Listen In: What is Happening with the Endangered Species Act and Herbicide Labels?

The acronym “ESA” is fast-becoming a dreaded word in agriculture, as farmers, scientists and pesticide registrants anxiously await the results of EPA’s new efforts to make herbicide registrations fully comply with the Endangered Species Act. 

The wheels are truly in motion now that the EPA’s final Herbicide Strategy was released earlier this year, confirming that over the next decade or so, labels will sport new requirements for spray drift mitigation, conservation practices that reduce runoff and erosion and strict use limitations in certain areas where listed species are found ( known as “pesticide use limitation areas” or PULAs). 

It’s a lot to take in and many uncertainties remain: When will these new label restrictions emerge? What will they look like? Where will I find them? Which active ingredients will be the first to have them? 

Here to help unpack the answers to these questions and more are Dr. Bill Chism, a retired EPA official and current chair of the WSSA’s Endangered Species Act Committee, along with Ashley Franke, a consultant with Compliance Services International. 

Listen in as Kansas State University Extension Weed Specialist Dr. Sarah Lancaster interviews them for the War Against Weeds podcast. 

Along with other organizations, the Weed Science Society of America has worked hard to help supply EPA with solid data on how to adapt old and new herbicides to the agency’s renewed goal to avoid off-target harm to endangered listed species and their habitats. See the organization’s educational webpage on the ESA here.

Looking for more podcast deep dives on weed management? You can find episodes on a huge range of weed-related topics on the War Against Weeds podcast, which is hosted by the Crop Protection Network and sponsored by the North Central IPM Center


Text by Emily Unglesbee, GROW; feature and header photo by Claudio Rubione, GROW