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The Endangered Species Act and Herbicide Use

As the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) works to make all pesticides in the U.S. fully compliant with the Endangered Species Act (ESA), farmers will see changes to their herbicide labels. Potential changes include: 

  • A requirement to check the EPA Bulletins Live! Two website to check if the field you are spraying with a specific herbicide is located within a Pesticide Use Limitation Area (PULA), and if there are use restrictions within the PULA
  • Some new label requirements to reduce spray drift
  • A new requirement to check if your field qualifies for additional mitigations to avoid runoff or erosion, and if so, how many mitigations are required. (Keep in mind that government and industry surveying suggest that more than 96% of farmers qualify for 6 mitigation points just from their current cropping and conservation practices.)

Which Herbicides Are Affected? 

Ultimately, all herbicides that go through the registration and re-registration process will have these new ESA-specific label requirements. Here is a chart of herbicides that currently contain ESA-specific label requirements, as of January 21st, 2026

ESA-Herbicide-List

How Do the New Labels Work?

There are a growing number of excellent resources available to help farmers navigate these new labels: 

Here is a series of short videos, developed by CropLife America, in partnership with the Agricultural Retailers Association (ARA) and the Council of Producers and Distributors of Agrotechnology (CPDA). In them, University of Georgia weed scientist Dr. Stanley Culpepper walks you through how to understand and follow the new label requirements, step by step. You can find the entire series here, or watch them below: 

Authors

Christy Sprague, Michigan State University

Emily Unglesbee, GROW

Mark VanGessel, University of Delaware

Reviewers

Bill Chism, EPA (retired) 

Michael Flessner, Virginia Tech 

Sarah Lancaster, Kansas State University