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HomeFood and Agricultural CodeDiv. 1Pt. 1Ch. 3Art. 9§ 577 Ecological Pest Management Research

§ 577 Ecological Pest Management Research

Food and Agricultural Code·California
AI Summary·Official Text·Key Terms·Related Statutes·References
AI SummaryVerified

§ 577 Ecological Pest Management Research

Key Takeaways

  • •California wants to find better ways to deal with pests (like bugs or weeds) without hurting the environment or people's health.
  • •Using too many chemical sprays for pests is not good because bugs can become resistant, and chemicals can be bad for health and nature.
  • •The state wants scientists, farmers, and experts to work together to find safer ways to control pests.
  • •A special center at the University of California will decide what pest research is most important and help guide other research projects.

Example

A farmer has a problem with bugs eating their crops. Instead of spraying lots of chemicals, they work with scientists to find a better way.

The law says the farmer should try safer methods, like using natural predators of the bugs, instead of just spraying chemicals. The special center at the university can help figure out the best way to do this.

AI-generated — May contain errors. Not legal advice. Always verify source.

Official Source
View on CA.gov

§ 577 Ecological Pest Management Research

The Legislature finds and declares all of the following: (a) There is a need to develop and apply ecologically based pest management alternatives that are environmentally sound to prevent, control, and eradicate pests. (b) The continuation of pest control technology in agriculture which relies primarily on synthetic chemicals may be impractical, given the dwindling number of newly registered chemicals, increasing resistance of numerous pests to pesticides, public concern about pesticide residues, and potential threats posed to environmental quality and human health. (c) To be adequately prepared for existing and new infestations of agricultural pests, California needs to have a means of coordinating and evaluating long-term basic and applied pest research, including the impact of prevention, control, and eradication efforts upon public health and the environment. (d) The state should facilitate, promote, and support collaborative pest research programs and projects by its agencies, public and private universities, the federal government, and the agricultural industry that work toward developing environmentally sound, ecologically based pest management techniques. (e) In order to strengthen pest prevention, control, and eradication efforts, it is the intent of the Legislature that an administrative structure be created within the University of California which, in cooperation with California’s public and private universities, the state, the agricultural industry, and persons experienced with environmentally sound, ecologically based pest management alternatives, advances pest research and formulates innovative solutions that better safeguard the environment and public health. Toward these ends, the Legislature requests that the Regents of the University of California establish a pest research center which will review and prioritize pest-related research activities conducted through the university. It is the intent of the Legislature that University of California programs engaged in pest research shall, when applicable, follow the research priorities established by the center. The center is encouraged to develop research priorities in cooperation with other public and private universities and with state, federal, and county agencies, including, but not limited to, the Department of Food and Agriculture, State Department of Health Services, Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, county agricultural commissioners, United States Department of Agriculture, National Science Foundation, National Institutes of Health, and the agricultural industry, and with environmental and public and occupational health groups. (Added by Stats. 1990, Ch. 1642, Sec. 1.)

Last verified: January 23, 2026

Key Terms

universityenvironmentalhealthportlegislaturemanagementpreventioneradication

Related Statutes

  • § 580 Pest Management Research Priorities
  • § 581 Pest Research Funding Priorities
  • § 491 Biotech Product Health Disclosure
  • § 492 Food Biotechnology Task Force
  • § 579 Pest Research And Management

References

  • Official text at leginfo.legislature.ca.gov
  • California Legislature. Food and Agricultural Code. Section 577.
View Official Source