Seeds Regulation 1994 (NSW)
This Regulation may be cited as the Seeds Regulation 1994.
This Regulation commences on 26 August 1994.
In this Regulation:
(a) for a seed listed in the International Seed Testing Rules, the relevant germination test procedure specified in those Rules, and
(b) for any other seed, the relevant germination test procedure approved by the Director-General of the Department.
For the purposes of section 6 of the Act, each of the following sales of seed is prescribed as an exempt sale:
(a) a sale of sowing seed to be used for experimental or breeding purposes, but only if the Director-General has approved in writing of the sale,
(b) a sale of sowing seed of wheat, oats, barley, rye or triticale by a primary producer who does not grow sowing seed for sale in the ordinary course of the business of the primary producer, but only if:
(i) the sale is to another primary producer who, so far as the seller is aware, is not buying the seed for sale but intends to use the seed for the purpose of sowing, and
(ii) the sale is not solicited by the seller, and
(iii) the seed has not been produced under an approved varietal verification scheme (within the meaning of Part 4 of the Act), and
(iv) the total of all such sales by the primary producer during the previous period of 12 months, together with the present sale, does not exceed 5 tonnes,
(c) a sale by retail of a parcel of sowing seed that has been made up at the express direction of the purchaser from 2 or more parcels of seed (each containing a different variety of seed and each bearing a section 5 statement), but only if, at the time of the sale, the seller gives the purchaser a written statement identifying the source lots for the various seeds,
(d) a sale by retail of a parcel containing less than 10 kilograms of seed that has been made up at the express direction of the purchaser from a parcel of seed bearing a section 5 statement, but only if, at the time of the sale, the seller gives the purchaser a written statement identifying the source lot for the seed.
In this clause, a reference to a small parcel of sowing seed is a reference to a parcel of sowing seed containing:
(a) less than 100 grams of vegetable seed (other than maize, bean or pea seed), or
(b) less than 1 kilogram of maize, bean or pea seed, or
(c) less than 10 kilograms of seed, where the seed is labelled as being suitable for growing lawn or turf.
For the purposes of section 6 of the Act, a sale of a small parcel of sowing seed is prescribed as an exempt sale if the following particulars are legibly and durably written on the parcel or on a label securely attached to the parcel:
(a) the common name of the seed,
(b) the brand, code or mark that identifies the source lot for the seed,
(c) the name (including a recognised brand name) of any chemical that, subsequent to harvesting, has been applied to seed in that source for the purpose of protecting it against any pest or disease,
(d) the words “USE BY” or “SOW BEFORE”, together with the date by which the seed should be sown if it is to germinate.
The particulars must be in boldface Roman type of at least 6 points in size.
For the purposes of section 6 of the Act, the sale of a parcel of wheat, oats, barley, rye or triticale seed is prescribed as an exempt sale:
(a) if the parcel has legibly and durably written on it, or on a label securely attached to it, a brand, code or mark that identifies the source lot for the seed, and
(b) if, at the time of the sale, the seller gives to the purchaser a written statement containing the information that would otherwise be required to be contained in a section 5 statement for the seed, and
(c) if, at all times while the parcel is being offered for sale, the seller keeps at the place of sale, and permits any person to inspect free of charge, a register containing the information that would otherwise be required to be contained in a section 5 statement for the seed.
For the purposes of section 6 of the Act, a sale of a parcel of seed is prescribed as an exempt sale if the seed is flower seed or the seed of a native Australian tree or shrub.
For the purposes of the definition of
• Sclerote (that is, the whole or any part of an externally black resting body composed of a mass of fungal hyphae produced by
Sclerotinia spp ), but only when contained in a parcel of seeds of the speciesHelianthus annuus • Anguina agrostis Steinbuch, (1799) Filipjev galls
For the purposes of the definition of
(a) the seed of any plant specified in Schedule 2,
(b) a seed of a species of the genus
sorghum that is physically indistinguishable fromSorghum almun orSorghum halepense .
A section 5 statement must specify (in addition to the botanical name or names or the common name or names of the seed) the following particulars:
(a) the mass, or (in the case of vegetable seed) the number, of seeds contained in the parcel,
(b) a brand, code or mark that identifies the source lot for the seed,
(c) the name (including a recognised brand name) of any chemical that, subsequent to harvesting, has been applied to the source lot for the seed for the purpose of protecting it against pest or disease,
(d) for each kind of seed that comprises at least 5 per cent of the mass of the contents of the parcel:
(i) the common name of the seed, and
(ii) the minimum proportion of the mass of the parcel that comprises pure seed of that kind, being a proportion no greater than the corresponding proportion of pure seed of that kind in the source lot for the seed, and
(iii) the minimum proportion of the number of pure seed of that kind in the parcel that is germinable seed, being a proportion no greater than the corresponding proportion of pure seed of that kind that is germinable seed in the source lot for the seed, and
(iv) in the case of leguminous seed, the maximum proportion of the seed that is hard seed (that is, seed which, if subjected to a germination test, would remain unswollen), being a proportion no less than the corresponding proportion of the seed that is hard seed in the source lot for the seed, and
(e) for other seed (that is, seed for which particulars are not required under paragraph (d)), the maximum proportion of the mass of the parcel that comprises that other seed, being a proportion no less than the corresponding proportion of that other seed occurring in the source lot for the seed.
For seed that is labelled as being suitable for growing lawn or turf, the reference in subclause (1) (d) to 5 per cent is to be read as 1 per cent.
A section 5 statement for seed of a declared weed must also contain the common name of the weed, together with:
(a) the maximum number of seeds of the weed per 100 grams (or per kilogram) of the parcel, in the case of the seed of:
(i) Trifolium subterranean , or(ii) Medicago scutellata , or(iii) any species of plant for which the Working Sample for Count of Other Species in Table 2A of the Annex to the International Seed Testing Rules is less than 250 grams, or
(b) the maximum number of seeds of the weed per kilogram of seed in the source lot for the seed (being a number no less than the number of seeds of that kind in the parcel), in any other case.
Subclause (3) does not apply to the seed of flowers, vegetables (other than maize, bean or pea seed), trees or shrubs.
A section 5 statement must be in boldface Roman type of at least 8 points in size.
For the purposes of section 5 (2) of the Act, the common name of a seed listed in the CSIRO Handbook may be used in the section 5 statement instead of the botanical name of the seed.
For the purposes of section 8 (2) of the Act, a maximum proportion of 0.1 per cent by mass is prescribed in respect of sclerotes when contained in a parcel of seed of the species
For the purposes of section 25 (2) (c) (i) of the Act, the prescribed particulars to be contained on a label attached to a sample of seed taken under section 22 of the Act are as follows:
(a) the name and address of the person from whom the sample was taken,
(b) the date on which the sample was taken,
(c) the botanical name or names or the common name or names of the seed,
(d) the particulars referred to in clause 10 (1) (b), (d) and (e) and clause 10 (2) in respect of the seed.
For the purposes of this Regulation, the tolerances applicable to an analysis or test conducted for determining purity, germination or seed count are:
(a) the tolerances specified in the International Seed Testing Rules, or
(b) if no such tolerances are specified in those Rules, the tolerances specified in the Seed Testing Handbook.
The Seeds Regulation 1983 is repealed.
Any act, matter or thing that, immediately before the repeal of the Seeds Regulation 1983, had effect under that Regulation is taken to have effect under this Regulation.
(Clause 3)
Common name | Botanical name |
Australian Bindweed | |
Bugloss | |
Bulbous Oatgrass | |
Common Heliotrope | |
Docks (not Sorrel) | |
Glaucous Star Thistle | |
Hexham Scent | |
Hoary Cress | |
Horehound | |
Khaki weed | |
Mexican Poppy | |
Mintweed | |
Mustard | |
Oat (Wild, Black) | |
Onion grass | |
Onion weed | |
Paterson’s Curse | |
Saffron Thistle | |
Skeleton weed | |
Slender Thistle | |
Spear Thistle | |
St Barnaby’s Thistle | |
Three-cornered Jack | |
Turnip weed | |
Variegated Thistle | |
Wild turnip | |
Yellow Burrweed |
(Clause 9)
Common name | Botanical name |
African Feather grass | |
Black Bindweed | |
Blue Heliotrope | |
Broomrape | |
Buffalo burr | |
Burr grass | |
Burrs | |
Caltrop | |
Cape Tulips | |
Cardoon | |
Carolina Horse Nettle | |
Charlock | |
Clockweed | |
Colombus grass | |
Corn Sowthistle | |
Creeping Knapweed | |
Dark Blue Snakeweed | |
Dodders | |
Espartillo | |
Field Bindweed | |
Gallon’s Curse | |
Giant Foxtail | |
Golden Thistle | |
Gooseberries | |
Groundsel bush | |
Hemlock | |
Johnson grass | |
Mesquite | |
Mignonettes | |
Mossman River grass | |
Nodding Thistle | |
Nutgrass | |
Opium Poppy | |
Oxalis | |
Parthenium weed | |
Perennial Thistle | |
Ragweeds | |
Ragwort | |
Red Rice | |
Serrated Tussock | |
Silverleaf Nightshade | |
Smallflower Opium Poppy | |
Smoothstem Turnip | |
Soldier’s Thistle | |
Spotted Thistle | |
Spiny Burr grass | |
Spiny Burr grass | |
Star Thistle | |
St John’s wort | |
Stinkwort | |
Texas Blueweed | |
Thistles | |
Thornapples | |
Wild radish | |
Witch weed | |
Yellow nutsedge |
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