Skip to main content
Minnesota Department of Agriculture
  • Business Dev, Loans, Grants
      1. Business & Marketing
        1. Corporate Farm Information
        2. Food Business Development
        3. Exporting & International Trade
        4. Local & Regional Markets
      2. Resources for Farmers
        1. Beginning Farmer Tax Credit
        2. Emerging Farmers
        3. Minnesota Farm Advocates
        4. Farmer Stress
        5. Farm, Property, Real Estate Listing (MN FarmLink)
      3. Disaster & Cleanup Assistance
        1. Agriculture Chemical Response & Reimbursement Account
        2. Elk Damage Compensation
        3. Wolf Depredation
      4. Animals & Livestock
        1. Livestock Dealer Licensing
        2. Livestock Resources
        3. Avian Influenza
      5. Loans
        1. VIEW ALL Loans & Funding
        2. Disaster Recovery Loan
        3. Aggie Bond Loan
        4. Agricultural Best Management Practices (AgBMP) Loan
        5. Beginning Farmer Loan
        6. Farm Opportunity Loan
        7. Rural Finance Authority
        8. Loan Comparison Chart
      6. Grants
        1. VIEW ALL Grants & Funding
        2. Beginning Farmer Equipment and Infrastructure Grant
        3. Local Food Purchase Assistance
        4. Down Payment Assistance Grant
        5. Agricultural Growth, Research & Innovation (AGRI) Program
        6. Value-Added (AGRI)
        7. Specialty Crop
        8. Livestock Investment (AGRI)
        9. Soil Health Equipment
      7. More Business Development, Loans, Grants Topics
  • Environment, Sustainability
      1. Conservation
        1. Minnesota Ag Water Quality Certification Program
        2. Best Management Practices
      2. Organic Agriculture
        1. Organic Agriculture
        2. Minnesota Organic Conference
      3. Renewable Energy
        1. Governor's Council on Biofuels
        2. Biodiesel
        3. Ethanol
        4. Manure Digesters
        5. AGRI Bioincentive Program
        6. AGRI Biofuels Infrastructure Grant
      4. Water Protection
        1. Clean Water Fund Activities
        2. Minnesota Ag Water Quality Certification Program
        3. Water Monitoring Programs
        4. Nitrate in SE MN
      5. Farmland Protection
        1. Farmland Protection
        2. PFAS
        3. PFAS and Ag
        4. Products with Added PFAS
      6. Climate Change
        1. Agriculture in a Changing Climate
      7. More Environment, Sustainability Topics
  • Pesticide, Fertilizer
      1. Pesticides
        1. VIEW ALL Specific Pesticides
        2. Pesticide Overview
        3. Apply, Register, Store, Sell
        4. Pesticide Use & Sales Data
        5. Monitoring Pesticides in Water
        6. Regulation, Inspection & Enforcement
        7. Dicamba
        8. Integrated Pest Management
      2. Fertilizers
        1. Fertilizer Overview
        2. Apply, Register, Store, Sell
        3. Fertilizer Use & Sales Data
        4. Monitoring Nitrate in Water
        5. Ag Lime
        6. Anhydrous Ammonia Program
        7. Certified Testing Laboratories (soil & manure)
        8. Fertilizer Practices
      3. Best Management Practices
        1. Nitrogen Fertilizer BMPs
        2. Pest Control without Pesticide BMPs
        3. Pesticide BMPs
        4. Pollinator Habitat BMPs
        5. Turfgrass BMPs
      4. Safety & Cleanup
        1. Spills & Cleanup
        2. Waste Pesticide Disposal
        3. Pesticide Container Recycling
        4. Health & Safety
      5. File a Misuse Complaint
        1. Pesticide & Fertilizer Complaints
      6. Registered Product Search
        1. Find Pesticide, Fertilizer Products
      7. Licensing & Registration
        1. Search Licenses
        2. License Lookup
        3. Fertilizer Tonnage Reporting & Inspection Fees
        4. Pesticide Dealer Licensing & Sales Reporting
      8. Clean Water Fund Activities
        1. Clean Water Fund Activities
      9. More Pesticide & Fertilizer Topics
  • Food, Feed
      1. Feed & Pet Food Business Info
        1. Certificate of Free Sale
        2. GMP Certificate Request
      2. Food & Feed Safety
        1. VIEW ALL Food Safety
        2. Secure Milk Supply Program
        3. Food Ingredients/Allergens
        4. Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA)
        5. Drug Residue Prevention
      3. Resources for New Food Businesses
        1. How to Start a Food Business
        2. Licensing Liaison Request
        3. Food Licenses
        4. Meat & Poultry Processing
        5. Wild Game Processing
      4. Selling Food & Feed
        1. Meat, Poultry & Eggs
        2. Dairy & Milk
        3. Labeling Requirements
        4. Minnesota Grown
        5. Cottage Food
        6. Venison Donation
        7. Hemp in Food
      5. Recalls & Complaints
        1. Report a Complaint
        2. Recent Recall Notifications
        3. MN Rapid Response Team
      6. Food & Feed Inspection Programs
        1. Retail Food Program
        2. Retail Food Plan Review
        3. Manufactured Food Inspection Program
        4. Produce Safety Program
        5. Commercial Feed & Pet Food
      7. More Food, Feed Topics
  • Plants, Insects
      1. Insect Pests & Diseases
        1. VIEW ALL Insect Pests & Diseases
        2. Report a Plant, Pest or Disease
        3. Emerald Ash Borer
        4. Spongy Moth
        5. Brown Marmorated Stink Bug
        6. Japanese Beetle
        7. Swede Midge
        8. Velvet Longhorned Beetle
        9. Bacterial Wilt and Canker of Tomato
        10. Potato Cyst Nematode
        11. Red Star Rust
      2. Pest Management
        1. Pest Regulations
        2. Biological Control of Emerald Ash Borer
        3. Pest Surveys
        4. Smarty Plants
        5. Research
      3. Plants
        1. Industrial Hemp
        2. Nursery
        3. Cold Hardiness List
        4. Noxious & Invasive Weeds
        5. Export Certification Program
        6. Grain Licensing Program
        7. Palmer Amaranth
        8. Noxious Weed Grant
        9. Seed Program
      4. Beneficial Insects
        1. Pollinators
      5. Licensing
        1. VIEW ALL Licensing
        2. Grain Buy & Store
        3. Plants, Trees & Seed
        4. Firewood
      6. More PLANTS, INSECTS topics
  • Licensing & Inspections
      1. License Services
        1. Licensing and Renewal
        2. Apply for a License
        3. Renew with a PIN
        4. Pay an Invoice
        5. Search for a License Holder
        6. Payment Options
      2. File a Report
        1. Pesticide Sales Report
        2. Shell Egg Annual Report
      3. Learn, Apply, Renew or Train
        1. VIEW ALL Licenses
        2. Crops
        3. Dairy, Milk
        4. Feed, Pet Food
        5. Fertilizers, Pesticides & Chemicals
        6. Food – Cottage, Retail, Wholesale
        7. Livestock
        8. Meat, Poultry, Eggs
        9. Plants, Trees & Seed
        10. Produce, Fruits, Vegetables, Grain
        11. Other
      4. View all Licensing & Inspections

Search

Verbal descriptions of plant characteristics including their potential to be pollinator-friendly are not considered advertising.

Are verbal communications with my customers about plant qualities, including attractiveness to pollinators considered advertising?

Verbal descriptions of plant characteristics including their potential to be pollinator-friendly are not considered advertising.

No

Pollinators include insects, birds and mammals (examples include honey bees, butterflies, hummingbirds and bats).

What is considered a pollinator?

Pollinators include insects, birds and mammals (examples include honey bees, butterflies, hummingbirds and bats).

No

All plants offered for sale in Minnesota are covered: annuals, bedding plants, perennials, trees and shrubs.

What plants are covered by the law?

All plants offered for sale in Minnesota are covered: annuals, bedding plants, perennials, trees and shrubs.

No

The law does not regulate the use of specific insecticides or products; rather, it is the labeling of plant material that is regulated. Plants cannot be labeled or advertised as attractive or beneficial to pollinators if they are treated with systemic insecticide that: (i) has a pollinator protection box on the label; or (ii) has a pollinator, bee, or honey bee precautionary statement in the environmental hazards section of the insecticide product label that results in a concentration in its flowers greater than the no observed adverse effect level as established by the United States Environmental Protection Agency (U.S. EPA) for acute oral toxicity for adult honeybee.  All insecticide products with active ingredients that act systemically and carry bee- or pollinator-protective label language noted in the law have the potential to lead to detectable levels of residues.  A systemic insecticide is on that is both absorbed by the plant and translocated through the plant’s vascular system.  Insecticides that work through translaminar absorption – moving into the leaf where the active ingredient remains for a period of time – are not considered systemic insecticides for purposes of this law.

What types of insecticides are regulated by this law?

The law does not regulate the use of specific insecticides or products; rather, it is the labeling of plant material that is regulated. Plants cannot be labeled or advertised as attractive or beneficial to pollinators if they are treated with systemic insecticide that: (i) has a pollinator protection box on the label; or (ii) has a pollinator, bee, or honey bee precautionary statement in the environmental hazards section of the insecticide product label that results in a concentration in its flowers greater than the no observed adverse effect level as established by the United States Environmental Protection Agency (U.S. EPA) for acute oral toxicity for adult honeybee.  All insecticide products with active ingredients that act systemically and carry bee- or pollinator-protective label language noted in the law have the potential to lead to detectable levels of residues.  A systemic insecticide is on that is both absorbed by the plant and translocated through the plant’s vascular system.  Insecticides that work through translaminar absorption – moving into the leaf where the active ingredient remains for a period of time – are not considered systemic insecticides for purposes of this law.

No

Certain pesticide product labels now carry a bee icon accompanied by a “bee box” containing information pertinent to protecting bees and other pollinators from acute pesticide exposure. In addition, product labels might contain a precautionary statement about product toxicity to bees. If you see any one of these on the label, the product should be carefully reviewed for active ingredients that may be systemic in character, and refrain from using it on plants intended for advertisement or labeling as attractive or beneficial to pollinators. Even if the environmental hazards section of the label indicates that toxicity is only associated with “bees exposed to direct treatment on blooming crops” or similar language, the presence of such a hazard statement is all that’s necessary to suggest the need for careful review of the active ingredient list on the insecticide product label for systemic insecticides that, if detected, may result in non-compliant labeling of plant material as attractive or beneficial to pollinators. Here are examples of relevant label indicators:

What is a pollinator protection box on the label and what does a pollinator, bee, or honeybee precautionary statement look like?

Certain pesticide product labels now carry a bee icon accompanied by a “bee box” containing information pertinent to protecting bees and other pollinators from acute pesticide exposure. In addition, product labels might contain a precautionary statement about product toxicity to bees. If you see any one of these on the label, the product should be carefully reviewed for active ingredients that may be systemic in character, and refrain from using it on plants intended for advertisement or labeling as attractive or beneficial to pollinators. Even if the environmental hazards section of the label indicates that toxicity is only associated with “bees exposed to direct treatment on blooming crops” or similar language, the presence of such a hazard statement is all that’s necessary to suggest the need for careful review of the active ingredient list on the insecticide product label for systemic insecticides that, if detected, may result in non-compliant labeling of plant material as attractive or beneficial to pollinators. Here are examples of relevant label indicators:

No

Pagination

  • First page « First
  • Previous page ‹ Previous
  • Page 1292
  • Page 1293
  • Page 1294
  • Page 1295
  • Current page 1296
  • Page 1297
  • Page 1298
  • Page 1299
  • Page 1300
  • Next page Next ›
  • Last page Last »
Follow us
Like Us
Email Updates
View Videos

Contact the MDA

625 Robert Street North
Saint Paul, MN 55155-2538

Phone: 651-201-6000
Toll Free: 800-967-2474
711 TTY

Ask MDA

Resources

  • Ag in the Classroom
  • Accessibility/Web Policies
  • Careers, Human Resources
  • Data Requests
  • Download Adobe Reader
  • Non-Discrimination Plan
  • ~ Txoj Kev Npaj Tsis Sib Haum Xeeb
  • ~ Qorshaha takoor la'aanta
  • ~ Plan de no discriminación
  • Visitors & Parking

About

  • Commissioner's Office
  • Communications/Media
  • Events
  • Government Relations
  • MDA Agency Overview
  • Staff Directory
  • Tribal Relations
Enter the terms you wish to search for.
mn register to vote

 

© Copyright 2025 Minnesota Department of Agriculture