert-date; false sandalwood; fragant manjack; gooseberry, abyssinian; gooseberry, Ceylon;
gooseberry, otaheite; governor’s plum; grumichama; guabiroba; guava berry; guava, Brazilian; guava, Costa Rican;
guayabillo; illawarra plum; Indian-plum; Jamaica-cherry; jambolan; kaffir-plum; kakadu plum; kapundung; karnada;
lemon aspen; mombin, yellow; monos plum; mountain cherry; olive; persimmon, black; pitomba; plum-of-martinique;
rukam; rumberry; sea grape; sete-capotes; silver aspen; water apple; water pear; water berry; wax jambu; cultivars, varieties, and hybrids of these commodities.
Crop Subgroup 23B. Medium to large fruit, edible peel subgroup
Fig and guava ..........
´
´
´
Ambarella; araza; babaco; bilimbi; borojo; cajou, fruit; cambuca; carob; cashew apple; ciruela verde; Davidson’s plum;
feijoa; fig; gooseberry, Indian; guava; guava, cattley; guava, para; guava, purple strawberry; guava, strawberry; guava,
´
yellow strawberry; imbe; imbu; jaboticaba; jujube, Indian; kwai muk; mangaba; Marian plum; mombin, Malayan;
mombin, purple; monkeyfruit; nance; natal plum; noni; papaya, mountain; persimmon, Japanese; pomerac; rambai;
rose apple; sentul; starfruit; Surinam cherry; tamarind; uvalha; cultivars, varieties, and hybrids of these commodities.
Crop Subgroup 23C. Palm fruit, edible peel subgroup
Date ..........................
´
Acaı; apak palm; bacaba palm; bacaba-de-leque; date; doum palm coconut; jelly palm; pataua; peach palm, fruit;
¸ ´
cultivars, varieties, and hybrids of these commodities.
(33) Crop Group 24. Tropical and
Subtropical Fruit, Inedible Peel Group.
(i) Representative commodities.
Atemoya or sugar apple, avocado,
banana or pomegranate, dragon fruit,
lychee, passionfruit, pineapple, and
prickly pear, fruit.
(ii) Commodities. The following Table
1 lists all commodities included in Crop
Group 24.
TABLE 1—CROP GROUP 24: TROPICAL AND SUBTROPICAL FRUIT, INEDIBLE PEEL
Related crop
subgroup
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
Commodities
Abiu (Pouteria caimito (Ruiz & Pav.) Radlk) ......................................................................................................................................
Aisen (Boscia senegalensis (Pers.) Lam.) .........................................................................................................................................
Akee apple (Blighia sapida K.D. Koenig) ...........................................................................................................................................
Atemoya (Annona cherimola Mill. X A. squamosa L.) .......................................................................................................................
Avocado (Persea americana Mill.) ......................................................................................................................................................
Avocado, Guatemalan (Persea americana Mill. var. guatemalensis) ................................................................................................
Avocado, Mexican (Persea americana Mill. var. drymifolia (Schltdl. & Cham.) S. F. Blak) ..............................................................
Avocado, West Indian (Persea americana var. americana) ...............................................................................................................
Bacury (Platonia insignis Mart.) ..........................................................................................................................................................
ˆ
Bael fruit (Aegle marmelos (L.) Correa) .............................................................................................................................................
Banana (Musa spp.) ...........................................................................................................................................................................
Banana, dwarf (Musa hybrids; Musa acuminata Colla) .....................................................................................................................
Binjai (Mangifera caesia Jack) ............................................................................................................................................................
Biriba (Annona mucosa Jacq.) ...........................................................................................................................................................
Breadfruit (Artocarpus altilis (Parkinson) Fosberg) ............................................................................................................................
Burmese grape (Baccaurea ramiflora Lour.) ......................................................................................................................................
Canistel (Pouteria campechiana (Kunth) Baehni) ..............................................................................................................................
Cat’s-eyes (Dimocarpus longan Lour. subsp. malesianus Leenh.) ....................................................................................................
Champedak (Artocarpus integer (Thunb.) Merr.) ...............................................................................................................................
Cherimoya (Annona cherimola Mill.) ..................................................................................................................................................
´
Cupuacu (Theobroma grandiflorum (Willd. Ex Spreng.) K. Schum.) .................................................................................................
Custard apple (Annona reticulata L.) ..................................................................................................................................................
Dragon fruit (Hylocereus undatus (Haw.) Britton & Rose) .................................................................................................................
Durian (Durio zibethinus L.) ................................................................................................................................................................
Elephant-apple (Limonia acidissima L.) ..............................................................................................................................................
Etambe (Mangifera zeylanica (Blume) Hook. F.) ...............................................................................................................................
Granadilla (Passiflora ligularis Juss.) .................................................................................................................................................
Granadilla, giant (Passiflora quadrangularis L.) .................................................................................................................................
Ilama (Annona macroprophyllata Donn. Sm.) ....................................................................................................................................
´
Inga (Inga vera Willd. subsp. affinis (DC.) T. D. Penn.) ....................................................................................................................
Jackfruit (Artocarpus heterophyllus Lam.) ..........................................................................................................................................
´
Jatoba (Hymenaea courbaril L.) .........................................................................................................................................................
Karuka (Pandanus julianettii Martelli) .................................................................................................................................................
Kei apple (Dovyalis caffra (Hook. F. & Harv.) Warb.) ........................................................................................................................
ˆ
Langsat (Lansium domesticum Correa) .............................................................................................................................................
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68171
Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 220 / Friday, November 14, 2014 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 1—CROP GROUP 24: TROPICAL AND SUBTROPICAL FRUIT, INEDIBLE PEEL—Continued
Related crop
subgroup
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
Commodities
Lanjut (Mangifera lagenifera Griff.) .....................................................................................................................................................
Longan (Dimocarpus longan Lour.) ....................................................................................................................................................
Lucuma (Pouteria lucuma (Ruiz & Pav.) Kuntze) ..............................................................................................................................
Lychee (Litchi chinensis Sonn.) ..........................................................................................................................................................
Mabolo (Diospyros blancoi A. DC.) ....................................................................................................................................................
Madras-thorn (Pithecellobium dulce (Roxb.) Benth.) .........................................................................................................................
Mammy-apple (Mammea americana L ) ............................................................................................................................................
Manduro (Balanites maughamii Sprague) ..........................................................................................................................................
Mango (Mangifera indica L.) ...............................................................................................................................................................
Mango, horse (Mangifera foetida Lour.) .............................................................................................................................................
Mango, Saipan (Mangifera odorata Griff.) ..........................................................................................................................................
Mangosteen (Garcinia mangostana L. ) .............................................................................................................................................
Marang (Artocarpus odoratissimus Blanco) .......................................................................................................................................
Marmaladebox (Genipa americana L.) ...............................................................................................................................................
Matisia (Matisia cordata Humb. & Bonpl.) ..........................................................................................................................................
Mesquite (Prosopis juliflora (Sw.) DC.) ..............................................................................................................................................
Mongongo, fruit (Schinziophyton rautanenii (Schinz) Radcl.-Sm) ......................................................................................................
Monkey-bread-tree (Adansonia digitata L.) ........................................................................................................................................
Monstera (Monstera deliciosa Liebm.) ...............................................................................................................................................
Nicobar-breadfruit (Pandanus leram Jones ex Fontana) ...................................................................................................................
Paho (Mangifera altissima Blanco) .....................................................................................................................................................
Pandanus (Pandanus utilis Bory) .......................................................................................................................................................
Papaya (Carica papaya L.) .................................................................................................................................................................
Passionflower, winged-stem (Passiflora alata Curtis) ........................................................................................................................
Passionfruit (Passiflora edulis Sims) ..................................................................................................................................................
Passionfruit, banana (Passiflora tripartita var. mollissima (Kunth) Holm-Niels. & P. Jorg.) ..............................................................
Passionfruit, purple (Passiflora edulis Sims forma edulis) .................................................................................................................
Passionfruit, yellow (Passiflora edulis Sims forma flavicarpa O. Deg.) .............................................................................................
Pawpaw, common (Asimina triloba (L.) Dunal) ..................................................................................................................................
Pawpaw, small-flower (Asimina parviflora (Michx.) Dunal) ................................................................................................................
Pelipisan (Mangifera casturi Kosterm.) ...............................................................................................................................................
Pequi (Caryocar brasiliense Cambess) ..............................................................................................................................................
Pequia (Caryocar villosum (Aubl.) Pers.) ...........................................................................................................................................
Persimmon (American (Diospyros virginiana L.) ................................................................................................................................
Pineapple (Ananas comosus (L.) Merr.) .............................................................................................................................................
Pitahaya (Hylocereus polyrhizus (F. A. C. Weber) Britton & Rose) ..................................................................................................
Pitaya (Hylocereus sp. Including H. megalanthus (H. ocamponis and H. polychizus) ......................................................................
Pitaya, amarilla (Hylocereus triangularis Britton & Rose) ..................................................................................................................
Pitaya, roja (Hylocereus ocamponis (Salm-Dyck) Britton & Rose) ....................................................................................................
Pitaya, yellow (Hylocereus megalanthus (K. Schum. ex Vaupel) Ralf Bauer) ..................................................................................
Plantain (Musa paradisiaca L.) ...........................................................................................................................................................
Pomegranate (Punica granatum L.) ...................................................................................................................................................
Poshte (Annona liebmanniana Baill.) .................................................................................................................................................
Prickly pear, fruit (Opuntia ficus-indica (L.) Mill.) ...............................................................................................................................
Prickly pear, Texas, fruit (Opuntia engelmannii Salm-Dyck ex Engelm. var. lindheimeri (Engelm.) B. D. Parfitt & Pinkav) ............
Pulasan (Nephelium ramboutan-ake (Labill.) Leenh.) ........................................................................................................................
Quandong (Santalum acuminatum (R. Br.) DC.) ...............................................................................................................................
Rambutan (Nephelium lappaceum L.) ................................................................................................................................................
Saguaro (Carnegiea gigantea (Engelm.) Britton & Rose) ..................................................................................................................
Sapodilla (Manilkara zapota (L.) P. Royen) .......................................................................................................................................
Sapote, black (Diospyros digyna Jacq.) .............................................................................................................................................
Sapote, green (Pouteria viridis (Pittier) Cronquist) .............................................................................................................................
Sapote, mamey (Pouteria sapota (Jacq.) H.E. Moore & Stearn) .......................................................................................................
Sapote, white (Casimiroa edulis La Llave & Lex) ..............................................................................................................................
Sataw (Parkia speciosa Hassk.) .........................................................................................................................................................
Satinleaf (Chrysophyllum oliviforme L.) ..............................................................................................................................................
Screw-pine (Pandanus tectorius Parkinson) ......................................................................................................................................
Sierra Leone-tamarind (Dialium guineense Willd.) .............................................................................................................................
´
Soncoya (Annona purpurea Moc. & Sesse ex Dunal) .......................................................................................................................
Soursop (Annona muricata L.) ............................................................................................................................................................
Spanish lime (Melicoccus bijugatus Jacq.) .........................................................................................................................................
Star apple (Chrysophyllum cainito L.) ................................................................................................................................................
Sugar apple (Annona squamosa L.) ...................................................................................................................................................
Sun sapote (Licania platypus (Hemsl.) Fritsch) .................................................................................................................................
Tamarind-of-the-Indies (Vangueria madagascariensis J. F. Gmel.) ..................................................................................................
Velvet tamarind (Dialium indum L.) ....................................................................................................................................................
Wampi (Clausena lansium (Lour.) Skeels) .........................................................................................................................................
White star apple (Chrysophyllum albidum G. Don) ............................................................................................................................
¨
Wild loquat (Uapaca kirkiana Mull. Arg.) ............................................................................................................................................
Cultivars, varieties, and hybrids of these commodities ......................................................................................................................
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 220 / Friday, November 14, 2014 / Proposed Rules
(iii) Table. The following Table 2
identifies the crop subgroups for Crop
Group 24, specifies the representative
commodities for each subgroup, and
lists all the commodities included in
each subgroup.
TABLE 2—CROP GROUP 24: SUBGROUP LISTING
Representative
commodities
Commodities
Crop Subgroup 24A. Small fruit, inedible peel subgroup
Lychee ......................
´
Aisen; bael fruit; Burmese grape; cat’s eyes; inga; lychee; madras-thorn; manduro; matisia; mesquite; mongongo, fruit;
pawpaw, small-flower; satinleaf; Sierra Leone-tamarind; Spanish lime; velvet tamarind; wampi; white star apple;
cultivars, varieties, and hybrids of these commodities.
Crop Subgroup 24B. Medium to large fruit, smooth, inedible peel subgroup
Avocado, plus pomegranate or banana.
Abiu; akee apple; avocado; avocado, Guatemalan; avocado, Mexican; avocado, West Indian; bacury; banana; banana,
´
´
dwarf; binjai; canistel; cupuacu; etambe; jatoba; kei apple; langstat; lanjut; lucuma; mabolo; mango; mango, horse;
mango, Saipan; mangosteen; paho; papaya; pawpaw, common; pelipisan; pequi; pequia; persimmon, American; plantain; pomegranate; poshte; quandong; sapote, black; sapote, green; sapote, white; sataw; screw-pine; star apple; tamarind-of-the-Indies; wild loquat; cultivars, varieties, and hybrids of these commodities.
Crop Subgroup 24C. Medium to large fruit, rough or hairy, inedible peel subgroup
Pineapple, plus
Atemoya or sugar
apple.
Atemoya; biriba; breadfruit; champedak; cherimoya; custard apple; durian; elephant-apple; ilama; jackfruit; karuka;
longan; mammy-apple; marmalade-box; marang; monkey-bread tree; nicobar-breadfruit; pandanus; pineapple; pulasan;
rambutan; sapodilla; sapote, mamey; soncoya; soursop; sugar apple; sun sapote; cultivars, varieties, and hybrids of
these commodities.
Crop Subgroup 24D. Cactus, inedible peel subgroup
Dragon fruit and
Prickly pear fruit.
Dragon fruit; pitahaya; pitaya; pitaya amarilla; pitaya roja; pitaya, yellow; prickly pear, fruit; prickly pear, Texas, fruit;
saguaro; cultivars, varieties, and hybrids of these commodities.
Crop Subgroup 24E. Vine, inedible peel subgroup
Passionfruit ...............
Granadilla; granadilla, giant; monstera; passionflower, winged-stem; passionfruit; passionfruit, banana; passionfruit, purple; passionfruit, yellow; cultivars, varieties, and hybrids of these commodities.
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS
COMMISSION
47 CFR Parts 1 and 27
[RM–11395, GN Docket No. 12–268, WT
Docket Nos. 14–170, 05–211; FCC 14–146]
Updating Competitive Bidding Rules;
Expanding the Economic and
Innovation Opportunities of Spectrum
Through Incentive Auctions;
Implementation of the Commercial
Spectrum Enhancement Act
Federal Communications
Commission.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
This Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking (NPRM) seeks comment on
the revision of certain competitive
bidding rules and provides notice of the
Commission’s intention to resolve
longstanding petitions for
reconsideration.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
SUMMARY:
Comments are due on or before
December 29, 2014 and reply comments
are due on or before January 20, 2015.
DATES:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
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All filings in response to the
NPRM must refer to GN Docket No. 12–
268 and WT Docket Nos. 14–170 and
05–211. The Commission strongly
encourages parties to develop responses
to the NPRM that adhere to the
organization and structure of the NPRM.
Comments may be filed using the
Commission’s Electronic Comment
Filing System (ECFS):
D Electronic Filers: Comments may be
filed electronically using the Internet by
accessing ECFS: https://fjallfoss.fcc.gov/
ecfs2.
D Paper Filers: Parties who choose to
file by paper must file an original and
one copy of each filing. If more than one
docket or rulemaking number appears in
the caption of this proceeding, filers
must submit two additional copies for
each additional docket or rulemaking
number.
Filings can be sent by hand or
messenger delivery, by commercial
overnight courier, or by first-class or
overnight U.S. Postal Service mail. All
filings must be addressed to the
Commission’s Secretary, Office of the
Secretary, Federal Communications
Commission.
All hand-delivered or messengerdelivered paper filings for the
ADDRESSES:
[FR Doc. 2014–26661 Filed 11–13–14; 8:45 am]
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Commission’s Secretary must be
delivered to FCC Headquarters at 445
12th Street SW., Room TW–A325,
Washington, DC 20554. The filing hours
are 8:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. All hand
deliveries must be held together with
rubber bands or fasteners. Any
envelopes and boxes must be disposed
of before entering the building.
Commercial overnight mail (other
than U.S. Postal Service Express Mail
and Priority Mail) must be sent to 9300
East Hampton Drive, Capitol Heights,
MD 20743.
U.S. Postal Service first-class,
Express, and Priority mail must be
addressed to 445 12th Street SW.,
Washington, DC 20554.
People with Disabilities: To request
materials in accessible formats for
people with disabilities (braille, large
print, electronic files, or audio format),
send an email to fcc504@fcc.gov or call
the Consumer & Governmental Affairs
Bureau at 202–418–0530 (voice), 202–
418–0432 (TTY).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Wireless Telecommunications Bureau,
Auctions and Spectrum Access
Division: Kathryn Hinton at (202) 418–
0660.
E:\FR\FM\14NOP1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 79, Number 220 (Friday, November 14, 2014)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 68153-68172]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2014-26661]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 180
[EPA-HQ-OPP-2006-0766; FRL-9918-40]
RIN 2070-AJ28
Tolerance Crop Grouping Program IV
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: EPA is proposing revisions to its pesticide tolerance crop
grouping regulations, which allow the establishment of tolerances for
multiple, related crops based on data from a representative set of
crops. EPA is proposing five new crop groups, two new and two revised
commodity definitions, and revisions to the regulations on the
interaction of crop group tolerances with processed food tolerances and
meat, milk, and egg tolerances. Once final, EPA expects these revisions
to promote greater use of crop groupings for tolerance-setting
purposes, both domestically and in countries that export food to the
United States. This is the fourth in a series of planned crop group
updates expected to be proposed over the next several years.
DATES: Comments must be received on or before January 13, 2015.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments, identified by docket identification
(ID) number EPA-HQ-OPP-2006-0766, by one of the following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the online instructions for submitting comments. Do not submit
electronically any information you consider to be Confidential Business
Information (CBI) or other information whose disclosure is restricted
by statute.
Mail: OPP Docket, Environmental Protection Agency Docket
Center (EPA/DC), (28221T), 1200 Pennsylvania Ave. NW., Washington, DC
20460-0001.
Hand Delivery: To make special arrangements for hand
delivery or delivery of boxed information, please follow the
instructions at https://www.epa.gov/dockets/contacts.html.
Additional instructions on commenting or visiting the docket, along
with more information about dockets generally, is available at https://www.epa.gov/dockets.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Barbara Madden, Registration Division
(7505P), Office of Pesticide Programs, Environmental Protection Agency,
1200 Pennsylvania Ave. NW., Washington, DC 20460-0001; telephone
number: (703) 305-6463; email address: madden.barbara@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. General Information
A. Legal Authority
EPA is initiating this rulemaking to amend the existing crop
grouping regulations under section 408(e)(1)(C) of the Federal Food,
Drug, and Cosmetic Act (FFDCA), which authorizes EPA to establish
``general procedures and requirements to implement [section 408].'' 21
U.S.C. 346a(e)(1)(C). Under FFDCA section 408, EPA is authorized to
establish tolerances for pesticide chemical residues in food. EPA
establishes tolerances for each pesticide based on the potential risks
to human health posed by that pesticide. A tolerance is the maximum
permissible residue level established for a pesticide in raw
agricultural produce and processed foods. The crop group regulations
currently in Sec. Sec. 180.40 and 180.41 enable the establishment of
tolerances for a group of crops based on residue data for certain crops
that are representative of the group and have been established under
FFDCA section 408(e)(1)(C).
B. Does this action apply to me?
You may be potentially affected by this action if you are an
agricultural producer or food manufacturer. The following list of North
American Industrial Classification System (NAICS) codes is not intended
to be exhaustive, but rather provides a guide to help readers determine
whether this document applies to them. Potentially affected entities
may include:
Crop production (NAICS code 111).
Animal production (NAICS code 112).
Food manufacturing (NAICS code 311).
Pesticide manufacturing (NAICS code 32532).
C. What should I consider as I prepare my comments for EPA?
1. Submitting CBI. Do not submit this information to EPA through
[[Page 68154]]
regulations.gov or email. Clearly mark the part or all of the
information that you claim to be CBI. For CBI information in a disk or
CD-ROM that you mail to EPA, mark the outside of the disk or CD-ROM as
CBI and then identify electronically within the disk or CD-ROM the
specific information that is claimed as CBI. In addition to one
complete version of the comment that includes information claimed as
CBI, a copy of the comment that does not contain the information
claimed as CBI must be submitted for inclusion in the public docket.
Information so marked will not be disclosed except in accordance with
procedures set forth in 40 CFR part 2.
2. Tips for preparing your comments. When preparing and submitting
your comments, see the commenting tips at https://www.epa.gov/dockets/comments.html.
II. Background
A. Tolerance-Setting Requirements and Petitions From the Interregional
Research Project Number 4 (IR-4) To Expand the Existing Crop Grouping
System
EPA is authorized to establish maximum residue limits (MRLs) or
tolerances for pesticide chemical residues in or on food commodities
under FFDCA section 408 (21 U.S.C. 346a). EPA establishes pesticide
tolerances only after determining that aggregate exposure to the
pesticide is considered safe. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration
(FDA) and the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) enforce compliance
with tolerance limits.
Traditionally, tolerances are established for a specific pesticide
and commodity combination. However, under EPA's crop grouping
regulations (Sec. 180.41), a single tolerance may be established that
applies to a group of related commodities. For example, Leafy Vegetable
Crop Group 4-14 is proposed to include 62 commodities, with head
lettuce, leaf lettuce, spinach, and mustard greens as the
representative crops. Crop group tolerances may be established based on
residue data from designated representative commodities within the
group. Representative commodities are selected based on EPA's
determination that they are likely to bear the maximum level of residue
that could occur on any crop within the group. Once a crop group
tolerance is established, the tolerance level applies to all
commodities within the group.
This proposed rule is the fourth in a series of planned crop group
amendments expected to be completed over the next several years.
Specific information regarding the history of the crop group
regulations, the previous amendments to the regulations and the process
for amending crop groups can be found in the Federal Register of May
23, 2007 (Ref. 1). Specific information regarding how the Agency
implements crop group amendments can be found in Sec. 180.40(j).
This proposal is based upon five petitions developed by the
International Crop Grouping Consulting Committee (ICGCC) workgroup and
submitted to EPA by a nation-wide cooperative project, IR-4. These
petitions and the supporting monographs are included in the docket for
this action, under docket ID number EPA-HQ-OPP-2006-0766 at https://regulations.gov. EPA expects that a series of additional petitions
seeking amendments and changes to the crop grouping regulations (Sec.
180.41) will originate from the ICGCC workgroup over the next several
years.
EPA believes that this proposal is a burden-reducing regulation. It
will provide for greater sharing of data by permitting the results from
a magnitude of residue field trial studies in one crop to be applied to
other, similar crops. The primary beneficiaries are minor crop
producers and consumers. Minor crop producers will benefit because
lower registration costs will encourage more products to be registered
on minor crops, providing additional tools for pest control. Consumers
are expected to benefit by having more affordable and abundant food
products available. Secondary beneficiaries include pesticide
registrants, as expanded markets for pesticide products will lead to
increased sales.
EPA believes that data from representative crops will not
underestimate the public exposure to pesticide residues through the
consumption of treated crops. IR-4, which is publicly funded, will also
more efficiently use resources as a result of this rule. Revisions to
the crop grouping scheme will result in no appreciable costs or
negative impacts to consumers, minor crop producers, pesticide
registrants, the environment, or human health.
B. International Considerations
1. North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) partner involvement
in proposal. EPA's Office of Pesticide Programs' Chemistry Science
Advisory Council (ChemSAC), an internal Agency peer review committee,
provided a detailed analysis for each proposed crop group to Canada's
Pest Management Regulatory Agency (PMRA), IR-4, and the government of
Mexico for their review and comment, and invited these parties to
participate in the ChemSAC meeting to finalize the recommendations for
each petition.
PMRA has indicated that it will, in parallel with the United States
effort and under the authority of Canada's Pest Control Products (PCP)
Act (2002), establish equivalent crop groups. Additionally, once the
new crop groups become effective in the United States, Mexico will have
them as a reference for the establishment of maximum residue limits in
Mexico.
2. Relationship of proposal to Codex activities. The United States
and Canadian Delegations to the Codex Committee on Pesticide Residues
(CCPR) have an ongoing effort to harmonize the NAFTA crop groups and
representative commodities with those being developed by Codex, an
international commission created to develop international food
standards, guidelines and related texts, as part of their revision of
the Codex Classification of Foods and Feeds. Canada and the United
States are working closely with the Chairs of the Codex group for this
project (The Netherlands and the United States) to coordinate the U.S.
crop group amendments with the efforts to amend the Codex crop groups.
The goals of coordinating these NAFTA activities with Codex activities
are to minimize differences within and among the Unites States and
Codex groups and to develop representative commodities for each group
that will be acceptable on an international basis. These efforts could
lead to the increased harmonization of tolerances and MRL
recommendations.
C. Scheme for Organization of Revised and Pre-Existing Crop Groups
EPA has amended the generic crop group regulations to include an
explicit scheme for how revised crop groups will be organized in the
regulations.
In brief, the regulations now specify that when a crop group is
amended in a manner that expands or contracts its coverage of
commodities, EPA will retain the pre-existing crop group in Sec.
180.41; insert the new, related crop group immediately after the pre-
existing crop group in the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR); and title
the new, related crop group in a way that clearly differentiates it
from the pre-existing crop group. The new, related crop group will
retain roughly the same name and number as the pre-existing group
except that the number will be followed by a hyphen and the final two
digits of the year it is established. For example, EPA is proposing to
revise Crop Group 5:
[[Page 68155]]
Brassica Leafy Vegetables. The revised group is proposed be titled Crop
Group 5-14: Head and Stem Brassica Vegetable. Although EPA will
initially retain pre-existing crop groups that have been superseded by
new crop groups, EPA will not establish new tolerances under the pre-
existing groups. Further, EPA plans to eventually convert tolerances
for any pre-existing crop groups to tolerances with the coverage of the
new crop group. This conversion will be effected both through the
registration review process and in the course of establishing new
tolerances for a pesticide. To this end, EPA requests that petitioners
for tolerances address this issue in their petitions.
III. Specific Proposed Revisions
This unit explains the proposed amendments to the crop group
regulations.
A. Crop Group 4-14: Leafy Vegetable Group
EPA is proposing to expand Leafy Vegetable, except Brassica Crop
Group 4 to both add and remove commodities and to restructure the
group. EPA proposes to name the new crop group the Leafy Vegetable Crop
Group 4-14.
1. Add new commodities. In creating new Crop Group 4-14, EPA
proposes to include most, but not all, commodities currently in Crop
Group 4 and to add the following 41 commodities currently not in Crop
Group 4: Aster, Indian, Kalimeris indica (L.) Sch. Bip.; Blackjack,
Bidens pilosa L.; broccoli raab, Brassica ruvo L.H. Bailey; broccoli,
Chinese, Brassica oleracea var. alboglabra (L.H. Bailey) Musil;
cabbage, abyssinian, Brassica carinata A. Braun; cabbage, seakale,
Brassica oleracea L. var. costata DC.; Cat's whiskers, Cleome gynandra
L.; Cham-chwi, Doellingeria scabra (Thunb.) Nees; Cham-na-mul,
Pimpinella calycina Maxim; Chinese cabbage, bok choy, Brassica rapa
subsp. chinensis (L.) Hanelt; Chipilin, Crotalaria longirostrata Hook &
Arn; cilantro, fresh leaves, Coriandrum sativum L.; collards, Brassica
oleracea var. Viridis L.; Cosmos, Cosmos caudatus Kunth; Dang-gwi,
Angelica gigas; dillweed, Anethum graveolens L.; Dol-nam-mul, Sedum
sarmentosum Bunge; Ebolo, Crassocephalum crepidioides (Benth.) S.
Moore; escarole, Cichorium endive L. subsp. endiva; Fameflower, Talinum
fruticosum (L.) Juss.; Feather cockscomb, Glinus oppositifolius (L.)
Aug. DC.; Good King Henry, Chenopodium bonus-henricus L.; Hanover
salad, Brassica napus var. Pabularia (DC.) Rchb.; Huauzontle,
Chenopodium berlandieri Moq.; jute, leaves, Corchorus spp.; kale,
Brassica oleracea var. Sabellica L;lettuce, bitter, Launaea cornuta
(Hochst. ex Oliv. & Hiern) C. Jeffrey; Maca, Lepidium meyenii Walp.;
Mizuna, Brassica rapa L. subsp. nipposinica (L. H. Bailey) Hanelt;
mustard greens, Brassica juncea subsp., including Brassica juncea (L.)
Czern. subsp. integrifolia (H. West) Thell., Brassica juncea (L.)
Czern. var. tsatsai (T. L. Mao) Gladis; primrose, English, Primula
vulgaris Huds.; radish, leaves, Raphanus sativus L. var sativus,
including Raphanus sativus L. var. mougri H. W. J. Helm and Raphanus
sativus L. var. oleiformis Pers; rape greens, Brassica napus L. var.
napus, including Brassica rapa subsp. trilocularis (Roxb.) Hanelt,
Brassica rapa subsp. dichotoma (Roxb.) Hanelt, and Brassica rapa subsp.
oleifera Met; Rocket, wild, Diplotaxis tenuifolia (L.) DC.; Shepherd's
purse, Capsella bursa-pastoris (L.) Medik; spinach, malabar, Basella
alba L.; spinach, tanier, Xanthosoma brasiliense (Desf.) Engl.; turnip
greens, Brassica rapa L. subsp. Rapa; Violet, Chinese, Asystasia
gangetica (L.) T. Anderson; and watercress, Nasturtium officinale W. T.
Aiton. Also included are cultivars, varieties, and hybrids of these
commodities.
Included in this list of commodities are seven brassica leafy
vegetables currently in Crop Group 5: Broccoli raab, Chinese cabbage
(bok choy), collards, kale, mizuna, mustard greens, and rape greens.
These seven commodities represent all current members of Crop subgroup
5B, with the exception of mustard spinach. Mustard spinach has not been
proposed for inclusion in Crop Group 4-14 because it is one of several
common names for mustard greens, which is already proposed for
inclusion in Crop Group 4-14. EPA is proposing a corresponding change
to Crop Group 5, which will be incorporated in the proposed new Crop
Group 5-14.
The 41 new commodities proposed for Crop Group 4-14 were chosen
based on similarities between the existing and additional commodities
in plant morphology; cultural practices, including that all commodities
are row crops; pest problems; edible food portions and lack of animal
feed portions; potential exposures to residues resulting from
application of specific pesticides; geographical locations; processing;
and established tolerances. In particular, the brassica leafy
vegetables are proposed to be moved from Crop Group 5 to revised Crop
Group 4-14 because leafy brassica leafy vegetables are similar in
growth pattern, leaf exposure and pesticide residues to the other leafy
vegetables in Crop Group 4-14, and dissimilar from the crops in Crop
Group 5, which are grown and consumed for their stem or bulb. Moreover,
the leaf morphology of the moved crops leads to residues that can be
higher than in broccoli and cabbage, Crop Group 5's representative
commodities.
Cardoon, celery, Chinese celery, celtuce, Florence fennel, and
rhubarb, which are currently included in Crop Group 4, are not proposed
for Crop Group 4-14 but rather new Crop Group 22 Stalk, Stem and Leaf
Petiole. The plant morphology of these six crops is more similar to
crops grown and consumed for their stalk, stem, and leaf petiole,
rather than for their leaves alone as are the crops in Crop Group 4-14.
Edible-leaved chrysanthemum, which is also in Crop Group 4, has not
been proposed for inclusion in Crop Group 4-14 because it is another
common name for chrysanthemum garland, which is already included in
Crop Group 4 and is proposed for inclusion in Crop Group 4-14.
2. Representative commodities for new crop group. The
representative commodities in Crop Group 4 are celery, head lettuce,
leaf lettuce, and spinach. EPA proposes the following representative
commodities for Crop Group 4-14: Head lettuce, leaf lettuce, spinach,
and mustard greens. Generally, the selection of representative
commodities is based on a representative commodity that is most likely
to: Contain the highest residues (whether raw or processed); be major
in terms of production and consumption; and be similar in morphology,
growth habit, pest problems and edible portion, and subject to similar
processing as the related commodities within a group or subgroup. The
representative commodities proposed for Crop Group 4-14 represent over
93% of the total leafy vegetable harvested acres reported by USDA's
Census of Agriculture and are the highest consumed commodities on a per
capita basis in the group; therefore, these commodities were chosen to
represent Crop Group 4-14. Inclusion of brassica leafy vegetables in a
separate subgroup is desirable because of potentially different actions
of herbicides on leafy Brassica vegetables, verses other leafy, non-
brassica crops.
3. New subgroups. The existing Crop Group 4 subgroups are Leafy
greens, subgroup 4A, and Leaf petioles, subgroup 4B. In light of the
significant differences between existing Crop Group 4 and proposed Crop
Group 4-14, EPA is proposing the following subgroups for Crop Group 4-
14:
i. Leafy greens subgroup 4-14A. (Representative commodities-Head
[[Page 68156]]
lettuce, Leaf lettuce, and Spinach). EPA proposes that subgroup 4-14A
include the following 27 commodities in addition to the 20 commodities
that currently are included in subgroup 4A: Amaranth, Chinese;
Amaranth, leafy; Aster, Indian; Blackjack; Cat's whiskers; Cham-chwi;
Cham-na-mul; Chipilin; cilantro, fresh leaves; Cosmos; Dang-gwi;
dillweed; Dol-nam-mul; Ebolo; escarole; Fameflower; Feather cockscomb;
Good King Henry; Huauzontle; jute, leaves; lettuce, bitter; plantain,
buckthorn; Primrose, English; spinach, malabar; spinach, tanier; Swiss
chard; and Violet, Chinese. Also included are cultivars, varieties, and
hybrids of these commodities.
Swiss chard is proposed for inclusion in subgroup 4-14A because
both the leaves and petioles are consumed and the leaves constitute a
major portion of the plant, whereas that is not the case for the
brassica leafy greens in subgroup 4-14B. Arugula, upland cress, and
garden cress are currently members of Crop subgroup 4A; however, these
commodities are members of the Brassicaceae family and are therefore
proposed for inclusion in subgroup 4-14B, because of their similarities
to the other commodities proposed in that subgroup.
Leafy greens subgroup 4-14A is proposed to have head lettuce, leaf
lettuce, and spinach as the representative commodities, which are the
same as the current Leafy Greens subgroup 4A.
ii. Brassica leafy greens subgroup 4-14B. (Representative
commodity-Mustard greens). As previously discussed, EPA is proposing to
add eight brassica leafy vegetables currently in Crop Group 5 (those
included in Crop subgroup 5B, except mustard spinach) to Crop Group 4-
14. EPA is also proposing to create a subgroup in new Crop Group 4-14
for these commodities and 12 other similar commodities. This new
subgroup 4-14B is proposed to include the following 20 commodities:
Arugula; broccoli raab; broccoli, Chinese; cabbage, abyssinian;
cabbage, seakale; Chinese cabbage, bok choy; collards; cress, garden;
cress, upland; Hanover salad; kale; Maca; Mizuna; mustard greens;
radish, leaves; rape greens; Rocket, wild; Shepherd's purse; turnip
greens; and watercress. Also included are cultivars, varieties, and
hybrids of these commodities.
Arugula, upland cress, and garden cress are proposed for inclusion
in new subgroup 4-14B because these commodities are members of the
Brassicaceae family. Inclusion of brassica leafy vegetables in a
separate subgroup is desirable because of potentially different actions
of herbicides on leafy brassica vegetables, versus other leafy (non-
brassica) crops.
EPA proposes these additional commodities in Crop subgroups 4-14A
and 4-14B because of the similarities in cultural practices, potential
residue exposures, dietary consumption importance, and the lack of
animal feed items. A comparison of existing tolerances supports the
proposed subgroups and representative commodities for Crop Group 4-14.
EPA is not proposing to carry Leaf petiole subgroup 4B over to Crop
Group 4-14 because, as previously discussed, most of the crops in that
group are being proposed for inclusion in the new proposed Stalk, Stem,
and Leaf Petiole Crop Group 22.
B. Crop Group 5-14: Head and Stem Brassica Vegetable Group
EPA is proposing to amend Brassica (Cole) Leafy Vegetables Crop
Group 5, to remove commodities and to restructure the group. EPA
proposes to name the new crop group the Brassica Head and Stem
Vegetable Crop Group 5-14.
1. Commodities not included. EPA proposes to not include eight
commodities currently in Crop Group 5 (Chinese broccoli (gai lon);
broccoli raab (rapini); cabbage, Chinese (bok choy); collards; kale;
mizuna; mustard greens; and rape greens) in Crop Group 5-14 because, as
previously discussed, the commodities are being included in Crop Group
4-14. EPA also proposes to not include one other commodity currently in
Crop Group 5 (kohlrabi) in Crop Group 5-14. Kohlrabi is proposed to be
included in the proposed new Stalk, Stem, and Leaf Petiole Crop Group
22, as the kohlrabi's exposed, enlarged, and bulb-like stem can have
higher pesticide residues than the proposed representative commodities
(broccoli or cabbage) for new Crop Group 5-14.
Two other commodity terms are not being carried over from Crop
Group 5 to new Crop Group 5-14. First, Chinese mustard cabbage is not a
distinct crop, but rather a common name that refers to various leafy
non-heading Brassica greens. The brassica leafy greens have been
proposed for new Crop Group 4-14. The term Chinese mustard cabbage is
also not proposed for new Crop Group 5-14 because of its non-
distinctive nature. Second, cavalo broccoli is the same species as
cauliflower, and the name was used to refer to various types of
broccoli or cauliflower in the past. It is not proposed for inclusion
in new Crop Group 5-14 because of redundancy.
Thus, EPA is proposing that new Crop Group 5-14 contain the
following commodities: Broccoli, Brassica oleracea L. var. italica
Plenck; brussels sprouts, Brassica oleracea L. var. gemmifera (DC.)
Zenker; cabbage, Brassica oleracea L. var. capitata L.; cabbage,
Chinese, napa, Brassica rapa L. subsp. pekinensis (Lour.) Hanelt; and
cauliflower, Brassica oleracea L. var. capitata L. Also included are
cultivars, varieties, and hybrids of these commodities.
The commodities proposed for inclusion in new Crop Group 5-14 were
chosen based on similarities in plant morphology; cultural practices,
including that all are row crops; pest problems; edible food and animal
feed portions; residue levels; geographical locations; processing; and
established tolerances on these commodities. The commodities chosen for
this crop group also further the goal of international harmonization of
tolerances and other MRLs, through coordinating the U.S. crop group
amendments with efforts to amend the Codex crop groups.
2. Representative commodities. The representative commodities in
Crop Group 5 are broccoli or cauliflower, cabbage, and mustard greens.
EPA proposes the following representative commodities for new Crop
Group 5-14: Broccoli or cauliflower, and cabbage. These commodities are
the same representative commodities as in Crop Group 5, except for
mustard greens. EPA proposes to move those commodities currently
represented by mustard greens to new Crop Group 4-14; therefore,
mustard greens is not proposed as a representative commodity for new
Crop Group 5-14. All other representative commodities are the same as
those currently representing Crop Group 5, and are proposed to
represent new Crop Group 5-14 group members because the proposed
representative commodities are the most likely to: Contain the highest
residues (whether raw or processed); be major in terms of production
and consumption; and be similar in morphology, growth habit, pest
problems and edible portion, and subject to similar processing as the
related commodities within a group or subgroup. These representative
commodities account for >99% of the harvested acres for the members of
this amended crop group, and are the most widely grown Brassica head
and stem commodities in the United States, with the largest acreages
and geographical distribution. The representative commodities are based
on similarities in its vegetable structures, exposure to residues, and
cultural practices and geographical locations, as well as their high
production (both acres and yield) and consumption. A comparison of
[[Page 68157]]
established tolerances on Crop subgroup 5A also supports that residue
levels will be similar between members of the crop group.
3. No subgroups in new Crop Group 5-14. EPA proposes to not include
subgroups in new Crop Group 5-14 given the small number of commodities.
C. Crop Group 22: Stalk, Stem, and Leaf Petiole Group
EPA is proposing to establish a new crop group, entitled Stalk,
Stem, and Leaf Petiole Crop Group 22.
1. Commodities. EPA proposes to include the following 19
commodities in Crop Group 22: Agave, Agave spp.; aloe vera, Aloe vera
(L.) Burm. f.; asparagus, Asparagus officinalis L; bamboo shoots,
Arundinaria spp.; Bambusa spp., Chimonobambusa spp.; Dendrocalamus
spp., Fargesia spp.; Gigantochloa spp., Nastus elatus; Phyllostachys
spp.; Thyrsostachys spp.; cardoon, Cynara cardunculus L.; celery, Apium
graveolens var. dulce (Mill.) Pers.; celery, Chinese, Apium graveolens
L. var. secalinum (Alef.) Mansf.; Celtuce, Lactuca sativa var.
angustana L.H. Bailey; fennel, Florence, fresh leaves and stalk,
Foeniculum vulgare Mill. subsp. vulgare var. azoricum (Mill.) Thell.;
fern, edible, fiddlehead; Fuki, Petasites japonicus (Siebold & Zucc.)
Maxim.; kale, sea, Crambe maritima L.; Kohlrabi, Brassica oleracea
L.var gongylodes L.; palm hearts, various species; Prickly pear, pads,
Opuntia ficus-indica (L.) Mill., Opuntia spp.; Prickly pear, Texas,
pads, Opuntia engelmannii Salm-Dyck ex Engelm. var. lindheimeri
(Engelm.) B. D. Parfitt & Pinkav; rhubarb, Rheum x hybridum Murray;
Udo, Aralia cordata Thunb.; and Zuiki, Colocasia gigantea (Blume) Hook.
f. Also included are cultivars, varieties, and hybrids of these
commodities.
The 19 members of the new proposed Stalk, Stem and Leaf Petiole
Crop Group 22 are proposed based on similarities of the morphology of
the stalk, stem, and leaf petiole vegetables; the cultural practices;
the edible food and livestock feed portions; the plant exposure to
pesticide residue levels; the geographical locations; the manner of
processing; the food uses; and the established tolerances for the
commodities. Additionally, the proposal of a separate new Stalk, Stem
and Leaf Petioles Crop Group 22 will be similar to the Codex stalk and
stem group.
As previously discussed, the new Crop Group 22 is proposed to
include certain commodities currently in Crop Group 4, Leafy Vegetable,
except Brassica (those in subgroup 4B, with the exception of Swiss
chard). Additionally, kohlrabi, which is currently a member of Crop
Group 5, Brassica (Cole) Leafy Vegetables Crop is proposed to be
included in Crop Group 22. The reasons for these two proposed changes
are discussed in Units III A.2. and III B.2.
2. Representative commodities. EPA proposes two representative
commodities for new Stalk, Stem, and Leaf Petiole Crop Group 22:
Asparagus and Celery.
The proposed representative commodities, asparagus and celery, were
chosen because they account for >98% of the harvested acres and
production for the proposed members of this group. They are the two
most widely grown stalk, stem, and leaf petiole crops in the United
States, with both the largest acreages and geographical distribution.
The selection of representative commodities is based on a
representative commodity that is most likely to: Contain the highest
residues (whether raw or processed); be major in terms of production
and consumption; and be similar in morphology, growth habit, pest
problems and edible portion, and subject to similar processing as the
related commodities within a group or subgroup.
3. Crop subgroups. EPA proposes new Stalk, Stem, and Leaf Petiole
Crop Group 22 to have two crop subgroups:
i. Stalk and stem vegetable subgroup 22A. (Representative
commodity--Asparagus). Twelve commodities are proposed for this
subgroup: Agave; aloe vera; asparagus; bamboo shoots; Celtuce; fennel,
Florence, fresh leaves and stalk; fern, edible; kale, sea; Kohlrabi;
palm hearts; Prickly pear, pads; and Prickly pear, Texas, pads. Also
included are cultivars, varieties, and hybrids of these commodities.
ii. Leaf petiole vegetable subgroup 22B. (Representative
commodity--Celery). Seven commodities are proposed for subgroup:
Cardoon; celery; celery, Chinese; Fuki; rhubarb; Udo; and Zuiki. Also
included are cultivars, varieties, and hybrids of these commodities.
Comparisons of established tolerances on the commodities proposed
for new Stalk and stem vegetable subgroup 22A and new Leaf petiole
vegetable subgroup 22B support that residue levels will be similar
between members of the crop group. Comparison of tolerances for the
individual members of each subgroup also supports that these two
representative commodities will support the crop subgroups.
4. Commodity definitions. In conjunction with new Crop Group 22,
EPA proposes two new commodity definitions for fern, edible and palm
hearts to be added to Sec. 180.1(g), as specified in the proposed
regulatory text. These commodity definitions are being proposed in
order to easily distinguish and define the various varieties of edible
ferns and palm hearts, respectively.
D. Crop Group 23: Tropical and Subtropical Fruit, Edible Peel Group
EPA is proposing to establish a new crop group, entitled Tropical
and Subtropical Fruit, Edible Peel, Crop Group 23.
1. Commodities. EPA proposes to include the following 108
commodities in new Group 23: A[ccedil]a[iacute], Euterpe oleracea
Mart.; Acerola, Malpighia emarginata DC.; African plum, Vitex doniana
Sweet; Agritos, Berberis trifoliolata Moric.; Almondette, Buchanania
lanzan Spreng.; Ambarella, Spondias dulcis Sol. ex Parkinson; Apak
palm, Brahea dulcis (Kunth) Mart.; Appleberry, Billardiera scandens
Sm.; Araz[aacute], Eugenia stipitata McVaugh; Arbutus berry, Arbutus
unedo L.; Babaco, Vasconcellea x heilbornii (V. M. Badillo) V. M.
Badillo; Bacaba palm, Oenocarpus bacaba Mart.; Bacaba-de-leque,
Oenocarpus distichus Mart.; Bayberry, Red, Morella rubra Lour.; Bignay,
Antidesma bunius (L.) Spreng.; Bilimbi, Averrhoa bilimbi L.;
Boroj[oacute], Borojoa patinoi Cuatrec.; Breadnut, Brosimum alicastrum
Sw.; Cabeluda, Plinia glomerata (O. Berg) Amshoff; Cajou, fruit,
Anacardium giganteum Hance ex Engl.; Cambuc[aacute], Marlierea edulis
Nied.; Carandas-plum, Carissa edulis Vahl; Carob, Ceratonia siliqua L.;
Cashew apple, Anacardium occidentale L.; Ceylon iron wood, Manilkara
hexandra (Roxb.) Dubard; Ceylon olive, Elaeocarpus serratus L.; Cherry-
of-the-Rio-Grande, Eugenia aggregata (Vell.) Kiaersk.; Chinese olive,
black, Canarium tramdenum C. D. Dai & Yakovlev; Chinese olive, white,
Canarium album (Lour.) Raeusch.; Chirauli-nut, Buchanania latifolia
Roxb.; Ciruela verde, Bunchosia armeniaca (Cav.) DC.; Cocoplum,
Chrysobalanus icaco L.; date, Phoenix dactylifera L.; Davidson's plum,
Davidsonia pruriens F. Muell.; Desert-date, Balanites aegyptiacus (L.)
Delile; Doum palm coconut, Hyphaene thebaica (L.) Mart.; False
sandalwood, Ximenia americana L.; Feijoa, Acca sellowiana (O. Berg)
Burret; fig, Ficus carica L.; Fragrant manjack, Cordia dichotoma G.
Forst.; Gooseberry, abyssinian, Dovyalis abyssinica (A. Rich.) Warb.;
Gooseberry, Ceylon, Dovyalis hebecarpa (Gardner) Warb.; Gooseberry,
Indian, Phyllanthus emblica L.; Gooseberry, otaheite, Phyllanthus
acidus (L.) Skeels; Governor's plum, Flacourtia indica
[[Page 68158]]
(Burm. F.) Merr.; Grumichama, Eugenia brasiliensis Lam; Guabiroba,
Campomanesia xanthocarpa O. Berg; Guava, Psidium guajava L.; Guava
berry, Myrciaria floribunda (H. West ex Willd.) O. Berg; Guava,
Brazilian, Psidium guineense Sw.; Guava, cattley, Psidium cattleianum
Sabine; Guava, Costa Rican, Psidium friedrichsthalianum (O. Berg)
Nied.; Guava, para, Psidium acutangulum DC.; Guava, purple strawberry,
Psidium cattleianum Sabine var. cattleianum; Guava, strawberry, Psidium
cattleianum Sabine var. littorale (Raddi) Fosberg; Guava, yellow
strawberry, Psidium cattleianum Sabine var. cattleianum forma lucidum
O. Deg.; Guayabillo, Psidium sartorianum (O. Berg) Nied.; Illawarra
plum, Podocarpus elatus R. Br. Ex Endl.; Imb[eacute], Garcinia
livingstonei T. Anderson; Imbu, Spondias tuberosa Arruda ex Kost.;
Indian-plum, Flacourtia jangomas (Lour.) basionym); Jaboticaba,
Myrciaria cauliflora (Mart.) O. Berg; Jamaica-cherry, Muntingia
calabura L.; Jambolan, Syzygium cumini (L.) Skeels; Jelly palm, Butia
capitata (Mart.) Becc.; Jujube, Indian, Ziziphus mauritiana Lam.;
Kaffir-plum, Harpephyllum caffrum Bernh. Ex C. Krauss; Kakadu plum,
Terminalia latipes Benth. subsp. psilocarpa Pedley; Kapundung,
Baccaurea racemosa (Reinw.) Mull. Arg.; Karanda, Carissa carandas L.;
Kwai muk, Artocarpus hypargyreus Hance ex Benth.; Lemon aspen,
Acronychia acidula F. Muell; Mangaba, Hancornia speciosa Gomes; Marian
plum, Bouea macrophylla Griff.; Mombin, malayan, Spondias pinnata (J.
Koenig ex L. f.) Kurz; Mombin, purple, Spondias purpurea L.; Mombin,
yellow, Spondias mombin L.; Monkeyfruit, Artocarpus lacucha Buch.-Ham.;
Monos plum, Pseudanamomis umbellulifera (Kunth) Kausel; Mountain
cherry, Bunchosia cornifolia Kunth; Nance, Byrsonima crassifolia (L.)
Kunth; Natal plum, Carissa macrocarpa (Eckl.) A. DC; Noni, Morinda
citrifolia L.; Olive, Olea europaea L. subsp. europaea; papaya,
mountain, Vasconcellea pubescens A. DC.; Patau[aacute], Oenocarpus
bataua Mart.; Peach palm, fruit, Bactris gasipaes Kunth var. gasipaes;
persimmon, black, Diospyros texana Scheele; persimmon, Japanese,
Diospyros kaki Thunb.; Pitomba, Eugenia luschnathiana Klotzsch ex O.
Berg; Plum-of-Martinique, Flacourtia inermis Roxb.; Pomerac, Syzygium
malaccense (L.) Merr. & L.M. Perry; Rambai, Baccaurea motleyana (Mull.
Arg.) Mull. Arg.; Rose apple, Syzygium jambos (L.) Alston; Rukam,
Flacourtia rukam Zoll. & Moritizi; Rumberry, Myrciaria dubia (Kunth)
McVaugh, (Myrtaceae); Sea grape, Coccoloba uvifera (L.) L.; Sentul,
Sandoricum koetjape (Burm. F.) Merr.; Sete-capotes, Campomanesia
guazumifolia (Cambess.) O. Berg; Silver aspen, Acronychia wilcoxian,
(F. Muell.) T.G. Hartley; Starfruit, Averrhoa carambola L; Surinam
cherry, Eugenia uniflora L.; Tamarind, Tamarindus indica L.; Uvalha,
Eugenia pyriformis Cambess; Water apple, Syzygium aqueum (Burm. F.)
Alston; Water pear, Syzygium guineense (Willd.) DC.; Water berry,
Syzygium cordatum Hochst. Ex C. Krauss; and Wax jambu, Syzygium
samarangense (Blume) Merr. & L.M. Perry. Also included are cultivars,
varieties, and hybrids of these commodities.
The commodities proposed for new Crop Group 23 are based on
similarities in fruit size; peel (edible for all commodities); cultural
practices; geographical distribution; lack of animal feed items;
tolerance levels of established tolerances; and pest problems. The
commodities chosen also further the goal of international harmonization
of tolerances and MRLs, through coordinating the U.S. crop group
amendments with efforts to amend the Codex crop groups.
2. Representative commodities. EPA proposes four representative
commodities for Tropical and Subtropical Fruit, Edible Peel, Crop Group
23: Olive, Fig, Guava, and Date.
The proposed representative commodities were chosen because they
account for >95% of the harvested U.S. acres for the members of the
proposed Crop Group 23. The selection of representative commodities is
based on a representative commodity that is most likely to: Contain the
highest residues (whether raw or processed); be major in terms of
production and consumption; and be similar in morphology, growth habit,
pest problems and edible portion, and subject to similar processing as
the related commodities within a group or subgroup. Comparison of the
tolerances established for the representative commodities support that
residue levels will adequately cover the wide number of commodities.
3. Crop subgroups. EPA proposes to create three crop subgroups for
Tropical and Subtropical Fruit, Edible Peel Crop Group 23:
i. Small fruit, edible peel subgroup 23A. (Representative
commodity--Olive). EPA is proposing 56 commodities for new subgroup
23A: Acerola; African plum; Agritos; Almondette; Appleberry; Arbutus
berry; Bayberry, red; Bignay; Breadnut; Cabeluda; Carandas-plum; Ceylon
iron wood; Ceylon olive; Cherry-of-the-Rio-Grande; Chinese olive,
black; Chinese olive, white; Chirauli-nut; Cocoplum; Desert-date; False
sandalwood; Fragant manjack; gooseberry, abyssinian; gooseberry,
Ceylon; gooseberry, otaheite; Governor's plum; Grumichama; Guabiroba;
guava berry; guava, Brazilian; guava, Costa Rican; Guayabillo;
Illawarra plum; Indian-plum; Jamaica-cherry; Jambolan; Kaffir-plum;
Kakadu plum; Kapundung; Karnada; Lemon aspen; Mombin, yellow; Monos
plum; Mountain cherry; olive; persimmon, black; Pitomba; Plum-of-
Martinique; Rukam; Rumberry; Sea grape; Sete-capotes; Silver aspen;
Water apple; Water pear; Water berry; and Wax jambu. Also included are
cultivars, varieties and hybrids of these commodities.
ii. Medium to large fruit, edible peel subgroup 23B.
(Representative commodities--Fig and Guava). EPA is proposing 43
commodities for new subgroup 23B: Ambarella; Araz[aacute]; Babaco;
Bilimbi; Boroj[oacute]; Cajou, fruit; Cambuc[aacute]; Carob; Cashew
apple; Ciruela verde; Davidson's plum; Feijoa; Fig; gooseberry, Indian;
guava; guava, cattley; guava, para; guava, purple strawberry; guava,
strawberry; guava, yellow strawberry; Imb[eacute]; Imbu; Jaboticaba;
Jujube, Indian; Kwai muk; Mangaba; Marian plum; Mombin, malayan;
Mombin, purple; Monkeyfruit; Nance; Natal plum; Noni; papaya, mountain;
persimmon, Japanese; Pomerac; Rambai; Rose apple; Sentul; starfruit;
Surinam cherry; Tamarind; and Uvalha. Also included are cultivars,
varieties and hybrids of these commodities.
iii. Palm fruit, edible peel subgroup 23C. (Representative
commodity--Date). EPA is proposing nine commodities for new subgroup
23C: A[ccedil]a[iacute]; Apak palm; Bacaba palm; Bacaba-de-leque; date;
Doum palm coconut; Jelly palm; Patau[aacute]; and Peach palm, fruit.
Also included are cultivars, varieties and hybrids of these
commodities.
The creation of these subgroups and the choice of representative
commodity designations are based on sorting commodities into fruit
size, small versus medium to large fruit, based on the surface area to
mass (volume) ratio, with the addition of a palm subgroup in order to
determine the proposed subgrouping scheme. Small fruit were
distinguished from medium and large fruit depending on whether the
fruit's surface area to mass (volume) ratio was greater or less than
1.5:1. Palm commodities are proposed to be classified in a separate
subgroup based on the botanical similarity of trees in the family
Arecaceae (alt. Palmae). Palm fruit is produced in clusters that are
partially exposed to the elements, and fruit is
[[Page 68159]]
located considerably higher on palm trees than other tropical and
subtropical fruits; therefore, similar use patterns of pesticide
applications are expected to occur and similar residue patterns can be
expected within the palm group. EPA has determined that residue data on
the designated representative crops will provide adequate information
on residue levels in crops and subgroups.
E. Crop Group 24: Tropical and Subtropical Fruit, Inedible Peel Group
EPA is proposing to establish a new crop group entitled Tropical
and Subtropical Fruit, Inedible Peel, Crop Group 24:
1. Commodities. EPA proposes to include the following 104
commodities in new Crop Group 24: Abiu, Pouteria caimito (Ruiz & Pav.)
Radlk; Aisen, Boscia senegalensis (Pers.) Lam.; Akee apple, Blighia
sapida K.D. Koenig; Atemoya, Annona cherimola Mill. X A. squamosa L.;
avocado, Persea americana Mill.; avocado, Guatemalan, Persea americana
Mill. var. guatemalensis; avocado, Mexican, Persea americana Mill. var.
drymifolia (Schltdl. & Cham.) S. F. Blak; avocado, West Indian, Persea
americana var. americana; Bacury, Platonia insignis Mart.; Bael fruit,
Aegle marmelos (L.) Corr[ecirc]a; banana, Musa spp. and hybrids;
banana, dwarf, Musa hybrids; Musa acuminata Colla; Binjai, Mangifera
caesia Jack; Biriba, Annona mucosa Jacq.; Breadfruit, Artocarpus
altilis (Parkinson) Fosberg; Burmese grape, Baccaurea ramiflora Lour.;
Canistel, Pouteria campechiana (Kunth) Baehni; Cat's-eyes, Dimocarpus
longan Lour. subsp. malesianus Leenh.; Champedak, Artocarpus integer
(Thunb.) Merr.; Cherimoya, Annona cherimola Mill.; Cupuac[uacute],
Theobroma grandiflorum (Willd. Ex Spreng.) K. Schum.; Custard apple,
Annona reticulata L.; Dragon fruit, Hylocereus undatus (Haw.) Britton &
Rose; Durian, Durio zibethinus L.; Elephant-apple, Limonia acidissima
L.; Etambe, Mangifera zeylanica (Blume) Hook. F.; Granadilla,
Passiflora ligularis Juss.; Granadilla, giant, Passiflora
quadrangularis L.; Ilama, Annona macroprophyllata Donn. Sm.;
Ing[aacute], Inga vera Willd. subsp. affinis (DC.) T. D. Penn.;
Jackfruit, Artocarpus heterophyllus Lam.; Jatob[aacute], Hymenaea
courbaril L.; Karuka, Pandanus julianettii Martelli; Kei apple,
Dovyalis caffra (Hook. F. & Harv.) Warb.; Langsat, Lansium domesticum
Corr[ecirc]a; Lanjut, Mangifera lagenifera Griff.; Longan, Dimocarpus
longan Lour.; Lucuma, Pouteria lucuma (Ruiz & Pav.) Kuntze; Lychee,
Litchi chinensis Sonn.; Mabolo, Diospyros blancoi A. DC.; Madras-thorn,
Pithecellobium dulce (Roxb.) Benth.; Mammy-apple, Mammea americana L.;
Manduro, Balanites maughamii Sprague; mango, Mangifera indica L.;
mango, horse, Mangifera foetida Lour.; mango, Saipan, Mangifera odorata
Griff.; Mangosteen, Garcinia mangostana L.; Marang, Artocarpus
odoratissimus Blanco; Marmaladebox, Genipa americana L.; Matisia,
Matisia cordata Humb. & Bonpl.; Mesquite, Prosopis juliflora (Sw.) DC.;
Mongongo, fruit, Schinziophyton rautanenii (Schinz) Radcl.-Sm; Monkey-
bread-tree, Adansonia digitata L.; Monstera, Monstera deliciosa Liebm.;
Nicobar-breadfruit, Pandanus leram Jones ex Fontana; Paho, Mangifera
altissima Blanco; Pandanus, Pandanus utilis Bory; papaya, Carica papaya
L.; passionflower, winged-stem, Passiflora alata Curtis; passionfruit,
Passiflora edulis Sims; passionfruit, banana, Passiflora tripartita
var. mollissima (Kunth) Holm-Niels. & P. Jorg.; passionfruit, purple,
Passiflora edulis Sims forma edulis; passionfruit, yellow, Passiflora
edulis Sims forma flavicarpa O. Deg.; Pawpaw, common, Asimina triloba
(L.) Dunal; Pawpaw, small-flower, Asimina parviflora (Michx.) Dunal;
Pelipisan, Mangifera casturi Kosterm.; Pequi, Caryocar brasiliense
Cambess; Pequia, Caryocar villosum (Aubl.) Pers.; persimmon, American,
Diospyros virginiana L.; pineapple, Ananas comosus (L.) Merr.;
Pitahaya, Hylocereus polyrhizus (F. A. C. Weber) Britton & Rose;
Pitaya, Hylocereus spp. including H. megalanthus, H. ocamponis and H.
polychizus; Pitaya amarilla, Hylocereus triangularis Britton & Rose;
Pitaya roja, Hylocereus ocamponis (Salm-Dyck) Britton & Rose; Pitaya,
yellow, Hylocereus megalanthus (K. Schum. ex Vaupel) Ralf Bauer;
plantain, Musa paradisiaca L.; pomegranate, Punica granatum L.; Poshte,
Annona liebmanniana Baill.; Prickly pear, fruit, Opuntia ficus-indica
(L.) Mill., Opuntia spp.; Prickly pear, Texas, fruit, Opuntia
engelmannii Salm-Dyck ex Engelm. var. lindheimeri (Engelm.) B. D.
Parfitt & Pinkava; Pulasan, Nephelium ramboutan-ake (Labill.) Leenh.;
Quandong, Santalum acuminatum (R. Br.) DC.; Rambutan, Nephelium
lappaceum L.; Saguaro, Carnegiea gigantea (Engelm.) Britton & Rose;
Sapodilla, Manilkara zapota (L.) P. Royen; Sapote, black, Diospyros
digyna Jacq.; Sapote, green, Pouteria viridis (Pittier) Cronquist;
Sapote, mamey, Pouteria sapota (Jacq.) H.E. Moore & Stearn; Sapote,
white, Casimiroa edulis La Llave & Lex; Sataw, Parkia speciosa Hassk.;
Satinleaf, Chrysophyllum oliviforme L.; Screw-pine, Pandanus tectorius
Parkinson; Sierra Leone-tamarind, Dialium guineense Willd.; Soncoya,
Annona purpurea Moc. & Sess[eacute] ex Dunal; Soursop, Annona muricata
L.; Spanish lime, Melicoccus bijugatus Jacq.; Star apple, Chrysophyllum
cainito L.; Sugar apple, Annona squamosa L.; Sun Sapote, Licania
platypus (Hemsl.) Fritsch; Tamarind-of-the-Indies, Vangueria
madagascariensis J. F. Gmel.; Velvet Tamarind, Dialium indum L.; Wampi,
Clausena lansium (Lour.) Skeels; White star apple, Chrysophyllum
albidum G. Don; and Wild loquat, Uapaca kirkiana M[uuml]ll. Arg. Also
included are cultivars, varieties, and hybrids of these commodities.
2. Representative commodities. EPA proposes the following
commodities as representatives for new Tropical and Subtropical Fruit,
Inedible Peel, Crop Group 24: Atemoya or Sugar apple; avocado;
pomegranate or banana; Dragon fruit; Prickly pear, fruit; lychee;
passionfruit; and pineapple.
These representative commodities will account for approximately 99%
of the harvested U.S. acres for the members of the new crop group. The
selection of representative commodities is based on a representative
commodity that is most likely to: Contain the highest residues (whether
raw or processed); be major in terms of production and consumption; and
be similar in morphology, growth habit, pest problems and edible
portion, and subject to similar processing as the related commodities
within a group or subgroup. Comparison of the tolerances established
for the representative commodities support that residue levels will
adequately cover the wide number of commodities.
3. Crop subgroups. EPA proposes five crop subgroups for new
Tropical and Subtropical Fruit, Inedible Peel, Crop Group 24:
i. Small fruit, inedible peel subgroup 24A. (Representative
commodity--Lychee). EPA is proposing 18 commodities in new subgroup
24A: Aisen; Bael fruit; Burmese grape; Cat's eyes; Ing[aacute]; lychee;
Madras-thorn; Manduro; Matisia; Mesquite; Mongongo, fruit; Pawpaw,
small-flower; Satinleaf; Sierra Leone-tamarind; Spanish lime; Velvet
tamarind; Wampi; and White star apple. Also included are cultivars,
varieties and hybrids of these commodities.
ii. Medium to large fruit, smooth, inedible peel subgroup 24B.
(Representative commodities--Avocado, plus Pomegranate or Banana). EPA
is proposing 42 commodities for new subgroup 24B: Abiu; Akee apple;
avocado; avocado, Guatemalan; avocado, Mexican; avocado, West
[[Page 68160]]
Indian; Bacury; banana; banana, dwarf; Binjai; Canistel;
Cupuac[uacute]; Etambe; Jatob[aacute]; Kei apple; Langstat; Lanjut;
Lucuma; Mabolo; mango; mango, horse; mango, Saipan; Mangosteen; Paho;
papaya; Pawpaw, common; Pelipisan; Pequi; Pequia; persimmon, American;
plantain; pomegranate; Poshte; Quandong; Sapote, black; Sapote, green;
Sapote, white; Sataw; Screw-pine; Star apple; Tamarind-of-the-Indies;
and Wild loquat. Also included are cultivars, varieties and hybrids of
these commodities.
iii. Medium to large fruit, rough or hairy, inedible peel subgroup
24C. (Representative commodities--Pineapple, plus Atemoya or Sugar
apple). EPA is proposing 27 commodities for new subgroup 24C: Atemoya;
Biriba; breadfruit; Champedak; Cherimoya; Custard apple; Durian;
Elephant-apple; Ilama; Jackfruit; Karuka; longan; Mammy-apple;
Marmalade-box; Marang; Monkey-bread tree; Nicobar-breadfruit; Pandanus;
pineapple; Pulasan; Rambutan; Sapodilla; Sapote, mamey; Soncoya;
Soursop; Sugar apple; and Sun sapote. Also included are cultivars,
varieties and hybrids of these commodities.
iv. Cactus inedible peel subgroup 24D. (Representative
commodities--Dragon fruit and Prickly pear fruit). EPA is proposing
nine commodities for new subgroup 24D: Dragon fruit; Pitahaya; Pitaya;
Pitaya amarilla; Pitaya roja; Pitaya, yellow; Prickly pear, fruit;
Texas prickly pear, fruit; and Saguaro. Also included are cultivars,
varieties and hybrids of these commodities.
v. Vine inedible peel subgroup 24E. (Representative commodity--
Passionfruit). EPA is proposing eight commodities for new subgroup 24E:
Granadilla; Granadilla, giant; Monstera; passionflower, winged-stem;
passionfruit; passionfruit, banana; passionfruit, purple; and
passionfruit, yellow. Also included are cultivars, varieties and
hybrids of these commodities.
The creation of these subgroups and the choice of representative
commodity designations are based on similarities between cultural
practices, potential residue exposure due to fruit size area, and lack
of animal feed items. The proposed subgroup designations are based on
fruit size (small versus medium to large fruit), determined via the
surface area to mass (volume) ratio, as well as peel texture (rough or
hairy, smooth, or cactus), and growth habit (e.g., vine crops).
F. Other Changes
1. Revise Sec. 180.40(e) and (f). EPA believes that Sec.
180.40(f) of the Crop Group Regulations, promulgated in 1983 (Ref. 2),
has become outdated and that revisions are needed. Section 180.40(f)
addresses the interaction of crop group tolerances with processed food
tolerances and meat, milk, and egg tolerances. Under FFDCA section 408,
raw food tolerances and exemptions from tolerance apply to processed
foods as well; however, separate processed food tolerances are needed
if residues may concentrate to levels higher than the raw food
tolerance in one or more fractions of the raw food following
processing. (21 U.S.C. 346a(a)(2)). This provision in the FFDCA is
generally referred to as the flow-through provision because it legally
permits residues--or, more accurately, the raw food tolerance--to flow
through to processed food. Similarly, residues in a raw crop may make
necessary a tolerance in meat, milk, and egg commodities if the crop,
or a fraction thereof, is a significant animal feed commodity and the
consumption of the treated crop may lead to residues in livestock
commodities. (Sec. 180.3(b)). Section 180.40(f) requires that, if any
commodity covered by a crop group is utilized as an animal feed, any
needed tolerances or exemptions from tolerance in meat, milk, or egg
commodities must be established before the crop group tolerance will be
promulgated. Section 180.40(f) also specifies that:
Representative crops in a crop group include all crops
that upon processing may result in a greater concentration of residues
in the processed food;
Processing data will be required before establishing a
crop group tolerance; and
Crop group tolerances will not be established on processed
foods prepared from crops covered by crop group tolerances.
When Sec. 180.40(f) was proposed, one commenter criticized it as
subject to misinterpretation. The commenter noted that crop groups do
not include all crops that are processed as representative commodities
and thus the provision may be construed as a ``guide for crops for
which food or feed additive data will be required.'' (Ref. 2). Another
commenter asked EPA to reconsider the exclusion on crop group
tolerances for processed foods. In response to the first commenter, EPA
disagreed that the provision would be misconstrued as limiting
processing data requirements to representative commodities. While not
disputing that crop groups do not include all commodities subject to
processing as representative commodities, the Agency thought the
provision did not suggest that processing data was not required on all
commodities that are processed. EPA cited the bar on setting group
tolerances on processed foods as the basis for this conclusion.
Nonetheless, the Agency did note that representative commodities are
intended to be representative of ``the overall residue picture for the
group,'' including residues in processed foods. As to the second
comment, EPA declined to remove the bar on establishing crop group
tolerances for processed foods. EPA concluded that, given the
relatively low number of processed food tolerances established each
year and the potentially significant differences in processing
techniques even for commodities in the same crop group, it would not be
appropriate to set processed food group tolerances. However, EPA
promised to re-examine this exclusion in the future (Ref. 2).
EPA has now re-examined the requirements of Sec. 180.40(f) in
light of 30 years of experience in implementing the 1983 crop groups
rule, evaluating residue levels in processed foods; and setting
processed food tolerances. Based on this re-examination, EPA has
concluded that Sec. 180.40(f) is no longer consistent with Agency
practice and fails to provide clear direction to tolerance petitioners.
With regard to consistency with Agency practice, Sec. 180.40(f) is
out-of-step with Agency determinations made on what commodities are
appropriately considered representative and on whether processed food
group tolerances should be set. As noted, Sec. 180.40(f) specifies
that ``representative crops include all crops in the group that could
be processed such that residues may concentrate in processed food and/
or feed.'' The thinking behind this provision appears to have been that
processed food and animal feeds were so unique that residue data on
them was needed in all cases to evaluate human exposure to a pesticide
under a group tolerance and to determine whether processed food and
feed tolerances are needed. In practice, EPA has not found this to be
the case. For example, nearly every crop in the Crop Group 15--Cereal
Grains is processed into fractions that could result in concentrated
residues but EPA only selected a handful of the crops to serve as
representative crops. Designating every, or nearly every, crop in a
crop group as a representative commodity would have defeated the
purpose of having a crop group. The selection of only a few of the
cereal grains that are processed as representative crops was based on
an analysis on the representativeness of these crops as to both raw and
[[Page 68161]]
processed commodities. EPA has determined that, as to the commodities
in this group, processing data on only a few commodities would be
adequate for estimating residue values in all processed foods covered
by the crop group tolerance (under FFDCA section 408, raw food
tolerances apply to all processed food, including animal feed, derived
from that raw food) (Ref. 3). (See 21 U.S.C. 346a(a)(2))
EPA's experience implementing the crop group regulations has also
led EPA to question the wisdom of Sec. 180.40(f)'s bar on crop group
tolerances for ``processed foods prepared from crops covered by [a]
group tolerance.'' If, as found for the cereal grains group and other
more recently established crop groups, processing data on a few
commodities are adequate to assess residue levels in processed food and
animal feed covered by the crop group tolerance, there is no reason not
to consider setting a crop group tolerance for processed food or animal
feed, where needed. In fact, outside of the context of the crop group
regulations in Sec. Sec. 180.40 and 180.41, EPA has been setting de
facto crop group tolerances for processed foods pursuant to its Residue
Chemistry Test Guidelines (Ref. 4) for years. For example, those
Guidelines identify the commodity ``citrus'' as appropriate for use in
setting both raw and processed food/feed tolerances. Although this term
is not necessarily co-extensive with Crop Group 10-10, Citrus Fruit
Group, it does indicate EPA's judgment that processed food/feed
tolerances are workable for categories of commodities and not just
single commodities.
Additionally, EPA's conclusions in 1983 regarding the relative
rarity of the need for processed food tolerances and the uniqueness of
food processing techniques have not stood the test of time. Although
the number of processed food tolerances is small compared to the number
of raw food tolerances, the overall number of processed food tolerances
is significant. For example, there are over 250 processed food
tolerances established for the processed commodities of just four
crops: Almond (hulls); apple (wet and dry pomace and juice); sugar beet
(dried pulp, molasses, and refined sugar); and wheat (bran, germ,
flour, middlings, milled byproducts, and shorts). Further, EPA's
conclusion about the uniqueness of processing techniques has not been
borne out by the thousands of processing studies received by EPA. EPA's
method of estimating pesticide levels in processed foods is
conservative because EPA bases its estimate on the highest residue
value found in field trials designed to produce worst-case residue
levels. Data from the USDA's Pesticide Data Program (PDP) confirms the
conservativeness of EPA's approach. PDP data show that residues in
processed foods are usually one to two orders of magnitude below the
level estimated by EPA in its exposure assessment and tolerance
selection processes.
EPA has not only found Sec. 180.40(f) to be out-of-step with
Agency practice, but upon further reflection based upon years of
experience, EPA now believes there is substantial merit in the comments
made 30 years ago questioning the regulation's clarity. Other than the
bar on processed food group tolerances, EPA believes that Sec.
180.40(f) meant to establish three principles. First, the provision was
intended to incorporate in the crop group regulations EPA's long-held
policy (generally referred to as the ``coordination policy'') of not
setting tolerances on raw agricultural commodities unless any needed
tolerances on processed foods (including animal feeds) and on meat,
milk, and/or eggs are in place (or are being simultaneously
established) (Ref. 2, p. 29856). Otherwise, raw foods containing legal
residues might result, after processing for human or animal consumption
or after consumption by livestock, in adulterated commodities subject
to seizure.
Second, the provision was intended to indicate that representative
commodities would be chosen for crop groups with an eye toward the
issue of residue levels in processed foods and in meat, milk, and eggs
resulting from animals consuming treated food so that the
representative crops would be truly representative of the group. Third,
the provision was intended to explain that processing studies and
animal feeding studies, where appropriate, would be required on the
representative commodities. Unless such studies were submitted when
needed, EPA believed it could not determine overall exposure levels
resulting from a crop group tolerance and if a crop group tolerance
would inadvertently lead to processed food or animal feed that has over
tolerance residues. Little of this, however, plainly emerges from the
text of Sec. 180.40(f).
Based on this re-examination of Sec. 180.40(f), EPA has concluded
that several changes are needed. EPA is proposing to revise Sec.
180.40(f) to more clearly enunciate the three principles originally
included in the provision and to update these provisions in line with
current practice. For the sake of clarity, the proposed revisions
include dividing Sec. 180.40(f) into four paragraphs. In proposed
Sec. 180.40(f)(1), EPA is proposing to adopt a statement of its
coordination policy similar to that in EPA's Federal Insecticide,
Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA) regulations that bars the
granting of a FIFRA registration until all needed tolerances have
received Agency approval. (See 40 CFR 152.112(g)) EPA is proposing that
crop group tolerances not be established until all other ``necessary''
tolerances have been approved (or are being simultaneously
established). Generally, the establishment of a tolerance for one raw
commodity makes other tolerances ``necessary'' if normal processing,
handling, production, transportation, or storage of the treated
commodity, or consumption of the commodity by livestock, could lead to
the presence of a residue in another commodity not covered by a
tolerance or exemption. Proposed Sec. 180.40(f)(1) specifies that
tolerances in other food forms are considered necessary if:
A processed form or fraction of a raw food covered by the
crop group tolerance may contain residues due to processing that are
higher than the crop group tolerance;
There exist raw commodities derived or produced from
commodity covered by the crop group tolerance but the derived raw food
is not covered by the crop group tolerance; and
Commodities, or fractions thereof, that are covered by the
crop group tolerance are a significant animal feed item and consumption
of the feed item may lead to residues in meat, milk, or eggs.
The reason for the second criteria is that the production of food
may result in multiple discrete raw and processed commodities as a crop
moves from harvest to market, but the flow-through provision only
applies to processed foods. Raw foods that are discrete from the raw
commodity specified in the tolerance need a separate tolerance if they
contain any residue level (i.e., they are not covered by the flow-
through provision). Separate raw forms of the same crop can be created,
for example, by drying the crop because not all forms of drying are
considered to be ``processing,'' as that term is used in the FFDCA
(Ref. 5). Proposed Sec. 180.40(f)(1) carves out an exception to the
first two types of necessary tolerances where there is complete
separation between crops grown solely to be sold as a specific raw
commodity and crops grown for the purpose of producing a processed food
or a separate raw commodity. In these circumstances, no processed food
tolerance (or separate
[[Page 68162]]
raw commodity tolerance) is needed to set the raw food tolerance
because production of the commodity for the raw food market will not
result in the production of processed foods (or distinct raw
commodities).
In new Sec. 180.40(f)(2) EPA is proposing to add express authority
to set processed food group tolerances for processed foods, or
fractions of foods, produced from foods covered by the crop groups
established in Sec. 180.41. Thus, EPA is proposing to delete the
language barring the establishment of crop group tolerances for
processed foods as currently exists in Sec. 180.40(f). Such processed
commodity group tolerances would apply to the types of processed
commodities, including both food and feed products, as to which EPA has
traditionally set processed food tolerances (e.g., juice, oil, and
dried pulp of citrus commodities). Thus, going forward, EPA will be
able to replace multiple individual processed commodity tolerances with
a single crop group processed commodity tolerance. For example, a crop
group tolerance on ``Grain, cereal, group 15, bran'' would apply to
bran from each of the 14 commodities in Crop Group 15.
In new Sec. 180.40(f)(2) EPA is also proposing to set crop group
tolerances for discrete raw commodities produced from commodities
covered by the crop groups in Sec. 180.41 where these discrete raw
commodities are not covered by the crop group. An example of such a
discrete ``produced'' raw food is aspirated grain fractions that are
produced during the storage of grain but is neither the raw
agricultural commodity ``grain'' nor a processed food. Once final, EPA
would be authorized to set, for example, a crop group tolerance for
``Grain, cereal, group 15, aspirated grain fractions.'' Further, Sec.
180.40(f)(2) integrates processed food (and ``produced'' raw
commodities) group tolerances into Sec. 180.40 more generally by
specifying that these group tolerances are to be governed by several of
the provisions in Sec. 180.40 pertaining to raw agricultural commodity
crop groups:
Sec. 180.40(c)--allowing crop group tolerances to be
established where tolerances already exist on the representative
commodities;
Sec. 180.40(d)--establishing the representative
commodities as the minimum residue chemistry data base;
Sec. 180.40(e)--requiring that registered patterns of
pesticide use be similar for all crops in the group;
Sec. 180.40(g)--specifying the maximum variation in
residue values in representative crops generally permitted for
establishing a crop group; and
Sec. 180.40(h)--providing an alternative for excluding a
commodity from a crop group.
Because of these proposed revisions, EPA is also proposing to
revise Sec. 180.40(e) to make clear that crop groups may only be
established where both the pesticide use patterns in the production of
the crops and the food processing steps are similar.
In new Sec. 180.40(f)(3) EPA is proposing to restate EPA's concept
of representative commodities to incorporate its revised view that a
representative commodity can represent both raw and processed foods
covered by the crop group tolerance as well as residues that may result
in meat, milk, or eggs from use of covered crops, or fractions thereof,
as animal feed.
Finally, in new Sec. 180.40(f)(4) EPA is also proposing to make
clear that processing data, data on residues in raw commodities derived
or produced from the commodity in the crop group, and animal feeding
studies will be required, where appropriate. Processing data are
generally required if a raw commodity is processed and residues may
concentrate in one or more of the processed fractions. EPA expects that
processing data on the representative commodities will generally be
sufficient for establishing processed commodity group tolerances but,
as with raw agricultural commodity crop groups, may require additional
processing data where circumstances warrant. Animal studies are
required if the raw commodity or any of its processed fractions are a
significant animal feed commodity.
2. Revise Crop Groups 16, 17, and 18 to clarify that separate group
tolerances may be set on forage, fodder, straw, and hay. Crop groups
16, 17, and 18 cover animal feeds (forage, fodder, straw, and/or hay)
for various grains, grasses, and non-grass/non-grain crops. EPA's
experience in administering these crop groups has shown that, for some
pesticides, there may be significant differences between residue levels
of forage, fodder, stover, straw, and/or hay for the covered crops even
though the residue levels in each of these animal feeds are similar for
the various crops covered. For example, with Crop Group 16, residue
levels in forage and fodder of corn and wheat may be very different
than residue levels in straw of corn and wheat despite a similarity
between residue levels in corn and wheat for each of the these animal
feed commodities individually (i.e., residue levels in forage of corn
and wheat are similar, residue levels in fodder of corn and wheat are
similar, etc.). In these circumstances, EPA believes that enforcement
can be more efficient and dietary exposure assessments more precise if
separate group tolerances can be set on the animal feeds covered by the
group tolerance. Accordingly, EPA is proposing to amend each of these
crop groups to make clear that separate crop groups can be set for one
or more of the animal feeds in the group if there are differences
between the residue levels in the animal feed commodities but residue
levels are similar for the individual commodities across the covered
crops.
3. Revise broccoli commodity definition. EPA proposes to revise the
commodity definition for broccoli in Sec. 180.1(g) to correct the
spelling for gai lon, which is currently written as ``gia lon.''
4. Revise sugar apple commodity definition. EPA proposes to revise
the commodity definition for sugar apple in Sec. 180.1(g) to update
the scientific name for sugar apple as well as to remove the remove
sweetsop and anon from the definition.
IV. References
The following is a listing of the documents that are specifically
referenced in this document. The docket includes these documents and
other information considered by EPA, including documents that are
referenced within the documents that are included in the docket, even
if the referenced document is not physically located in the docket. For
assistance in locating these other documents, please consult the person
listed under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT.
1. EPA. Pesticide Tolerance Crop Grouping Program; Proposed
Expansion; Proposed Rule. Federal Register (77 FR 28920, May 23, 2007)
(FRL-8126-1).
2. EPA. Crop Grouping: Amendment to Tests on the Amount of Residue
Remaining in Minor Crops; Final Rule. Federal Register (48 FR 29855,
June 29, 1983).
3. EPA. Bernard A. Schneider. Selection of Representative
Commodities and Processed Commodities. July 24, 2014. Docket ID number
EPA-HQ-OPP-2006-0766.
4. EPA. Residue Chemistry Test Guidelines. OPPTS 860.1520,
Processed Food/Feed. August 1996.
5. EPA. Pesticides; Status of Dried Commodities as Raw Agricultural
Commodities; Notice. Federal Register (61 FR 2386, January 25, 1996)
(FRL-4992-4).
6. EPA. Pesticide Tolerance Crop Grouping Program; Proposed
Expansion; Proposed Rule. Federal Register (77 FR 28920, May 23, 2007)
(FRL-8126-1).
[[Page 68163]]
7. EPA. Pesticide Tolerance Crop Grouping Program; Final Rule.
Federal Register (72 FR 69150, December 7, 2007) (FRL-8343-1).
V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory Planning and Review and Executive
Order 13563: Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review
This action is not a ``significant regulatory action'' under the
terms of Executive Order 12866 (58 FR 51735, October 4, 1993) and is
therefore not subject to review under Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
(76 FR 3821, January 21, 2011).
EPA prepared an analysis of the potential costs and benefits
associated with this action in the first proposed rule of this series
of updates (Ref. 6). This analysis is contained in ``Economic Analysis
Proposed Expansion of Crop Grouping Program.'' A copy of the analysis
is available in the docket. Because the costs and benefits of each
update to the crop grouping rule are essentially the same, EPA believes
the May 23, 2007 economic analysis continues to be applicable here and
is summarizing it in this unit.
This is a burden-reducing regulation. Crop grouping has saved money
by permitting the results of pesticide exposure studies for one crop to
be applied to other, similar crops. This regulation would expand
certain existing crop groups and add new crop groups.
The primary beneficiaries of the regulation are minor crop
producers and consumers. Specialty crop producers will benefit because
lower registration costs will encourage manufacturers to register more
pesticides on minor crops, providing these growers with additional
pesticide options. The greater availability of pesticides for use in
the United States as well as increased coverage of tolerances to
imported commodities may result in a larger supply of imported and
domestically produced specialty produce at potentially lower costs
benefiting consumers. Secondary beneficiaries are pesticide
registrants, who benefit because expanded markets for pesticides will
lead to increased sales. IR-4 and EPA, which are publicly funded
Federal Government entities, will more efficiently use resources as a
result of the rule.
EPA will conserve resources if, as expected, new or expanded crop
groups result in fewer emergency pesticide use requests from specialty
crop growers. Further, new and expanded crop groups will likely reduce
the number of separate risk assessments and tolerance rulemakings that
EPA will have to conduct. The public will further benefit from the
increased international harmonization of crop classification and
nomenclature, harmonized commodity import and export standards, and
increased potential for resource sharing between EPA and other
pesticide regulatory agencies. Revisions to the crop grouping program
will result in no appreciable costs or negative impacts to consumers,
specialty crop producers, and pesticide registrants.
The benefits of this action can be shown through the example of the
impact of changes to Crop Group 3 in a prior rulemaking (Ref. 7). That
rulemaking established Bulb Vegetable Crop Group 3-07, which expanded
upon the related Crop Group 3, Bulb Vegetables from 7 to 25 crops, an
increase of 18 from the original crop group. Prior to the establishment
of the expanded crop group, adding tolerances for the 18 crops would
have required a minimum of 18 field trials at a cost of approximately
$5.4 million (assuming $300,000 per field trial). However, after
promulgation of the new group, these 18 new crops could obtain
pesticide tolerances under a Crop Group 3-07 tolerance with no field
trials in addition to those required on the representative commodities
(which did not change with the expansion of the group). Fewer field
trials mean a greater likelihood that these commodities will obtain
tolerance coverage under the FFDCA, aiding growers and reducing the
costs of both the IR-4 data development process and the EPA review
process, all while maintaining the protectiveness of the tolerance
regulatory scheme.
B. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
This action does not impose any new information collection
requirements that would require additional review or approval by OMB
under the provisions of PRA, 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq. However, this
action is expected to reduce mandatory paperwork due to a reduction in
required studies. This action will also have the effect of reducing the
number of residue chemistry studies because fewer representative crops
would need to be tested under a crop grouping scheme, than it would
otherwise be required.
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
Pursuant to RFA section 605(b), 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq., I hereby
certify that this proposed rule will not have a significant adverse
economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. This
proposed rule does not have any direct adverse impacts on small
businesses, small non-profit organizations, or small local governments.
For the purpose of assessing the impacts of this proposed rule on
small entities, a small entity is defined as:
1. A small business as defined by the Small Business
Administration's (SBA) regulations at 13 CFR 121.201.
2. A small governmental jurisdiction that is a government of a
city, county, town, school district or special district with a
population of less than 50,000.
3. A small organization that is any not-for-profit enterprise which
is independently owned and operated and is not dominant in its field.
In determining whether a rule has a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities, the impact of concern is any
significant adverse economic impact on small entities, since the
primary purpose of the regulatory flexibility analyses is to identify
and address regulatory alternatives ``which minimize any significant
economic impact of the proposed rule on small entities'' (5 U.S.C. 603
and 604). Thus, an agency may certify that a rule will not have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities
if the rule relieves regulatory burden or otherwise has a positive
economic effect on all of the small entities subject to the rule.
This proposed action provides regulatory relief and regulatory
flexibility. The new crop groups ease the process for pesticide
manufacturers to obtain pesticide tolerances on greater numbers of
crops. Pesticides will be more widely available to growers for use on
crops, particularly specialty crops. This proposed action is not
expected to have any adverse impact on small businesses.
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (UMRA)
EPA has determined that this action does not contain a Federal
mandate that may result in expenditures of $100 million or more for
State, local, and tribal governments, in the aggregate, or the private
sector in any 1 year. Accordingly, this action is not subject to the
requirements of UMRA sections 202, 203, 204, and 205, 2 U.S.C. 1501 et
seq.
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
Pursuant to Executive Order 13132, 64 FR 43255, August 10, 1999,
EPA has determined that this action does not have federalism
implications, because it will not have substantial direct effects on
the States, on the relationship between the national government and
[[Page 68164]]
the States, or on the distribution of power and responsibilities among
the various levels of government, as specified in the Executive Order.
Thus, Executive Order 13132 does not apply to this action.
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation and Coordination With Indian
Tribal Governments
As required by Executive Order 13175, 65 FR 67249, November 9,
2000, EPA has determined that this action does not have tribal
implications because it will not have any effect on tribal governments,
on the relationship between the Federal Government and the Indian
tribes, or on the distribution of power and responsibilities between
the Federal Government and Indian tribes, as specified in the Executive
order. Thus, Executive Order 13175 does not apply to this action.
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of Children From Environmental
Health Risks and Safety Risks
Executive Order 13045, 62 FR 19885, April 23, 1997 does not apply
because this action is not designated as an economically significant
regulatory action as defined by Executive Order 12866 (see Unit V.A.),
nor does it establish an environmental standard, or otherwise have a
disproportionate effect on children.
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions That Significantly Affect Energy
Supply, Distribution, or Use
This action is not a ``significant energy action'' as defined in
Executive Order 13211, 66 FR 28355, May 22, 2001 because it is not
designated as an regulatory action as defined by Executive Order 12866
(see Unit V.A.), nor is it likely to have any adverse effect on the
supply, distribution, or use of energy.
I. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act (NTTAA)
Section 12(d) of NTTAA, 15 U.S.C. 272 note, directs EPA to use
voluntary consensus standards in its regulatory activities unless to do
so would be inconsistent with applicable law or impractical. Voluntary
consensus standards are technical standards (e.g., materials
specifications, test methods, and sampling procedures) that are
developed or adopted by voluntary consensus standards bodies. This
action does not impose any technical standards that would require EPA
to consider the use of any voluntary consensus standards.
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions To Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income Populations
This action does not have an adverse impact on the environmental
and health conditions in low-income and minority communities.
Therefore, this action does not involve special consideration of
environmental justice related issues as specified in Executive Order
12898, 59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994.
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 180
Environmental protection, Administrative practice and procedure,
Commodities, Pesticides and pests.
Dated: November 3, 2014.
James Jones,
Assistant Administrator, Office of Chemical Safety and Pollution
Prevention.
Therefore, it is proposed that 40 CFR chapter I be amended as
follows:
PART 180--[AMENDED]
0
1. The authority citation for part 180 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 21 U.S.C. 321(q), 346a and 371.
0
2. In Sec. 180.1:
0
a. Revise the entries for ``Broccoli'' and ``Sugar apple'' in the table
in paragraph (g).
0
b. Add entries for ``Fern, edible'' and ``Palm hearts'' in alphabetical
order to the table in paragraph (g).
The revisions and additions read as follows:
Sec. 180.1 Definitions and interpretations.
* * * * *
(g) * * *
------------------------------------------------------------------------
A B
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * * * *
Broccoli............ Broccoli, Chinese broccoli (gai lon, white
flowering broccoli).
* * * * * * *
Fern, edible........ Fern, edible, fiddlehead including: Black lady
fern, Deparia japonica (Thunb.) M. Kato; Bracken
fern, Pteridium aquilinum (L.) Kuhn; Broad
buckler fern, Dryopteris dilatata (Hoffm.) A.
Gray; Cinnamon fern, Osmundastrum cinnamomeum
(L.) C. Presl; Lady fern, Athyrium filix-femina
(L.) Roth ex Mert.; Leather fern, Acrostichum
aureum L.; Mother fern, Diplazium proliferum
(Lam.) Thouars; Ostrich fern, Matteuccia
struthiopteris (L.) Tod.; Vegetable fern,
Diplazium esculentum (Retz.) Sw.; Zenmai fern,
Osmuda japonica Thunb.
* * * * * * *
Palm hearts......... Palm hearts, various species including: African
fan palm, Borassus aethiopum Mart.; Cabbage palm,
Euterpe oleracea Mart.; Cabbage palmetto, Sabal
palmetto (Walter) Schult. & Schult. f.; Coconut,
Cocos nucifera L.; Palmyra palm, Borassus
flabellifera L.; Peach Palm, Bactris gasipaes
Kunth; Royal palm, Roystonea oleracea (Jacq.)
O.F. Cook; Salak palm, Salacca zalacca (Gaertn.)
Voss; Saw palmetto, Serenoa repens (W. Bartram)
Small; Wine palm, Raphia spp.
* * * * * * *
Sugar apple......... Annona squamosa L. and its hybrid atemoya (Annona
cherimola Mill X A. squamosa L.) Also includes
true custard apple (Annona reticulata L.).
* * * * * * *
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * *
0
3. In Sec. 180.40, revise paragraphs (e) and (f) to read as follows:
Sec. 180.40 Tolerances for crop groups.
* * * * *
(e) Since a group tolerance reflects maximum residues likely to
occur on all individual crops within a group, the proposed or
registered patterns of use for all crops in the group or subgroup must
be similar before a group tolerance is established. The pattern of use
consists of the amount of pesticide applied, the number of times
applied, the timing of the first application, the interval between
applications, and the interval between the last application
[[Page 68165]]
and harvest. The pattern of use will also include the type of
application; for example, soil or foliar application, or application by
ground or aerial equipment. Additionally, since a group tolerance
reflects maximum residues likely to occur on all individual foods
within a group, food processing practices must be similar for all crops
in the group or subgroup if the processing practice has the potential
to result in residues in a processed commodity at a higher
concentration than the raw agricultural commodity.
(f)(1) General. EPA will not establish a crop group for a pesticide
unless all tolerances made necessary by the presence of pesticide
residues in the crop group commodities have been issued or are being
issued simultaneously with the crop group tolerance. For purposes of
this paragraph (f)(1):
(i) Necessary tolerances for residues resulting from crop group
tolerances include:
(A) Tolerances for processed food, including processed animal feed,
to the extent needed under 21 U.S.C. 346a(a)(2).
(B) Tolerances for raw commodities not covered by the crop group
tolerance that are derivative of commodities in the group.
(C) Tolerances for meat, milk, or egg products that may contain
residues as a result of livestock's consumption of animal feed
containing pesticide residues to the extent needed under Sec.
180.6(b).
(ii) Notwithstanding the foregoing, a tolerance is not considered
necessary for processed food, derivative raw commodities, or meat,
milk, and eggs if the precursor raw commodities are grown solely for
sale as a raw commodities and are completely segregated from
commodities grown for the purpose of producing processed foods,
derivative raw commodities, and commodities, or fractions thereof, that
are used as animal feed.
(2) Processed commodity and related raw commodity crop group
tolerances. EPA may establish crop group tolerances for processed
commodities or fractions of commodities (e.g., bran and flour from the
Cereal Grains Group), including processed fractions used as animal feed
(e.g., pomace from the Pome Fruit Group), produced from crops in the
crop groups in Sec. 180.41. EPA may establish crop group tolerances
for raw commodities or fractions of commodities, including fractions
used as animal feed, derived from commodities covered by the crop
groups in Sec. 180.41 (e.g., aspirated grain dust associated with the
Cereal Grains Group). Crop group tolerances on processed foods and
derivative raw commodities may be based on data on representative
commodities for associated crop group. Paragraphs (c), (d), (e), (g),
and (h) of this section apply to group tolerances authorized by this
paragraph (f)(2).
(3) Representative crops. Unless indicated otherwise in Sec. Sec.
180.40 and 180.41, the processed food and feed forms of the
representative crops for a crop group are considered to be
representative of the processed food and feed forms and any derivative
raw commodities not covered by the crop group, that are produced from
any of the raw agricultural commodities covered by the crop group
tolerance. Additionally, unless indicated otherwise in Sec. Sec.
180.40 and 180.41, representative commodities for such crop groups are
selected taking into consideration whether their use as animal feed
will result in residues in or on meat, milk, and/or eggs at a level
representative of the residues that would result from use of the other
commodities or byproducts in the crop group as an animal feed.
(4) Data. Processing data on representative crops are required
prior to establishment of a group tolerance if the processing of the
representative commodity has the potential to result in residues in a
processed commodity at a higher concentration than in the
representative commodity. Residue data are required on raw commodities
derived from the crops in the crop group tolerance but not directly
covered by the tolerance. Animal feeding studies with a representative
crop are required if the representative crop is used as a significant
animal feed.
* * * * *
0
4. In Sec. 180.41:
0
a. Revise paragraph (b).
0
b. Redesignate paragraphs (c)(6) through (28) as paragraphs (c)(7)
through (29), respectively.
0
c. Add a new paragraph (c)(6).
0
d. Redesignate newly redesignated paragraphs (c)(8) through (29) as
paragraphs (c)(9) through (30), respectively.
0
e. Add a new paragraph (c)(8).
0
f. Revise newly redesignated paragraphs (c)(25)(ii), (c)(26)(ii), and
(c)(27)(ii) introductory text.
0
g. Add paragraphs (c)(31), (32), and (33).
The revisions and additions read as follows:
Sec. 180.41 Crop group tables.
* * * * *
(b) Commodities not listed are not considered as included in the
groups for the purposes of this paragraph (b), and individual
tolerances must be established. Miscellaneous commodities intentionally
not included in any group include globe artichoke, hops, peanut, and
water chestnut.
(c) * * *
(6) Crop Group 4-14. Leafy Vegetable Group.
(i) Representative commodities. Head lettuce, leaf lettuce, mustard
greens, and spinach.
(ii) Commodities. The following Table 1 lists all commodities
included in Crop Group 4-14.
Table 1--Crop Group 4-14: Leafy Vegetable
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Commodities Related crop subgroup
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Amaranth, Chinese (Amaranthus tricolor L.).... 4-14A
Amaranth, leafy (Amaranthus spp.)............. 4-14A
Arugula (Eruca sativa Mill.).................. 4-14B
Aster, Indian (Kalimeris indica (L.) Sch. 4-14A
Bip.).
Blackjack (Bidens pilosa L.).................. 4-14A
Broccoli, Chinese (Brassica oleracea var. 4-14B
alboglabra (L.H. Bailey) Musil).
Broccoli raab (Brassica ruvo L.H. Bailey)..... 4-14B
Cabbage, abyssinian (Brassica carinata A. 4-14B
Braun).
Cabbage, seakale (Brassica oleracea L. var. 4-14B
costata DC.).
Cat's whiskers (Cleome gynandra L.)........... 4-14A
Cham-chwi (Doellingeria scabra (Thunb.) Nees). 4-14A
Cham-na-mul (Pimpinella calycina Maxim)....... 4-14A
Chervil, fresh leaves (Anthriscus cerefolium 4-14A
(L.) Hoffm.).
[[Page 68166]]
Chinese cabbage, bok choy (Brassica rapa 4-14B
subsp. chinensis (L.) Hanelt).
Chipilin (Crotalaria longirostrata Hook & Arn) 4-14A
Chrysanthemum, garland (Glebionis coronaria 4-14A
(L.) Cass. ex Spach. Glebionis spp.).
Cilantro, fresh leaves (Coriandrum sativum L.) 4-14A
Collards (Brassica oleracea var. Viridis L.).. 4-14B
Corn salad (Valerianella spp.)................ 4-14A
Cosmos (Cosmos caudatus Kunth)................ 4-14A
Cress, garden (Lepidium sativum L.)........... 4-14B
Cress, upland (Barbarea vulgaris W. T. Aiton). 4-14B
Dandelion (Taraxacum officinale F.H. Wigg. 4-14A
Aggr.).
Dang-gwi (Angelica gigas)..................... 4-14A
Dillweed (Anethum graveolens L.).............. 4-14A
Dock (Rumex patientia L.)..................... 4-14A
Dol-nam-mul (Sedum sarmentosum Bunge)......... 4-14A
Ebolo (Crassocephalum crepidioides (Benth.) S. 4-14A
Moore).
Endive (Cichorium endivia L. ssp. Endivia).... 4-14A
Escarole (Cichorium endivia L. ssp. Endivia).. 4-14A
Fameflower (Talinum fruticosum (L.) Juss.).... 4-14A
Feather cockscomb (Glinus oppositifolius (L.) 4-14A
Aug. DC.).
Good King Henry (Chenopodium bonus-henricus 4-14A
L.).
Hanover salad (Brassica napus var. Pabularia 4-14B
(DC.) Rchb.).
Huauzontle (Chenopodium berlandieri Moq.)..... 4-14A
Jute, leaves (Corchorus spp.)................. 4-14A
Kale (Brassica oleracea var. Sabellica L.).... 4-14B
Lettuce, bitter (Launaea cornuta (Hochst. ex 4-14A
Oliv. & Hiern) C. Jeffrey).
Lettuce, head (Lactuca sativa L.; including 4-14A
Lactuca sativa var. capitata L.).
Lettuce, leaf (Lactuca sativa L.; including 4-14A
Lactuca sativa var. longifolia Lam.; Lactuca
sativa var. crispa L.).
Maca (Lepidium meyenii Walp.)................. 4-14B
Mizuna (Brassica rapa L. subsp. nipposinica 4-14B
(L. H. Bailey) Hanelt).
Mustard greens (Brassica juncea subsp., 4-14B
including Brassica juncea (L.) Czern. subsp.
integrifolia (H. West) Thell., Brassica
juncea (L.) Czern. var. tsatsai (T. L. Mao)
Gladis).
Orach (Atriplex hortensis L.)................. 4-14A
Parsley, fresh leaves (Petroselinum crispum 4-14A
(Mill.) Nyman ex A.W. Hill; Petroselinum
crispum var. neapolitanum Danert).
Plantain, buckthorn (Plantago lanceolata L.).. 4-14A
Primrose, English (Primula vulgaris Huds.).... 4-14A
Purslane, garden (Portulaca oleracea L.)...... 4-14A
Purslane, winter (Claytonia perfoliata Donn ex 4-14A
Willd).
Radicchio (Cichorium intybus L.).............. 4-14A
Radish, leaves (Raphanus sativus L. var 4-14B
sativus, including Raphanus sativus L. var.
mougri H. W. J. Helm (Raphanus sativus L.
var. oleiformis Pers).
Rape greens (Brassica napus L. var. napus, 4-14B
including Brassica rapa subsp. trilocularis
(Roxb.) Hanelt; Brassica rapa subsp.
dichotoma (Roxb.) Hanelt; Brassica rapa
subsp. oleifera Met).
Rocket, wild (Diplotaxis tenuifolia (L.) DC.). 4-14B
Shepherd's purse (Capsella bursa-pastoris (L.) 4-14B
Medik).
Spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.)................ 4-14A
Spinach, malabar (Basella alba L.)............ 4-14A
Spinach, New Zealand (Tetragonia 4-14A
tetragonioides (Pall.) Kuntze).
Spinach, tanier (Xanthosoma brasiliense 4-14A
(Desf.) Engl.).
Swiss chard (Beta vulgaris L. subsp. Vulgaris) 4-14A
Turnip greens (Brassica rapa L. subsp. Rapa).. 4-14B
Violet, Chinese (Asystasia gangetica (L.) T. 4-14A
Anderson).
Watercress (Nasturtium officinale W. T. Aiton) 4-14B
Cultivars, varieties, and hybrids of these ........................
commodities.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(iii) Crop subgroups. The following Table 2 identifies the crop
subgroups for Crop Group 4-14, specifies the representative commodities
for each subgroup, and lists all the commodities included in each
subgroup.
[[Page 68167]]
Table 2--Crop Group 4-14: Subgroup Listing
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Representative commodities Commodities
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Crop Subgroup 4-14A. Leafy greens subgroup
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Head lettuce, leaf lettuce, and spinach.... Amaranth, Chinese; amaranth, leafy; aster, Indian; blackjack; cat's
whiskers; chervil, fresh leaves; cham-chwi; cham-na-mul; chipilin;
chrysanthemum, garland; cilantro, fresh leaves; corn salad;
cosmos; dandelion; dang-gwi; dillweed; dock; dol-nam-mul; ebolo;
endive; escarole; fameflower; feather cockscomb; good king henry;
huauzontle; jute, leaves; lettuce, bitter; lettuce, head; lettuce,
leaf; orach; parsley, fresh leaves; plantain, buckhorn; primrose,
English; purslane, garden; purslane, winter; radicchio; spinach;
spinach, malabar; spinach, New Zealand; spinach, tanier; swiss
chard; violet, Chinese; cultivars, varieties, and hybrids of these
commodities.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Crop Subgroup 4-14B. Brassica leafy greens subgroup
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Mustard greens............................. Arugula; broccoli raab; broccoli, Chinese; cabbage, abyssinian;
cabbage, seakale; Chinese cabbage, bok choy; collards; cress,
garden; cress, upland; hanover salad; kale; maca; mizuna; mustard
greens; radish, leaves; rape greens; rocket, wild; shepherd's
purse; turnip greens; watercress; cultivars, varieties, and
hybrids of these commodities.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * *
(8) Crop Group 5-14. Brassica Head and Stem Vegetable Group.
(i) Representative commodities. Broccoli or cauliflower and
cabbage.
(ii) Commodities. The following List 1 contains all commodities
included in Crop Group 5-14.
List 1--Crop Group 5-14: Brassica Head and Stem Vegetable
------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Broccoli (Brassica oleracea L. var. italica Plenck).
Brussels sprouts (Brassica oleracea L. var. gemmifera (DC.) Zenker).
Cabbage (Brassica oleracea L. var. capitata L.).
Cabbage, Chinese, napa (Brassica rapa L. subsp. pekinensis (Lour.)
Hanelt).
Cauliflower (Brassica oleracea L. var. capitata L.).
Cultivars, varieties, and hybrids of these commodities.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * *
(25) * * *
(ii) Commodities. The commodities included in Crop Group 16 are:
Forage, fodder, stover, and straw of all commodities included in the
group cereal grains group. EPA may establish separate group tolerances
on forage, fodder, hay, stover, or straw, if data on the representative
commodities indicate differences in the levels of residues on forage,
fodder, stover, or straw.
(26) * * *
(ii) Commodities. The commodities included in Crop Group 17 are:
Forage, fodder, stover, and hay of any grass, Gramineae/Poaceae family
(either green or cured) except sugarcane and those included in the
cereal grains group, that will be fed to or grazed by livestock, all
pasture and range grasses and grasses grown for hay or silage. EPA may
establish separate group tolerances on forage, fodder, stover, or hay,
if data on the representative commodities indicate differences in the
levels of residues on forage, fodder, stover, or hay.
(27) * * *
(ii) Commodities. EPA may establish separate group tolerances on
forage, fodder, straw, or hay, if data on the representative
commodities indicate differences in the levels of residues on forage,
fodder, straw, or hay. The following is a list of all the commodities
included in Crop Group 18:
* * * * *
(31) Crop Group 22. Stalk, Stem and Leaf Petiole Vegetable Group.
(i) Representative commodities. Asparagus and celery.
(ii) Commodities. The following Table 1 lists all commodities
included in Crop Group 22.
Table 1--Crop Group 22: Stalk, Stem and Leaf Petiole Vegetable Group
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Commodities Related crop subgroup
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Agave (Agave spp.)............................ 22A
Aloe vera (Aloe vera (L.) Burm.f.............. 22A
Asparagus (Asparagus officinalis L.).......... 22A
Bamboo, shoots (Arundinaria spp.; Bambusa 22A
spp., Chimonobambusa spp.; Dendrocalamus
spp., Fargesia spp.; Gigantochloa spp.,
Nastus elatus; Phyllostachys spp.;
Thyrsostachys spp.).
Cardoon (Cynara cardunculus L.)............... 22B
Celery (Apium graveolens var. dulce (Mill.) 22B
Pers.).
Celery, Chinese (Apium graveolens L. var. 22B
secalinum (Alef.) Mansf.).
Celtuce (Lactuca sativa var. angustana L.H. 22A
Bailey).
Fennel, Florence, fresh leaves and stalk 22A
(Foeniculum vulgare Mill. subsp. vulgare var.
azoricum (Mill.) Thell.).
Fern, edible, fiddlehead...................... 22A
Fuki (Petasites japonicus (Siebold & Zucc.) 22B
Maxim.).
Kale, sea (Crambe maritima L.)................ 22A
Kohlrabi (Brassica oleracea L. var gongylodes 22A
L.).
Palm hearts (various species)................. 22A
Prickly pear, pads (Opuntia ficus-indica (L.) 22A
Mill., Opuntia spp.).
Prickly pear, Texas, pads (Opuntia engelmannii 22A
Salm-Dyck ex Engelm. var. lindheimeri
(Engelm.) B. D. Parfitt & Pinkav).
Rhubarb (Rheum x hybridum Murray)............. 22B
Udo (Aralia cordata Thunb.)................... 22B
Zuiki (Colocasia gigantea (Blume) Hook. f.)... 22B
Cultivars, varieties, and hybrids of these ........................
commodities..
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 68168]]
(iii) Crop subgroups. The following Table 2 identifies the crop
subgroups for Crop Group 22, specifies the representative commodities
for each subgroup, and lists all the commodities included in each
subgroup.
Table 2--Crop Group 22: Subgroup Listing
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Representative commodities Commodities
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Crop Subgroup 22A. Stalk and stem vegetable subgroup
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Asparagus.................................. Agave; aloe vera; asparagus; bamboo, shoots; celtuce; fennel,
florence, fresh leaves and stalk; fern, edible; kale, sea;
kohlrabi; palm hearts; prickly pear, pads; prickly pear, Texas,
pads; cultivars, varieties, and hybrids of these commodities
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Crop Subgroup 22B. Leaf petiole vegetable subgroup
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Celery..................................... Cardoon; celery; celery, Chinese; fuki; rhubarb; udo; zuiki;
cultivars, varieties, and hybrids of these commodities
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(32) Crop Group 23. Tropical and Subtropical Fruit, Edible Peel
Group.
(i) Representative commodities. Date, fig, guava, and olive.
(ii) Commodities. The following Table 1 lists all commodities
included in Crop Group 23.
Table 1--Crop Group 23: Tropical and Subtropical Fruit, Edible Peel
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Commodities Related crop subgroup
------------------------------------------------------------------------
A[ccedil]a[iacute] (Euterpe oleracea Mart.)... 23C
Acerola (Malpighia emarginata DC.)............ 23A
African plum (Vitex doniana Sweet)............ 23A
Agritos (Berberis trifoliolata Moric.)........ 23A
Almondette (Buchanania lanzan Spreng.)........ 23A
Ambarella (Spondias dulcis Sol. ex Parkinson). 23B
Apak palm (Brahea dulcis (Kunth) Mart.)....... 23C
Appleberry (Billardiera scandens Sm.)......... 23A
Araz[aacute] (Eugenia stipitata McVaugh)...... 23B
Arbutus berry (Arbutus unedo L.).............. 23A
Babaco (Vasconcellea x heilbornii (V. M. 23B
Badillo) V. M. Badillo).
Bacaba palm (Oenocarpus bacaba Mart.)......... 23C
Bacaba-de-leque (Oenocarpus distichus Mart.).. 23C
Bayberry, red (Morella rubra Lour.)........... 23A
Bignay (Antidesma bunius (L.) Spreng.)........ 23A
Bilimbi (Averrhoa bilimbi L.)................. 23B
Boroj[oacute] (Borojoa patinoi Cuatrec.)...... 23B
Breadnut (Brosimum alicastrum Sw.)............ 23A
Cabeluda (Plinia glomerata (O. Berg) Amshoff). 23A
Cajou, fruit (Anacardium giganteum Hance ex 23B
Engl.).
Cambuc[aacute] (Marlierea edulis Nied.)....... 23B
Carandas-plum (Carissa edulis Vahl)........... 23A
Carob (Ceratonia siliqua L.).................. 23B
Cashew apple (Anacardium occidentale L.)...... 23B
Ceylon iron wood (Manilkara hexandra (Roxb.) 23A
Dubard).
Ceylon olive (Elaeocarpus serratus L.)........ 23A
Cherry-of-the-Rio-Grande (Eugenia aggregata 23A
(Vell.) Kiaersk.).
Chinese olive, black (Canarium tramdenum C. D. 23A
Dai & Yakovlev).
Chinese olive, white (Canarium album (Lour.) 23A
Raeusch.).
Chirauli-nut (Buchanania latifolia Roxb.)..... 23A
Ciruela verde (Bunchosia armeniaca (Cav.) DC.) 23B
Cocoplum (Chrysobalanus icaco L.)............. 23A
Date (Phoenix dactylifera L.)................. 23C
Davidson's plum (Davidsonia pruriens F. 23B
Muell.).
Desert-date (Balanites aegyptiacus (L.) 23A
Delile).
Doum palm coconut (Hyphaene thebaica (L.) 23C
Mart.).
False sandalwood (Ximenia americana L.)....... 23A
Feijoa (Acca sellowiana (O. Berg) Burret)..... 23B
Fig (Ficus carica L.)......................... 23B
Fragrant manjack (Cordia dichotoma G. Forst.). 23A
Gooseberry, abyssinian (Dovyalis abyssinica 23A
(A. Rich.) Warb.).
Gooseberry, Ceylon (Dovyalis hebecarpa 23A
(Gardner) Warb.).
Gooseberry, Indian (Phyllanthus emblica L.)... 23B
Gooseberry, otaheite (Phyllanthus acidus (L.) 23A
Skeels).
Governor's plum (Flacourtia indica (Burm. F.) 23A
Merr.).
Grumichama (Eugenia brasiliensis Lam)......... 23A
Guabiroba (Campomanesia xanthocarpa O. Berg).. 23A
[[Page 68169]]
Guava (Psidium guajava L.).................... 23B
Guava berry (Myrciaria floribunda (H. West ex 23A
Willd.) O. Berg).
Guava, Brazilian (Psidium guineense Sw.)...... 23A
Guava, cattley (Psidium cattleianum Sabine)... 23B
Guava, Costa Rican (Psidium 23A
friedrichsthalianum (O. Berg) Nied.).
Guava, para (Psidium acutangulum DC.)......... 23B
Guava, purple strawberry (Psidium cattleianum 23B
Sabine var. cattleianum).
Guava, strawberry (Psidium cattleianum Sabine 23B
var. littorale (Raddi) Fosberg).
Guava, yellow strawberry (Psidium cattleianum 23B
Sabine var. cattleianum forma lucidum O.
Deg.).
Guayabillo (Psidium sartorianum (O. Berg) 23A
Nied.).
Illawarra plum (Podocarpus elatus R. Br. Ex 23A
Endl.).
Imb[eacute] (Garcinia livingstonei T. 23B
Anderson).
Imbu (Spondias tuberosa Arruda ex Kost.)...... 23B
Indian-plum (Flacourtia jangomas (Lour.). 23A
basionym).
Jaboticaba (Myrciaria cauliflora (Mart.) O. 23B
Berg).
Jamaica-cherry (Muntingia calabura L.)........ 23A
Jambolan (Syzygium cumini (L.) Skeels)........ 23A
Jelly palm (Butia capitata (Mart.) Becc.)..... 23C
Jujube, Indian (Ziziphus mauritiana Lam.)..... 23B
Kaffir-plum (Harpephyllum caffrum Bernh. Ex C. 23A
Krauss).
Kakadu plum (Terminalia latipes Benth. subsp. 23A
psilocarpa Pedley).
Kapundung (Baccaurea racemosa (Reinw.) Mull. 23A
Arg.).
Karanda (Carissa carandas L.)................. 23A
Kwai muk (Artocarpus hypargyreus Hance ex 23B
Benth.).
Lemon aspen (Acronychia acidula F. Muell)..... 23A
Mangaba (Hancornia speciosa Gomes)............ 23B
Marian plum (Bouea macrophylla Griff.)........ 23B
Mombin, malayan (Spondias pinnata (J. Koenig 23B
ex L. f.) Kurz).
Mombin, purple (Spondias purpurea L.)......... 23B
Mombin, yellow (Spondias mombin L.)........... 23A
Monkeyfruit (Artocarpus lacucha Buch. Ham.)... 23B
Monos plum (Pseudanamomis umbellulifera 23A
(Kunth) Kausel).
Mountain cherry (Bunchosia cornifolia Kunth).. 23A
Nance (Byrsonima crassifolia (L.) Kunth)...... 23B
Natal plum (Carissa macrocarpa (Eckl.) A. DC.) 23B
Noni (Morinda citrifolia L.).................. 23B
Olive (Olea europaea L. subsp. europaea)...... 23A
Papaya, mountain (Vasconcellea pubescens A. 23B
DC.).
Patau[aacute] (Oenocarpus bataua Mart.)....... 23C
Peach palm, fruit (Bactris gasipaes Kunth var. 23C
gasipaes).
Persimmon, black (Diospyros texana Scheele)... 23A
Persimmon, Japanese (Diospyros kaki Thunb.)... 23B
Pitomba (Eugenia luschnathiana Klotzsch ex O. 23A
Berg).
Plum-of-Martinique (Flacourtia inermis Roxb.). 23A
Pomerac (Syzygium malaccense (L.) Merr. & L.M. 23B
Perry).
Rambai (Baccaurea motleyana (Mull. Arg.) Mull. 23B
Arg.).
Rose apple (Syzygium jambos (L.) Alston)...... 23B
Rukam (Flacourtia rukam Zoll. & Moritizi)..... 23A
Rumberry (Myrciaria dubia (Kunth) Mc Vaugh 23A
Myrtaceae).
Sea grape (Coccoloba uvifera (L.) L.)......... 23A
Sentul (Sandoricum koetjape (Burm. F.) Merr.). 23B
Sete-capotes (Campomanesia guazumifolia 23A
(Cambess.) O. Berg).
Silver aspen (Acronychia wilcoxian (F. Muell.) 23A
T.G. Hartley).
Starfruit ( Averrhoa carambola L.)............ 23B
Surinam cherry (Eugenia uniflora L.).......... 23B
Tamarind (Tamarindus indica L.)............... 23B
Uvalha (Eugenia pyriformis Cambess ).......... 23B
Water apple (Syzygium aqueum (Burm. F.) 23A
Alston).
Water pear (Syzygium guineense (Willd.) DC)... 23A
Water berry (Syzygium cordatum Hochst. Ex C. 23A
Krauss).
Wax jambu (Syzygium samarangense (Blume) Merr. 23A
& L.M. Perry).
Cultivars, varieties, and hybrids of these ........................
commodities.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(iii) Table. The following Table 2 identifies the crop subgroups
for Crop Group 23, specifies the representative commodities for each
subgroup, and lists all the commodities included in each subgroup.
[[Page 68170]]
Table 2--Crop Group 23: Subgroup Listing
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Representative commodities Commodities
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Crop Subgroup 23A. Small fruit, edible peel subgroup
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Olive...................................... Acerola; African plum; agritos; almondette; appleberry; arbutus
berry; bayberry, red; bignay; breadnut; cabeluda; carandas-plum;
Ceylon iron wood; Ceylon olive; cherry-of-the-Rio-Grande; Chinese
olive, black; Chinese olive, white; chirauli-nut; cocoplum; desert-
date; false sandalwood; fragant manjack; gooseberry, abyssinian;
gooseberry, Ceylon; gooseberry, otaheite; governor's plum;
grumichama; guabiroba; guava berry; guava, Brazilian; guava, Costa
Rican; guayabillo; illawarra plum; Indian-plum; Jamaica-cherry;
jambolan; kaffir-plum; kakadu plum; kapundung; karnada; lemon
aspen; mombin, yellow; monos plum; mountain cherry; olive;
persimmon, black; pitomba; plum-of-martinique; rukam; rumberry;
sea grape; sete-capotes; silver aspen; water apple; water pear;
water berry; wax jambu; cultivars, varieties, and hybrids of these
commodities.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Crop Subgroup 23B. Medium to large fruit, edible peel subgroup
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fig and guava.............................. Ambarella; araz[aacute]; babaco; bilimbi; boroj[oacute]; cajou,
fruit; cambuc[aacute]; carob; cashew apple; ciruela verde;
Davidson's plum; feijoa; fig; gooseberry, Indian; guava; guava,
cattley; guava, para; guava, purple strawberry; guava, strawberry;
guava, yellow strawberry; imb[eacute]; imbu; jaboticaba; jujube,
Indian; kwai muk; mangaba; Marian plum; mombin, Malayan; mombin,
purple; monkeyfruit; nance; natal plum; noni; papaya, mountain;
persimmon, Japanese; pomerac; rambai; rose apple; sentul;
starfruit; Surinam cherry; tamarind; uvalha; cultivars, varieties,
and hybrids of these commodities.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Crop Subgroup 23C. Palm fruit, edible peel subgroup
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Date....................................... A[ccedil]a[iacute]; apak palm; bacaba palm; bacaba-de-leque; date;
doum palm coconut; jelly palm; patau[aacute]; peach palm, fruit;
cultivars, varieties, and hybrids of these commodities.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(33) Crop Group 24. Tropical and Subtropical Fruit, Inedible Peel
Group.
(i) Representative commodities. Atemoya or sugar apple, avocado,
banana or pomegranate, dragon fruit, lychee, passionfruit, pineapple,
and prickly pear, fruit.
(ii) Commodities. The following Table 1 lists all commodities
included in Crop Group 24.
Table 1--Crop Group 24: Tropical and Subtropical Fruit, Inedible Peel
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Commodities Related crop subgroup
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Abiu (Pouteria caimito (Ruiz & Pav.) Radlk)... 24B
Aisen (Boscia senegalensis (Pers.) Lam.)...... 24A
Akee apple (Blighia sapida K.D. Koenig)....... 24B
Atemoya (Annona cherimola Mill. X A. squamosa 24C
L.).
Avocado (Persea americana Mill.).............. 24B
Avocado, Guatemalan (Persea americana Mill. 24B
var. guatemalensis).
Avocado, Mexican (Persea americana Mill. var. 24B
drymifolia (Schltdl. & Cham.) S. F. Blak).
Avocado, West Indian (Persea americana var. 24B
americana).
Bacury (Platonia insignis Mart.).............. 24B
Bael fruit (Aegle marmelos (L.) Corr[ecirc]a). 24A
Banana (Musa spp.)............................ 24B
Banana, dwarf (Musa hybrids; Musa acuminata 24B
Colla).
Binjai (Mangifera caesia Jack)................ 24B
Biriba (Annona mucosa Jacq.).................. 24C
Breadfruit (Artocarpus altilis (Parkinson) 24C
Fosberg).
Burmese grape (Baccaurea ramiflora Lour.)..... 24A
Canistel (Pouteria campechiana (Kunth) Baehni) 24B
Cat's-eyes (Dimocarpus longan Lour. subsp. 24A
malesianus Leenh.).
Champedak (Artocarpus integer (Thunb.) Merr.). 24C
Cherimoya (Annona cherimola Mill.)............ 24C
Cupuac[uacute] (Theobroma grandiflorum (Willd. 24B
Ex Spreng.) K. Schum.).
Custard apple (Annona reticulata L.).......... 24C
Dragon fruit (Hylocereus undatus (Haw.) 24D
Britton & Rose).
Durian (Durio zibethinus L.).................. 24C
Elephant-apple (Limonia acidissima L.)........ 24C
Etambe (Mangifera zeylanica (Blume) Hook. F.). 24B
Granadilla (Passiflora ligularis Juss.)....... 24E
Granadilla, giant (Passiflora quadrangularis 24E
L.).
Ilama (Annona macroprophyllata Donn. Sm.)..... 24C
Ing[aacute] (Inga vera Willd. subsp. affinis 24A
(DC.) T. D. Penn.).
Jackfruit (Artocarpus heterophyllus Lam.)..... 24C
Jatob[aacute] (Hymenaea courbaril L.)......... 24B
Karuka (Pandanus julianettii Martelli)........ 24C
Kei apple (Dovyalis caffra (Hook. F. & Harv.) 24B
Warb.).
Langsat (Lansium domesticum Corr[ecirc]a)..... 24B
[[Page 68171]]
Lanjut (Mangifera lagenifera Griff.).......... 24B
Longan (Dimocarpus longan Lour.).............. 24C
Lucuma (Pouteria lucuma (Ruiz & Pav.) Kuntze). 24B
Lychee (Litchi chinensis Sonn.)............... 24A
Mabolo (Diospyros blancoi A. DC.)............. 24B
Madras-thorn (Pithecellobium dulce (Roxb.) 24A
Benth.).
Mammy-apple (Mammea americana L )............. 24C
Manduro (Balanites maughamii Sprague)......... 24A
Mango (Mangifera indica L.)................... 24B
Mango, horse (Mangifera foetida Lour.)........ 24B
Mango, Saipan (Mangifera odorata Griff.)...... 24B
Mangosteen (Garcinia mangostana L. ).......... 24B
Marang (Artocarpus odoratissimus Blanco)...... 24C
Marmaladebox (Genipa americana L.)............ 24C
Matisia (Matisia cordata Humb. & Bonpl.)...... 24A
Mesquite (Prosopis juliflora (Sw.) DC.)....... 24A
Mongongo, fruit (Schinziophyton rautanenii 24A
(Schinz) Radcl.-Sm).
Monkey-bread-tree (Adansonia digitata L.)..... 24C
Monstera (Monstera deliciosa Liebm.).......... 24E
Nicobar-breadfruit (Pandanus leram Jones ex 24C
Fontana).
Paho (Mangifera altissima Blanco)............. 24B
Pandanus (Pandanus utilis Bory)............... 24C
Papaya (Carica papaya L.)..................... 24B
Passionflower, winged-stem (Passiflora alata 24E
Curtis).
Passionfruit (Passiflora edulis Sims)......... 24E
Passionfruit, banana (Passiflora tripartita 24E
var. mollissima (Kunth) Holm-Niels. & P.
Jorg.).
Passionfruit, purple (Passiflora edulis Sims 24E
forma edulis).
Passionfruit, yellow (Passiflora edulis Sims 24E
forma flavicarpa O. Deg.).
Pawpaw, common (Asimina triloba (L.) Dunal)... 24B
Pawpaw, small-flower (Asimina parviflora 24A
(Michx.) Dunal).
Pelipisan (Mangifera casturi Kosterm.)........ 24B
Pequi (Caryocar brasiliense Cambess).......... 24B
Pequia (Caryocar villosum (Aubl.) Pers.)...... 24B
Persimmon (American (Diospyros virginiana L.). 24B
Pineapple (Ananas comosus (L.) Merr.)......... 24C
Pitahaya (Hylocereus polyrhizus (F. A. C. 24D
Weber) Britton & Rose).
Pitaya (Hylocereus sp. Including H. 24D
megalanthus (H. ocamponis and H. polychizus).
Pitaya, amarilla (Hylocereus triangularis 24D
Britton & Rose).
Pitaya, roja (Hylocereus ocamponis (Salm-Dyck) 24D
Britton & Rose).
Pitaya, yellow (Hylocereus megalanthus (K. 24D
Schum. ex Vaupel) Ralf Bauer).
Plantain (Musa paradisiaca L.)................ 24B
Pomegranate (Punica granatum L.).............. 24B
Poshte (Annona liebmanniana Baill.)........... 24B
Prickly pear, fruit (Opuntia ficus-indica (L.) 24D
Mill.).
Prickly pear, Texas, fruit (Opuntia 24D
engelmannii Salm-Dyck ex Engelm. var.
lindheimeri (Engelm.) B. D. Parfitt & Pinkav).
Pulasan (Nephelium ramboutan-ake (Labill.) 24C
Leenh.).
Quandong (Santalum acuminatum (R. Br.) DC.)... 24B
Rambutan (Nephelium lappaceum L.)............. 24C
Saguaro (Carnegiea gigantea (Engelm.) Britton 24D
& Rose).
Sapodilla (Manilkara zapota (L.) P. Royen).... 24C
Sapote, black (Diospyros digyna Jacq.)........ 24B
Sapote, green (Pouteria viridis (Pittier) 24B
Cronquist).
Sapote, mamey (Pouteria sapota (Jacq.) H.E. 24C
Moore & Stearn).
Sapote, white (Casimiroa edulis La Llave & 24B
Lex).
Sataw (Parkia speciosa Hassk.)................ 24B
Satinleaf (Chrysophyllum oliviforme L.)....... 24A
Screw-pine (Pandanus tectorius Parkinson)..... 24B
Sierra Leone-tamarind (Dialium guineense 24A
Willd.).
Soncoya (Annona purpurea Moc. & Sess[eacute] 24C
ex Dunal).
Soursop (Annona muricata L.).................. 24C
Spanish lime (Melicoccus bijugatus Jacq.)..... 24A
Star apple (Chrysophyllum cainito L.)......... 24B
Sugar apple (Annona squamosa L.).............. 24C
Sun sapote (Licania platypus (Hemsl.) Fritsch) 24C
Tamarind-of-the-Indies (Vangueria 24B
madagascariensis J. F. Gmel.).
Velvet tamarind (Dialium indum L.)............ 24A
Wampi (Clausena lansium (Lour.) Skeels)....... 24A
White star apple (Chrysophyllum albidum G. 24A
Don).
Wild loquat (Uapaca kirkiana M[uuml]ll. Arg.). 24B
Cultivars, varieties, and hybrids of these ........................
commodities.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 68172]]
(iii) Table. The following Table 2 identifies the crop subgroups
for Crop Group 24, specifies the representative commodities for each
subgroup, and lists all the commodities included in each subgroup.
Table 2--Crop Group 24: Subgroup Listing
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Representative commodities Commodities
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Crop Subgroup 24A. Small fruit, inedible peel subgroup
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Lychee..................................... Aisen; bael fruit; Burmese grape; cat's eyes; ing[aacute]; lychee;
madras-thorn; manduro; matisia; mesquite; mongongo, fruit; pawpaw,
small-flower; satinleaf; Sierra Leone-tamarind; Spanish lime;
velvet tamarind; wampi; white star apple; cultivars, varieties,
and hybrids of these commodities.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Crop Subgroup 24B. Medium to large fruit, smooth, inedible peel subgroup
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Avocado, plus pomegranate or banana........ Abiu; akee apple; avocado; avocado, Guatemalan; avocado, Mexican;
avocado, West Indian; bacury; banana; banana, dwarf; binjai;
canistel; cupuac[uacute]; etambe; jatob[aacute]; kei apple;
langstat; lanjut; lucuma; mabolo; mango; mango, horse; mango,
Saipan; mangosteen; paho; papaya; pawpaw, common; pelipisan;
pequi; pequia; persimmon, American; plantain; pomegranate; poshte;
quandong; sapote, black; sapote, green; sapote, white; sataw;
screw-pine; star apple; tamarind-of-the-Indies; wild loquat;
cultivars, varieties, and hybrids of these commodities.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Crop Subgroup 24C. Medium to large fruit, rough or hairy, inedible peel subgroup
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Pineapple, plus Atemoya or sugar apple..... Atemoya; biriba; breadfruit; champedak; cherimoya; custard apple;
durian; elephant-apple; ilama; jackfruit; karuka; longan; mammy-
apple; marmalade-box; marang; monkey-bread tree; nicobar-
breadfruit; pandanus; pineapple; pulasan; rambutan; sapodilla;
sapote, mamey; soncoya; soursop; sugar apple; sun sapote;
cultivars, varieties, and hybrids of these commodities.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Crop Subgroup 24D. Cactus, inedible peel subgroup
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dragon fruit and Prickly pear fruit........ Dragon fruit; pitahaya; pitaya; pitaya amarilla; pitaya roja;
pitaya, yellow; prickly pear, fruit; prickly pear, Texas, fruit;
saguaro; cultivars, varieties, and hybrids of these commodities.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Crop Subgroup 24E. Vine, inedible peel subgroup
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Passionfruit............................... Granadilla; granadilla, giant; monstera; passionflower, winged-
stem; passionfruit; passionfruit, banana; passionfruit, purple;
passionfruit, yellow; cultivars, varieties, and hybrids of these
commodities.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[FR Doc. 2014-26661 Filed 11-13-14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P